Licensed under
Created from scratch by Sebastian Rahtz,
This report should be read in conjunction with the other
reports at
The task force has not yet met face to face, operating only by email, but two fruitful full-day meetings in October 2003 between Lou Burnard, Sebastian Rahtz, and Norm Walsh, and Lou Burnard, Sebastian Rahtz, and Laurent Romary, resulting in documents MEW 02, MEW 03, MEW 04 and MEW 05. Attention is drawn to the analysis in MEW 02 of the relationship between TEI and Docbook element classes, as this may prove a fertile area of future collaboration. The discussion recorded MEW 05 about linking TEI names to corresponding concepts in ISO is also a very important development for the future.
The timetable of work under the META umbrella is expected to be
as follows:
The remaining sections in this report describe the
progress on the task force's jobs of:
The final result will be a new version of the TEI Guidelines.
The markup used to create the TEI Guidelines, from which both
documentation and DTDs/Schemas are derived, has been reviewed
several times, and three important sets of changes have been made:
This process should now be complete. The next stage will be to release
sample subsets of the TEI source for comment by other working groups
(eg manuscripts, feature structures, and standoff markup), to check
that they are useable for future editing.
The revision of the TSD tagset, to turn it into a proper TEI module and to make it conform to the current Guidelines source, has not yet been started. It is planned to complete this during November 2003.
The Guidelines have been converted to express element syntactic constraints using Relax NG. This work is complete, and awaiting more user testing. The Relax NG compact syntax is used for display in the HTML version of the Guidelines.
Tools to generate RelaxNG schemas and DTDs from the new Guidelines have been completed, written as XSLT transforms. The results await user testing.
A tool to generated W3C Schemas from the Guidelines has not been
written. It is intended to produce them using James Clark's
As described in the May report, 23 datatypes (linked to W3C datatypes where relevant) have been defined, and linked to all the simple attribute cases. Work has not yet started on looking at element content models to see where they would benefit from datatyping.
A prototype processor to replace the pizza chef, called