Article: 21377 of comp.text.sgml Path: news.tuwien.ac.at!aconews.univie.ac.at!newscore.univie.ac.at!dca1-hub1.news.digex.net!digex!news.idt.net!nyd.news.ans.net!news-w.ans.net!newsfeeds.ans.net!amber.ora.com!not-for-mail From: Chris Maden Newsgroups: comp.text.tex,comp.text.sgml,comp.text.pdf Subject: Re: SGML for thesis Date: 28 Apr 1998 17:16:49 -0400 Organization: O'Reilly & Associates Lines: 58 Message-ID: References: <6i2jju$ep0$1@node2.nodak.edu> <82vhrvht7t.fsf@robin.eecs.umich.edu> <3545C3EA.D8CE6C67@YandY.com> NNTP-Posting-Host: rosetta-stone.ora.com X-Newsreader: Gnus v5.3/Emacs 19.34 Xref: news.tuwien.ac.at comp.text.tex:129485 comp.text.sgml:21377 comp.text.pdf:15033 Louis Vosloo writes: > If you are interested in electronic publishing you may want to > consider using TeX and Acrobat PDF instead. The generation of the > on-line edition then is almost `for free' (running Distiller), and > you can of course have all the nice hyper-text, color etc. features > available in other formats. So the advantages would be that my customers get to see ITC Garamond and my carefully chosen aspect ratios, and possibly higher-quality figures. The disadvantages would be a possible need for users to install new software; inaccessibility to the blind, the nearsighted, the users with small screens, and the UNIX users sitting at a dumb console; a refusal to let the user choose an aspect ratio and color suited to his own needs; and the aesthetic unpleasantness of distribution in a semi-proprietary format.[*] Plus, I can go from SGML to just about any other format, including XML with XSL stylesheets once they're supported, which will give me nearly as good display capabilities as TeX and PDF, but with more flexibility since rendering happens on the user's system. And, if I decide to reorder some content (like moving index links to the top of the book home page, which I did today), I can do that with a change to the generation stylesheet; while LaTeX allows global changes in presentation, reordering of content is a little more difficult. So no thanks, I think I'll stick with HTML (and later XML) distribution. My content is important, not my flash and glamour.[***] > If you have a real need for SGML, then you may want to use TeX as > the backend for it. Some other publishers have gone that route. That's true, and I should look into jadetex. But since I need to go to a word processing format anyway for authors to create followup editions, I might as well use that for the printed output. -Chris [*] Yes, I know the PDF specification is published and freely available. It's still subject to change at the whim of a single company.[**] [**] Yeah, yeah, so is HTML, in some sense. But a little less so. [***] Lest anyone on c.t.t misinterpret my remarks and my .sig as anti-TeX, let me assure you that that's not the case. I am a TeXnician, and consider TeX the ideal tool for high-quality typesetting. But while LaTeX does a pretty good job of keeping semantics and presentation separate, information therein simply isn't anywhere close to as reusable as information in SGML. TeX's one very high-quality tool, but it's still just one tool in a toolbox. -- http://www.oreilly.com/people/staff/crism/ +1.617.499.7487 90 Sherman Street, Cambridge, MA 02140 USA" NDATA SGML.Geek>