RE: XForms, Performance Plans/Reports & StratML

Looks good for a prototype, Alain.  

 

I’ll look forward to seeing how something like it can be done with more complex forms like this one -- http://stratml.us/forms/Part2Form.xml -- which does not use CSS, at least not yet.

 

Owen

 

From: Alain Couthures <alain.couthures@agencexml.com> 
Sent: Sunday, September 2, 2018 3:31 PM
To: Owen Ambur <Owen.Ambur@verizon.net>; 'XForms' <public-xformsusers@w3.org>
Cc: Sandro Hawke <sandro@w3.org>
Subject: Re: XForms, Performance Plans/Reports & StratML

 

Owen,

I have now implemented expand/collapse appearance for groups in XSLTForms for evaluation. Please have a look at http://www.agencexml.com/collapse/collapse.xml

Adding appearance="expand" or appearance="collapse" is just required! Up and down triangle arrows are inserted with CSS so rendering can be adjusted rather easily.

--Alain

Le 22/08/2018 à 16:07, Owen Ambur a écrit :

Steven, here's the text of the law I mentioned on the XForms call a few minutes ago:  https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/open-machine-readable-government-owen-ambur/  

 

My StratML colleagues and I are trying to remove as many obstacles as possible so that U.S. federal agencies are left with few excuses for failing to comply with the law ... which, incidentally, establishes good practice for the plans and reports of all organizations, worldwide, whose activities should be matters of public record.  See the use cases documented thus far at http://stratml.us/carmel/iso/UC4SwStyle.xml

 

Internationally speaking, the *Open* Government Partnership (OGP) is an egregious example:  https://www.opengovpartnership.org/participants The national action plans as well as the OGP’s own report are still being published in PDF:  https://www.opengovpartnership.org/sites/default/files/OGP_Year-Review_20180504.pdf Assuming good faith on their part, they simply don’t understand the concept of “openness” in terms of XML/XSD validity.  So it is up to us to show them the benefits of well-structured and semantically well-defined content.

 

In the meantime, being able to expand and collapse sections of lengthy plans and reports will help to remove one excuse for failure to publish plans and reports in open, standard, machine-readable format.  Unless and until public agencies begin to comply with the law, citizens and taxpayers will have little cause to consider them credible and trustworthy.

 

Owen Ambur

Chair, StratML <http://stratml.us/>  Working Group

Co-Chair Emeritus, xml.gov CoP <http://xml.govwebs.net/> 

Webmaster, FIRM <http://firmcouncil.org/> 

Profile <https://www.linkedin.com/in/owenambur>  on LinkedIn | Personal Home Page <http://ambur.net/> 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Steven Pemberton  <mailto:steven.pemberton@cwi.nl> <steven.pemberton@cwi.nl> 
Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2018 7:15 AM
To: XForms  <mailto:public-xformsusers@w3.org> <public-xformsusers@w3.org>
Subject: Collapsing sections

 

Someone asked me about doing collapsing sections in XForms, so I wrote an  

article:

 

    <https://homepages.cwi.nl/%7Esteven/xforms/techniques/collapsing.html> https://homepages.cwi.nl/~steven/xforms/techniques/collapsing.html

 

Comments gratefully received.

 

Steven

 

 

Received on Monday, 3 September 2018 00:28:09 UTC