Jump to content

Document engineering: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
CmdrObot (talk | contribs)
m Wikipedia URL→wikilink
categorized subject and added reference links
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Category:Information Systems]]
{{orphan|date=January 2008}}


'''Document Engineering''' is a document-centric philosophy that synthesizes complementary ideas from information and systems analysis, electronic publishing, business process analysis, and business informatics to ensure that the documents and processes make sense to the people and applications that need them. Originating from research (and a text) by Robert J. Glushko and Tim McGrath[http://www.docengineering.com/], document engineering attempts to unify these different analysis and modeling perspectives, helps us specify, design, and implement these documents and the processes that create and consume them.
{{deadend|date=January 2008}}

'''Document Engineering''' is a document-centric philosophy that synthesizes complementary ideas from information and systems analysis, electronic publishing, business process analysis, and business informatics to ensure that the documents and processes make sense to the people and applications that need them. Originating from research (and a text) by Robert J. Glushko and Tim McGrath[1], document engineering attempts to unify these different analysis and modeling perspectives, helps us specify, design, and implement these documents and the processes that create and consume them.


It has particular relevance in the areas of XML vocabulary design. The principles of document engineering were applied to the development of the [[UBL|OASIS Universal Business Language]].
It has particular relevance in the areas of XML vocabulary design. The principles of document engineering were applied to the development of the [[UBL|OASIS Universal Business Language]].


A research center for document engineering is provided by the University of California, Berkeley[2].
A research center for document engineering is provided by the University of California, Berkeley[http://cde.berkeley.edu/].


References
References
1. ^ MIT Press. [http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=10476]
1. ^ Document Engineering official homepage. [http://www.docengineering.com/]
2. ^ O'Reilly Digital [http://blogs.oreilly.com/digitalmedia/2005/11/document-engineering-13.html]
2. ^ Center for Document Engineering [http://cde.berkeley.edu/]

{{Uncategorized|date=January 2008}}

Revision as of 07:01, 20 January 2008


Document Engineering is a document-centric philosophy that synthesizes complementary ideas from information and systems analysis, electronic publishing, business process analysis, and business informatics to ensure that the documents and processes make sense to the people and applications that need them. Originating from research (and a text) by Robert J. Glushko and Tim McGrath[1], document engineering attempts to unify these different analysis and modeling perspectives, helps us specify, design, and implement these documents and the processes that create and consume them.

It has particular relevance in the areas of XML vocabulary design. The principles of document engineering were applied to the development of the OASIS Universal Business Language.

A research center for document engineering is provided by the University of California, Berkeley[2].

References

 1. ^ MIT Press. [3]
 2. ^ O'Reilly Digital [4]