On 17 July 2015 at 15:23, Regina Henschel <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Jan, > > jan i schrieb: > >> Hi >> >> Can someone please help me understand the implications of this: >> >> https://blog.documentfoundation.org/2015/07/17/open-document-format-odf-1-2-published-as-international-standard-263002015-by-isoiec/ >> >> Do we also support ODF 1.2 ? >> if yes, then we should also tell it, if not what are the implications ? >> >> I thought ODF 1.2 was relative old, but I might be wrong. >> >> thanks for any information. >> >> > In regard to marketing, read > http://listarchives.documentfoundation.org/www/announce/msg00240.html > > ODF 1.2 is not old, but the current version of the standard. Work has > started for an errata to 1.2 and for a version 1.3, but both are in a very > early stage. There are currently only about ten active members in the > Technical Committee and they do not work on the standard in full time [in > my case all is in my spare time], therefore the progress is very slow. > > ODF 1.2 is the native format for documents generated by AOO, but there > exists still some elements in ODF 1.2, which AOO does not support. > > ODF 1.2 is an implementer driven standard. You should not think, that > there is a group of people, who invents the standard, and then application > developers will implement it. That is not the way standardization works. > What really happens is, that the application developers implement features > to satisfy their customers. And when this feature is not only implemented > in one application, but in others too, then this feature is considered to > go into the next version of the standard. Currently those features are of > interest, which improve interoperability with OOXML, and "change tracking" > is of special interest. > > Therefore the file format is not "ODF 1.2" but "ODF 1.2 extended". AOO > writes always "ODF 1.2. extended", LO has an option to write pure "ODF > 1.2". The ODF 1.2 standard uses the mechanism of namespaces to make such > extensions possible. When such feature goes into the standard, then the > code has to be changed to read and write the new standardized element. On > reading a document, the element in AOO namespace will then be mapped to the > corresponding element from the standard. Such change is not really > difficult, because AOO does not work on the file format directly but has > its own internal model. > thanks a lot for taking time to explain it in an understandable way. To be honest I had the wrong impression of how these standards come to be. rgds jan I. > > Kind regards > Regina > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] > >
