DocumentCode
1956697
Title
Succession in standardization: Grafting XML onto SGML
Author
Egyedi, T.M. ; Loeffen, A.G.A.J.
Author_Institution
Delft Univ. of Technol., Netherlands
fYear
2001
fDate
2001
Firstpage
38
Lastpage
49
Abstract
Succession in standardization is usually a problem. The advantages of improvements are weighed against those of compatibility. If compatibility considerations dominate, a grafting process takes place. This process need not lead to compatibility. According to our taxonomy of successor standards, there are three types of succession (outcomes). Type I, where grafting is achieved, entails compatibility between successors, technical paradigm-compliance, and continuity in the standards trajectory. In this paper, we examine issues of succession and focus on the Extensible Markup Language (XML). It was to be grafted on the Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML), a stable standard since 1988. However, XML was a profile, a subset and an extension of SGML (1988). Adaptation of SGML was needed (SGML1999) to forge full (downward) compatibility with XML (1998). We describe the grafting efforts and analyze their outcomes. We conclude that XML largely fits the SGML paradigm. SGML was a technical exemplar for XML developers. In contrast, widespread use of HTML exemplified the desirability of simplicity in XML standardization. The latter issue and HTML´s user market largely explain discontinuity in SGML-XML succession
Keywords
hypermedia markup languages; software standards; standardisation; SGML; SGML1999; XML; compatibility; continuity; grafting; standardization; technical paradigm compliance; Communications technology; HTML; Multiaccess communication; Pipelines; Pressing; SGML; Standardization; Standards development; Taxonomy; XML;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Standardization and Innovation in Information Technology, 2001 2nd IEEE Conference
Conference_Location
Boulder, CO
Print_ISBN
0-7803-9817-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SIIT.2001.968553
Filename
968553
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