Annotation of kupu/common/fulldoc.html, revision 1.1.1.1
1.1 dwinter 1: <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
2: "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
3: <html>
4: <head>
5: <title>Test Content Document</title>
6:
7: <link href="kupucontentstyles.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
8:
9: <!-- headers to prevent the browser from caching, these *must* be provided,
10: either in meta-tag form or as HTTP headers -->
11: <meta http-equiv="Pragma" content="no-cache" />
12: <meta http-equiv="Cache-Control" content="no-cache, must-revalidate" />
13:
14: <!-- make sure the browser's charset is UTF-8 -->
15: <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
16:
17: <!-- some meta data, customizations could build property tools that
18: edit more of them -->
19: <meta name="Subject" content="" />
20: <meta name="Publisher" content="No publisher" />
21: <meta name="Description" content="Document-centric editing overview." />
22: <meta name="Contributors" content="" />
23: <meta name="Effective_date" content="None" />
24: <meta name="Expiration_date" content="None" />
25: <meta name="Type" content="Document" />
26: <meta name="Format" content="text/html" />
27: <meta name="Language" content="" />
28: <meta name="Rights" content="" />
29: </head>
30: <body>
31:
32: <h1>Document-Centric Editing</h1>
33:
34: <p>There are two approaches to content editing in a web browser. The
35: first is a <em>data-oriented</em> approach, where the content is split into
36: concrete parts. The editing occurs in a <code><form></code> with various
37: fields. This approach fits best when there are specific pieces of information
38: needed for the resource.</p>
39: <p>The second is a <em>document-oriented</em> approach, where the essence of
40: the resource is free-flowing. This does not mean that the content is
41: unstructured, but it is less rigid than fields. Often there are elements that
42: provide metadata for the resource.</p>
43:
44: <p>Most information in organizations is free-flowing, as studies show.
45: For these cases, a rich editor like Kupu makes sense. Equally, these
46: cases point towards a <em>document-centric</em> approach, rather than
47: rigid <a title="HTML Specification" href="http://www.w3.org/Markup">HTML</a>
48: forms.</p>
49:
50: <p>The following table shows different aspects, and happens to give
51: us a chance to test table editing in Kupu:</p>
52:
53: <h4>Comparing Data- and Document-Centric</h4>
54: <table border="0" class="plain" cellspacing="0">
55: <tbody>
56: <tr>
57: <th> </th>
58: <th>Data-centric</th>
59: <th>Document-centric</th>
60: </tr>
61: <tr>
62: <td>Implementation</td>
63: <td>form fields</td>
64: <td>iframe</td>
65: </tr>
66: <tr>
67: <td>Metadata</td>
68: <td>form elements</td>
69: <td>iframe document "head"</td>
70: </tr>
71: </tbody>
72: </table>
73:
74:
75: </body>
76: </html>
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