Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!ira.uka.de!smurf!gopnbg!mcshh!schiers From: schiers@mcshh.hanse.de (Carsten Schiers) Newsgroups: comp.text.sgml Subject: What about the DTD Message-ID: <8149@mcshh.hanse.de> Date: 3 Oct 90 10:08:33 GMT Lines: 23 Hello, is the Document Type Definition (DTD) part of an SGML text interchange? To specify my question: does a software product, e.g. a publishing system, which tells to be able to use SGML format, have to be able to read an SGML document and *any* DTD? As I understand, then it has to read the DTD, which is something like a grammmar for me, and then parse the text, using this DTD. I ask this, because a software manufacturer tells me, I have to send the DTD for my special problem to him, and then he will return a special filter for documents which behave like this DTD. So anytime I have a new type of document, I have to buy a new filter. Is there something inside the SGML definition, which I don't have at my desk, sorry, which tells me that a DTD is part of an SGML document? What is the idea of the CALS standard with SGML text exchange? Thanks, Carsten Schiers Deutsche Airbus GmbH unido!imdm.uke.uni-hamburg.dbp.de!schiers unido!netmbx!mcshh!schiers