Thursday, May 29, 2008

Part 2: Top 6 books for people starting XML/SGML publishing projects

This is part two of a four-part series.

I have never found the one book that describes how to put it all together. These are the top 5 books, I'd recommend to anyone starting a single-sourcing project. They're a selection of books from both sides of the issue: the writing side and the programming side. Together, they begin to bring any project into focus.

  1. The XML Handbook (2nd Edition) - Charles Goldfarb & Paul Prescod (Prentice Hall:2000) (ISBN: 0130147141)

    All about XML.

  2. Definitive XSLT and XPath - G. Ken Holman (Prentice Hall:2002) (ISBN: 0130651966)

    This is the ultimate xlst & xpath book.

  3. Definitive XSL-FO (Charles F. Goldfarb Definitive XML Series) - G. Ken Holman (Pearson Education:2003) (ISBN: 0131403745)

    The authority for learning XSL-FO

  4. Developing SGML DTDs: From Text to Model to Markup - Eve Maler & Jeanne El Andaloussi (Prentice Hall PTR:1996) (ISBN: 0133098818)

    Although this book is written about SGML, the basics for data modeling are all here and apply to XML projects as much as to SGML projects. This is a great basic data modeling beginner's book.

  5. Single Sourcing: Building Modular Documentation - Kurt Ament (Noyes Data Corporation/Noyes Publications:2002) (ISBN: 0815514913)

    An excellent book for people staring single-sourcing projects. How to plan and implement as well as how to handle the inevitable staff issues.

  6. Introduction to DITA: A User Guide to the Darwin Information Typing Architecture Arbortext Edition - JoAnn Hackos

    Procedures and Examples in this book use Arbortext Editor.


Read the complete series:

  1. Part 1: Resources for folks doing single-sourcing projects

  2. Part 2: Top 6 book choices

  3. Part 3: Top 12 online topic-specific resources

  4. Part 4: Top 4 resources for Arbortext users.

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