Adobe 65030365 Developer's Guide - Page 123

Saving an EDD as a DTD for export, Read/write rules and the new DTD

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8 Saving an EDD as a DTD for export see that the elements behave in the way you expect. You may need to test the elements in the document, make revisions in the EDD, reimport the elements into the EDD, reimport the catalog into the document, and repeat the process as necessary. Here are a few tasks to go through while testing elements in a sample document: • Insert and wrap a variety of elements in the document. If you've defined any containers to have child elements added automatically, make sure the child elements also appear when you insert the containers. • Move elements around in the document. Check the Structure View to see that the elements are valid only where they should be. • Enter attribute values in elements that allow them. Check the Structure View to make sure that the types of values you want to add are valid according to the attribute's definition. • Once you have the format rules in the EDD, move elements around to verify that they are formatted correctly according to context. Check to see that extra formatting items such as prefixes and autonumbers appear where they should. For help on identifying syntax and context errors in an element definition, see: • "Debugging structure rules" on page 123 • "Debugging text format rules" on page 166 • "Debugging object format rules" on page 197 Saving an EDD as a DTD for export If your end users will be saving FrameMaker documents as markup and you did not begin the development process with a DTD, you need to save your EDD as a DTD so that users will have a DTD for exported documents. FrameMaker creates a new DTD with element declarations and attribute definition list declarations that correspond to element and attribute definitions in the EDD. You need to define a finished DTD as part of a structure application before your end users can save documents as markup. To do this, insert a DTD element in the application definition in structapps.fm and type the pathname of the DTD. For more information, see "Application definition file" on page 50. Read/write rules and the new DTD When creating a DTD from an EDD, we recommend that you first create an initial DTD with no read/write rules-or with only a subset of the rules if you have some already developed. This lets you see how FrameMaker translates the EDD with little or no help from your rules. Once you have both an EDD and a DTD, you can refine the translation in an iterative process of developing read/write rules. First analyze the EDD and new DTD together to plan how to modify the translation with rules. Then develop at least some of your rules, update Structure Application Developer's Guide 105

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Saving an EDD as a DTD for export
Structure Application Developer’s Guide
105
8
see that the elements behave in the way you expect. You may need to test the elements
in the document, make revisions in the EDD, reimport the elements into the EDD, reimport
the catalog into the document, and repeat the process as necessary.
Here are a few tasks to go through while testing elements in a sample document:
Insert and wrap a variety of elements in the document. If you’ve defined any containers
to have child elements added automatically, make sure the child elements also appear
when you insert the containers.
Move elements around in the document. Check the Structure View to see that the
elements are valid only where they should be.
Enter attribute values in elements that allow them. Check the Structure View to make
sure that the types of values you want to add are valid according to the attribute’s
definition.
Once you have the format rules in the EDD, move elements around to verify that they
are formatted correctly according to context. Check to see that extra formatting items
such as prefixes and autonumbers appear where they should.
For help on identifying syntax and context errors in an element definition, see:
“Debugging structure rules” on page 123
“Debugging text format rules” on page 166
“Debugging object format rules” on page 197
Saving an EDD as a DTD for export
If your end users will be saving FrameMaker documents as markup and you did not begin
the development process with a DTD, you need to save your EDD as a DTD so that users
will have a DTD for exported documents. FrameMaker creates a new DTD with element
declarations and attribute definition list declarations that correspond to element and attribute
definitions in the EDD.
You need to define a finished DTD as part of a structure application before your end users
can save documents as markup. To do this, insert a
DTD
element in the application
definition in
structapps.fm
and type the pathname of the DTD. For more information,
see “Application definition file” on page 50
.
Read/write rules and the new DTD
When creating a DTD from an EDD, we recommend that you first create an initial DTD with
no read/write rules—or with only a subset of the rules if you have some already developed.
This lets you see how FrameMaker translates the EDD with little or no help from your rules.
Once you have both an EDD and a DTD, you can refine the translation in an iterative
process of developing read/write rules. First analyze the EDD and new DTD together to plan
how to modify the translation with rules. Then develop at least some of your rules, update