RE: [Issue-75] - Domain

Hi Felix,

I follow your line of thought related to the similarities between "domainMapping" and matching of language tags. Thus, it would be OK for me to consider 2.b of http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-multilingualweb-lt-comments/2013Jan/0022.html closed.

Cheers,
Christian

-----Original Message-----
From: Felix Sasaki [mailto:fsasaki@w3.org] 
Sent: Montag, 14. Januar 2013 19:27
To: public-multilingualweb-lt-comments@w3.org
Subject: Re: [Issue-75] - Domain

Hi Christian, Yves, all,

Am 14.01.13 16:52, schrieb Yves Savourel:
> Hi Christian, all,
>
>
> CL>> It seems as if I didn't manage to my point about this aspect of "domain" is clear.
> CL>> Let me to try to provide a remedy by adding to my original comment:
> CL>> Something like its-domain="financials" could not just be imagined to work in
> CL>> a global rule (e.g. instead of a pointer); in addition, a local use of "domain"
> CL>> could be imagined
> CL>> Global: <its:domainRule selector="/h:html/h:body" its-domain="financials">
> CL>> Local: <em its-domain="financials">IMF</em>
>
> So (If I'm getting this right) you'd like a way to override the domain for spans of content? (Since the Dublin Core in HTML doesn't let you do that (the subject is define at the document level)).
>
> I think one of the reasons I hear early on was that today it would be difficult to make that distinction at the MT level. But I suppose MT engine selection is not the only application for domain. Maybe others have additional reason why we don't have a local domain?

Given the implementation driven approach we have made so far I would 
ask: is there an implementation on the horizon that would process local 
domain?

>
>
> CL>> Why do you think that the scenario that I sketch (multiply domain
> CL>> "systems" used in a processing chain) implies that a standard exists?
> CL>> I would rather think that the implication is the other way round:
> CL>> Since there is no standard, there is a need to accommodate heterogeneity.
>
> I agree, but so far that has not been part of the scope of ITS.
>
>
> CL>> I guess your point is valid in the sense that one could go for
> CL>> something like <its:domainRule selector="/h:html/h:body" ...
> CL>> domainMapping="FIN, 'A A-1 A1-A1X'"/>.
> CL>> However, this would require that additional information would have
> CL>> to be captured elsewhere (so that for example, the precedence
> CL>> 'A > A-1 > A1-A1X' could be captured).
>
> ITS doesn't prescribe what the right part of the mapping must be or how it should be used.
> It's really just a way to allow user-defined mechanisms to be connected to the input metadata.
> I suppose it is also beyond the scope of ITS.

As I understand Christian he does not ask to prescripe a mapping, but 
"to accomodate for heterogeneity": allow people to formulate their own 
mapping.

I think we do that: we don't make the usage of the mapping attribute 
mandatory. It is an optional attribute. If "our" mapping algorithm 
doesn't respond to a specific mapping approach, everybody can implement 
his own mapping.

This is similar to matching of language tags, see
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647#section-3.2

"Language tag matching is a tool, and does not by itself specify a    
complete procedure for the use of language tags.  Such procedures are    
intimately tied to the application protocol in which they occur."
The matching specification itself makes clear that it there are many 
aspects that are left out for actually using language tags. But having 
no matching at all would be even less interoperability, hence the 
"imperfect" matching scheme.

Best,

Felix

>
>
> cheers,
> -yves
>
>
>

Received on Tuesday, 15 January 2013 07:10:50 UTC