Alain,

I was looking forward to incorporating the expand/collapse feature into an
XSLTForms project, but it looks as though this has not yet been added to
the XSLTForms code repository on GitHub. Is this correct?

Best regards,
Tim

--
Tim A. Thompson
Discovery Metadata Librarian
Yale University Library



On Sun, Sep 2, 2018 at 3:31 PM Alain Couthures <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Owen,
>
> I have now implemented expand/collapse appearance for groups in XSLTForms
> for evaluation. Please have a look at
> http://www.agencexml.com/collapse/collapse.xml
>
> Adding appearance="expand" or appearance="collapse" is just required! Up
> and down triangle arrows are inserted with CSS so rendering can be adjusted
> rather easily.
>
> --Alain
>
> Le 22/08/2018 à 16:07, Owen Ambur a écrit :
>
> Steven, here's the text of the law I mentioned on the XForms call a few
> minutes ago:
> https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/open-machine-readable-government-owen-ambur/
>
>
>
>
> My StratML colleagues and I are trying to remove as many obstacles as
> possible so that U.S. federal agencies are left with few excuses for
> failing to comply with the law ... which, incidentally, establishes good
> practice for the plans and reports of all organizations, worldwide, whose
> activities should be matters of public record.  See the use cases
> documented thus far at http://stratml.us/carmel/iso/UC4SwStyle.xml
>
>
>
> Internationally speaking, the **Open** Government Partnership (OGP) is an
> egregious example:  https://www.opengovpartnership.org/participants The
> national action plans as well as the OGP’s own report are still being
> published in PDF:
> https://www.opengovpartnership.org/sites/default/files/OGP_Year-Review_20180504.pdf
> Assuming good faith on their part, they simply don’t understand the concept
> of “openness” in terms of XML/XSD validity.  So it is up to us to show them
> the benefits of well-structured and semantically well-defined content.
>
>
>
> In the meantime, being able to expand and collapse sections of lengthy
> plans and reports will help to remove one excuse for failure to publish
> plans and reports in open, standard, machine-readable format.  Unless and
> until public agencies begin to comply with the law, citizens and taxpayers
> will have little cause to consider them credible and trustworthy.
>
>
>
> Owen Ambur
>
> Chair, StratML <http://stratml.us/> Working Group
>
> Co-Chair Emeritus, xml.gov CoP <http://xml.govwebs.net/>
>
> Webmaster, FIRM <http://firmcouncil.org/>
>
> Profile <https://www.linkedin.com/in/owenambur> on LinkedIn | Personal Home
> Page <http://ambur.net/>
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Steven Pemberton <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
> Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2018 7:15 AM
> To: XForms <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
> Subject: Collapsing sections
>
>
>
> Someone asked me about doing collapsing sections in XForms, so I wrote an
>
> article:
>
>
>
>    https://homepages.cwi.nl/~steven/xforms/techniques/collapsing.html
>
>
>
> Comments gratefully received.
>
>
>
> Steven
>
>
>
>
>
_______________________________________________
Xsltforms-support mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/xsltforms-support

Reply via email to