Diff for Introduction to specialization
Mon, 2007-10-29 21:40 by carolgeyer | Mon, 2007-10-29 21:41 by carolgeyer | ||
---|---|---|---|
< previous diff | next diff > | ||
Changes to Body | |||
Line 3 | Line 3 | ||
</p>
| </p>
| ||
<p>
| <p>
| ||
- | Specialization allows you to define new kinds of information (new structural types or new domains of information), while reusing as much of existing design and code as possible, and minimizing or eliminating the costs of interchange, migration, and maintenance.
| + | Specialization allows you to define new kinds of information (new structural types or new domains of information), while reusing as much of existing design and code as possible, and minimizing or eliminating the costs of interchange, migration, and maintenance.
|
+ | </p>
| ||
+ | <p>
| ||
+ |
| ||
</p>
| </p>
| ||
<h3>See also:</h3>
| <h3>See also:</h3>
|
Revision of Mon, 2007-10-29 21:41:
Introduction to specialization
Specialization is the process by which new designs are created based on existing designs, allowing new kinds of content to be processed using existing processing rules.
Specialization allows you to define new kinds of information (new structural types or new domains of information), while reusing as much of existing design and code as possible, and minimizing or eliminating the costs of interchange, migration, and maintenance.
See also:
- DITA Architectural Specification description of specialization - Specialization in the Darwin Information Typing Architecture (IBM) - An XML-based information architecture for learning content, Part 1: A DITA specialization design (IBM) - Specializing topic types in DITA (IBM) - DITA Specialization - Matching Your Needs (Arbortext) - Specializing domains in DITA (IBM)