Hypertext and the Oxford English dictionary
Communications of the ACM
Hypertext engineering: practical methods for creating a compact disk encyclopedia
DOCPROCS '88 Proceedings of the ACM conference on Document processing systems
The SGML implementation guide: a blueprint for SGML migration
The SGML implementation guide: a blueprint for SGML migration
An XML framework for agent-based E-commerce
Communications of the ACM
Requirements for XML document database systems
DocEng '01 Proceedings of the 2001 ACM Symposium on Document engineering
An Introduction to Database Systems
An Introduction to Database Systems
Developing SGML DTDs: From Text to Model to Markup
Developing SGML DTDs: From Text to Model to Markup
Designing And Managing The Supply Chain
Designing And Managing The Supply Chain
Context representation, transformation and comparison for ad hoc product data exchange
Proceedings of the 2003 ACM symposium on Document engineering
Interactive office documents: a new face for web 2.0 applications
Proceedings of the eighth ACM symposium on Document engineering
Business to business interoperability: A current review of XML data integration standards
Computer Standards & Interfaces
XML schema-driven GUI forms environment
SEA '07 Proceedings of the 11th IASTED International Conference on Software Engineering and Applications
Semantics-enriched document exchange
Proceedings of the 10th ACM symposium on Document engineering
Simple metric for assessing quality of service design
ICSOC'10 Proceedings of the 2010 international conference on Service-oriented computing
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It can be said that "document exchange" is the "mother of all patterns" for business (and for e-business). Yet, by itself this view isn't sufficiently prescriptive. In this paper, we present additional perspectives or frameworks that make this abstraction more rigorous and useful. We describe an approach to artifact-driven analysis, model refinement, and implementation for document-intensive systems that unifies the "document analysis" approach from publishing and the "data analysis" approach from information systems. These traditionally contrasting approaches to understanding documents are unified in an "Analysis Spectrum" in which presentational, structural, and content components assume different weights or status. Our methodology emphasizes reuse with a "Reuse Matrix," in which both business process (or document exchange) patterns and document schema patterns are organized by different levels of abstraction and scope. Enterprise-level patterns like "supply chain" and "marketplace" can fit into this matrix along with process patterns like "RosettaNet PIP" and document patterns like the "XML Common Business Library." Taken together, these concepts form the foundation of a new discipline: "Document Engineering for e-Business.