Previously: What is a document? - part 4.
In the early Nineties,
I found myself tasked with the development of a digital guide to
third level education in Ireland. The digital product was to be an
add-on to a book based product, created in conjunction with the author of the book. The organization of the book was very
regular. Each third level course had a set of attributes such as
entry level qualifications, duration, accrediting institution,
physical location of the campus, fees and so on. All neatly laid out, on page per course, with some free-flowing narrative at the bottom of each page. The goals of the
digital product were to allow prospective students to search based on
different criteria such as cost ranges, course duration and so on.
Step number one was
getting the information from the paper book into a computer and it is in
this innocuous sounding step that things got very interesting. The
most obvious approach - it seemed to me at the time - was to create a programmable database – in something like
Clipper (a database programming language that was very popular with
PC developers at the time). Tabular databases were perfect for 90%
of the data – the “structured” parts such as dates, numbers,
short strings of text. However, the tabular databases had no good way
of dealing with the free-flowing narrative text that accompanied each
course in the book. It had paragraphs, bulleted lists, bold/italics and underline...
An alternative approach
would be to start with a word-processor – as opposed to a database
– as it would make handling the free-flowing text (and associated
formatting, bold/italic, bulleted lists etc.) easy. However, the word
processor approach did not make it at all easy to process the
“structured” parts in the way I wanted to (in many cases, the word processors of the day stored information in encrypted formats too).
My target output was a free
viewer that came with Windows 3.1 known as Windows Help. If I could
make the content programmable, I reasoned, I could automatically generate all
sorts of different views of the data as Windows Help files and ship
the floppy disk without needing to write my own viewer. (I
know this sounds bizarre now but remember this work predated the
concept of a generic web browser by a few years!)
I felt I was facing a
major fork in the road in the project. By going with a database, some
things were going to be very easy but some very awkward. By going
with a document instead...same thing. Some things easy, some very
awkward. I trawled around in my head for something that might have
the attributes of a database AND of a document at the same time.
As
luck would have it, I had a Byte Magazine from 1992 on a shelf. It had an article by Jon Udell that
talked about SGML - Standard Generalized Markup Language. It triggered memories of a brief encounter I had had
with SGML back in Trinity College when Dr. David Abrahamson had referencing it
in his compiler design course, back in 1986. Back then, SGML was not
yet an ISO standard (it became one in 1987). I remember in those days hearing about
“tagging" and how an SGML parser could enforce structure – any
structure you liked – on text – in a similar way to programming
language parsers enforced structure on, say, Pascal source code.
I remember thinking
“surely if SGML can deal with the hierarchical structures like you
typically find in programming languages, it can deal with the
simpler, flatter structures you get in tabular databases?”. If it could, I reasoned, then surely I could get the best of both worlds. My own data format that had what I needed from database-approaches but also what I needed from document approaches to data modelling?
I found – somehow
(this is all pre-internet remember. No Googling for me in those days.) – an address in Switzerland that I could
send some money to in the form of a money order, to get a 3.5 inch floppy back by return
post, with an SGML parser on it called ArcSGML. I also found out about
an upcoming gathering in Switzerland of SGML enthusiasts. A colleague, Neville Bagnall
went over and came back with all sorts of invaluable information
about this new thing (to us) called generalized markup.
We set to work in earnest. We
created our first ever SGML data model. Used ArcSGML to ensure we
were getting the structure and consistency we wanted in our source data. We set about
inventing tags for things like “paragraph”, “bold”,
“cross-reference” as well as the simpler field-like tags such as
“location”, “duration” etc. We sent about looking at ways to
process the resultant SGML file. The output from ArcSGML was not very
useful for processing, but we soon found out about another SGML parser called SGMLS
by Englishman James Clark. We got our hands on it and having taken one look at
the ESIS format it produced, we fell in love with it. Now we had a
tool that could validate the structure of our document/database and
feed us a clean stream of data to process downstream in our own software.
Back then C++ was our
weapon of choice. Over time our code turned into a toolkit of SGML
processing components called IDM (Intelligent Document Manager) which
we applied to numerous projects in what became known as the
“electronic publishing era”. Things changed very rapidly in those
days. The floppy disks gave way to the CD-ROMs. We transitioned from
Windows Help files to another Microsoft product called Microsoft
Multimedia Viewer. Soon the number of “viewers” for electronic
books exploded and we were working on Windows Help, Multimedia
Viewer, Folio Views, Lotus Notes to name but four.
As the number of
distinct outputs we needed to generate grew, so too did the value of our investment getting
up to speed with SGML. We could maintain a single source of content
but generate multiple output formats from it, each leveraging the
capabilities of the target viewer in a way that made them look and
feel like they had been authored directly in each tool as opposed to
programmatically generated for them.
My concept of a
“document” changed completely over this period. I began to see
how formatting – and content – could be separated from each other. I began to see how in so
doing, a single data model could be used to manage content that is
tabular (like a classic tabular database) as well as content that is
irregular, hierarchical, even recursive. Moreover, I could see how
keeping the formatting out of the core content made it possible to
generate a variety of different formatting “views” of the same
content.
It would be many years
later that the limitations of this approach became apparent to me.
Back then, I thought it was a completely free lunch. I was a fully paid-up convert to the concept of
generalized markup and machine readable, machine validatable
documents. As luck would have it, this coincided with the emergence
of a significant market for SGML and SGML technologies. Soon I was
knee deep in SGML parsers, SGML programming languages, authoring systems,
storage systems and was developing more and more of our own tools,
first in C++, then Perl, then Python.
The next big transition
in my thinking about documents came when I needed to factor
non-technical authors into my thinking. This is where I will turn
next. What is a document? - Part 6.
1 comment:
Learning by doing! I can see the 'transition' you're talking about.
Excellent piece Sean.
Post a Comment