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What is text, really?
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Source ACM SIGDOC Asterisk Journal of Computer Documentation archive
Volume 21 ,  Issue 3  (August 1997) table of contents
Pages: 1 - 24  
Year of Publication: 1997
ISSN:0731-1001
Authors
Steven J. DeRose  praXis
David G. Durand  Brandeis University
Elli Mylonas  Harvard University
Allen H. Renear  Brown University
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

THE WAY IN WHICH TEXT IS represented on a computer affects the kinds of uses to which it can be put by its creator and by subsequent users. The electronic document model currently in use is impoverished and restrictive. The authors argue that text is best represented as an ordered hierarchy of content object (OHCO), because that is what text really is. This model conforms with emerging standards such as SGML and contains within it advantages for the writer, publisher, and researcher. The authors then describe how the hierarchical model can allow future use and reuse of the document as a database, hypertext, or network.



Collaborative Colleagues:
Steven J. DeRose: colleagues
David G. Durand: colleagues
Elli Mylonas: colleagues
Allen H. Renear: colleagues