DITA XML.org is the official community gathering place and information resource for the DITA OASIS Standard, an XML architecture for designing, writing, managing, and publishing information. We encourage you to contribute content to this site.

Michael Priestley (IBM) and Steve Manning (Rockley Group) Workshops Announced for X-Pubs 2007

Michael Priestley (IBM DITA Lead) and Steve Manning (Principal, The Rockley Group, co-author of "Managing Enterprise Content") are both delivering first-come first-serve workshops at X-Pubs 2007. 

Read more

DITA Infocenter

We have launched a prototype of a Help-style interface to key OASIS and other DITA documents at http://www.ditainfocenter.com.

A help interface means it has the classic two panes with table of contents (TOC), index, and search views in the left pane and topics in the right.

The new DITA Infocenter is a demonstration of end-to-end DITA publishing. All the DITA source files for the Architecture Specification and the Language Specification were built as Eclipse Help and are serving from an Eclipse server at DITAUsers.org.

Read more

OASIS Creates Discussion List for Document Standards Interoperability TC

An open discussion list has been created to explore interest in forming an OASIS Document Standards Interoperability Technical Committee. The proposed TC is intended to address the development and documentation of scenarios for cross-standard content sharing; a specification for  an interoperability framework, including mappings from participating standard formats to the framework; and requirements on participating standards to improve interoperability.

The new discussion list is open to members and non-members and may last up to 90 days.

Read more

The Most Important Questions About DITA

QuickStudy: Darwin Information Typing Architecture (DITA)

by Russell Kay, Computerworld

DITA uses XML as the basis for designing, writing, managing and publishing many kinds of information, both in print and on the Web. DITA includes a set of design principles for creating “information-typed” modules covering specific topics. The adoption of DITA principles facilitates adapting this type of content for a wide variety of delivery vehicles and uses, including integrated help systems, technical documentation, Web-based product-support portals and instructions.

Read more

XML.org Focus Areas: BPEL | DITA | ebXML | IDtrust | OpenDocument | SAML | UBL | UDDI
OASIS sites: OASIS | Cover Pages | XML.org | AMQP | CGM Open | eGov | Emergency | IDtrust | LegalXML | Open CSA | OSLC | WS-I