- From: Michael Scott Cuthbert <cuthbert@mit.edu>
- Date: Sun, 6 Dec 2020 23:07:18 +0000
- To: Karim Ratib <karim.ratib@gmail.com>
- CC: W3C Music Notation <public-music-notation@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <3D607FE8-5DC6-4404-8930-8A7A2B205C91@mit.edu>
This is a very beautiful and useful way of presenting — I encourage others to consider including it in the workflow. Myke On Dec 6, 2020, at 11:09, Karim Ratib <karim.ratib@gmail.com<mailto:karim.ratib@gmail.com>> wrote: For what it's worth, I produced an HTML version of the MusicXML 3.1 XSD using a tool called xs3p and xsltproc. Although it's significantly simpler than the official (but obsolete) user manual, it has a number of advantages that I outline on a blog post at https://blog.karimratib.me/2020/12/06/document-musicxml.html. The result is at https://blog.karimratib.me/musicxml.html. If there's interest from the community here, we can enhance the XSLT transformation as needed, and automate the conversion process using a GitHub Action every time a change is made to musicxml.xsd. On Fri, Nov 20, 2020 at 11:36 AM Karim Ratib <karim.ratib@gmail.com<mailto:karim.ratib@gmail.com>> wrote: I've been using https://usermanuals.musicxml.com/MusicXML/Content/MusicXMLReference.htm as a browsable reference for MusicXML, but I notice it was last updated in 2015. Is there an up-to-date documentation site for version 3.1? https://w3c.github.io/musicxml/ does not seem to include the full documentation - only changes. If it's not available anywhere, and given some interest from the community, I'd be happy to engage in standing up a site generator for the latest version that can be kept updated with GitHub commits.
Received on Sunday, 6 December 2020 23:07:41 UTC