There actually is a mechanism for preserving directives for publishing in a 
specific output format: processing instructions.  If they become very dense, 
they make the markup hard to read, but the mechanism is there.  Processing 
instructions are ignored if they are not recognized by a processing engine and 
can be made specific to an output format.  While there are some processing 
instructions in DocBook, any number of them can be added, they just will not be 
recognized when a document is passed to another processing environment.

I think it is important to keep in mind that DocBook was not designed for 
publication of documents that require polish in their presentation.  The 
purpose was to produce a reasonable render of the content for authors working 
to produce technical documentation.  My first exposure to DocBook was in 
FrameMaker+SGML.  I was actually relieved when I moved to editing the markup 
directly in our move to XML and was no longer constantly fiddling with the 
output format.  The fiddling would have been counterproductive in many ways 
since we had multiple output formats by then and tuning for one frequently not 
only did not help the others but actually could negatively impact them.  I was 
down to occasionally specifying that a table should start at the top of a page 
instead of breaking across a page (and even that could be risky with reused 
content).

Our environment was pretty optimal for DocBook -- hundreds of documents 
produced and revised on an ongoing basis with corporate standards for what they 
were to look like.  This is probably not the model for a publishing house, but 
it is what DocBook shines at -- large quantities of documentation that are to 
be produced with a standard look and feel as rapidly as possible.

Authors moving from Word were frustrated, but many of them were frustrated 
because they didn't buy the fundamental premise of DocBook: mark up what it is, 
not what it looks like.  It is true that some things like table editing can be 
helped by WYSIWYG.  In general, I found it freeing to be able to concentrate on 
the content rather than worrying about the appearance, which depended heavily 
on the output format being used.

Regards,
Larry Rowland

-----Original Message-----
From: Dave Pawson [mailto:da...@dpawson.co.uk] 
Sent: Friday, June 18, 2010 12:46 AM
To: ka...@inkwelle.com
Cc: docbook-apps@lists.oasis-open.org
Subject: Re: [docbook-apps] DocBook and InDesign

On Thu, 17 Jun 2010 07:56:05 -0700
Katie Welles <ka...@inkwelle.com> wrote:

> Seems to be that the expectation in round-tripping is just that the
> text edits will be intact, yes?

Yes... but what help is that?
Two windows open, XML source, Finished output.
Edit XML. 

For non techie editors, .... dunno :-)

regards 

-- 

regards 

-- 
Dave Pawson
XSLT XSL-FO FAQ.
http://www.dpawson.co.uk

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