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It's more like a classification thing. The structure determines the category or "family" - eg it's a car. The constraints determine the classification - it's a Toyota Camry which can come in these colours only etc .... The conforming instance defines the individual. As a design technique it's invaluable. Rick Greg Alvord wrote: > Rick Marshall Wrote: This is a long way of saying that I think trying to get > one tool to do 2 fundamentally different things is always going to less than > optimal. > > Perhaps the view that structure and constraints are two separate things > comes from that fact that to tools we use treats them separately. > > At the semantic level structure defines relationships. The constraints of > the semantic definitions are not separate from the definitions but part of > it. Constraints like "If the parent has this value in that property then > there must be a child of this type" do not operate separately from the > semantic definitions. They are integral to the semantic definitions. > > > Greg > > Optimal Blue > > > > > _______________________________________________________________________ > > XML-DEV is a publicly archived, unmoderated list hosted by OASIS > to support XML implementation and development. To minimize > spam in the archives, you must subscribe before posting. > > [Un]Subscribe/change address: http://www.oasis-open.org/mlmanage/ > Or unsubscribe: xml-dev-unsubscribe@l... > subscribe: xml-dev-subscribe@l... > List archive: http://lists.xml.org/archives/xml-dev/ > List Guidelines: http://www.oasis-open.org/maillists/guidelines.php > >
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