Petri nets: an introduction
Adding browsing semantics to the hypertext model
DOCPROCS '88 Proceedings of the ACM conference on Document processing systems
Petri-net-based hypertext: document structure with browsing semantics
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
Programmable browsing semantics in Trellis
HYPERTEXT '89 Proceedings of the second annual ACM conference on Hypertext
Document Formatting Systems: Survey, Concepts, and Issues
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
DocEng '01 Proceedings of the 2001 ACM Symposium on Document engineering
Petri Net Theory and the Modeling of Systems
Petri Net Theory and the Modeling of Systems
Proceedings of the 2002 ACM symposium on Document engineering
A generalized approach to document markup
Proceedings of the ACM SIGPLAN SIGOA symposium on Text manipulation
Context-aware hypermedia in a dynamically changing environment, supported by a high-level petri net
Context-aware hypermedia in a dynamically changing environment, supported by a high-level petri net
Language-theoretic classification of hypermedia paths
Proceedings of the fifteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
Proceedings of the fifteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
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The benefits of separating document structure from presentation have long been understood—e.g., the distinction between the SGML and DSSSL standards as well as the ODA standard's separation of layout and logical structure. More recently, the breadth of applications incorporating XML specifications have provided further evidence in the context of the World-Wide Web of the strength of the abstraction that this separation provides. The structure/presentation separation, focused on describing the characteristics of documents, usefully can be extended to encompass the additional characteristics of interactive hypertextual documents, such as the Web's—for example, specifying the hypertext's responses to the reader's actions remains outside of the scope of the structure/presentation representation. We have explored one such family of models in which the hypertext is modeled by an automaton structure rather than a graph structure. In this paper, I will discuss how these new articulation points have lead to investigations into novel and flexible hypertext/hypermedia system implementations.