SGML/XML
Conversion of digital content, books, magazines,
journals, manuals, manuscripts and other documents
to SGML or XML for document management, retrieval
and archiving. We can take information and make
it more accessible and we are the leading offshore
outsourcing company for sgml/xml/pdf conversion.
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SGML/XML
Conversion of digital content, books, magazines,
journals, manuals, manuscripts and other documents
to SGML or XML for document management, retrieval
and archiving. We can take information and make
it more accessible and we are the leading offshore
outsourcing company for SGML/XML/PDF conversion.
Reason for using SGML/XML
SGML/XML
ensures reusability of documents by preserving raw
data and content-based structuring of information
pieces. Preserving data for statistics and formulas
in mathematics and chemistry could allow researchers
to reuse and repeat simulations, calculations and
experiments, deriving the needed data directly from
an archive.
Second,
using structured information allows the reuse of the
same information or documents in different contexts,
i.e., the same digital dissertation can be used to
produce an online or print version, and to produce
additional information products, like monthly proceedings
containing the abstracts of all dissertations produced
within the university during the last month, or a
citation index. Additionally, the dissertation can
be displays for different media, so a Braille reader
or an automatic voice synthesizer could be used as
a back-end machine.
Another
reason for using markup for encoding documents is
that a wider, more qualified retrieval could be provided
to the users of an archive. As university libraries
are more and more challenged by the problem of handling,
converting, archiving and providing electronic publications,
one of the major tasks is providing a new quality
for retrieval within the user interface. Using an
SGML/XML-based publishing concept enables a new quality
in the distribution of scientific contents via specific
information and knowledge management.
What does SGML/XML mean?
The
Extensible Markup Language (XML) is the universal
format for structured documents and data on the Web.
Before XML there was the Standard Generalized Markup
Language (SGML) widely used for large documentation
projects. SGML was mostly used for technical documentation.
"Structured
data", such as mathematical or chemical formulas,
spreadsheets, address books, configuration parameters,
financial transactions, technical drawings, etc. are
usually put on the Web using the output of layout
programs as Postscript or PDF or by putting them into
graphic formats like gif, jpeg, png, vrml, and so
on. Programs that produce such data often also store
it on disk, for which they can use either a binary
format or a text format. So, if somebody wants to
look at the data, he usually needs the program that
produced it. With XML those data could be stored in
a text format, which allows the user reading the file
without having the original program. XML is a set
of rules, guidelines, conventions, whatever you want
to call them, for designing text formats for such
data, in a way that produces files that are easy to
generate and read (by a computer).
The
Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a markup or structuring
language for documents, a so-called meta language,
that defines rules for the structural markup of documents
independently from any output media. XML is a "reduced"
version of the Structured Generalized Markup Language
(SGML). It prevail success in technical documentation.
The main philosophy of SGML and XML is the strict
separation of content, structure and layout of documents.
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