CALS Table Model


The CALS Table Model is a standard for representing tables in SGML/XML. It was developed as part of the CALS DOD initiative.

History and Rationale

The CALS Table Model was developed by the CALS Industry Steering Group Electronic Publishing Committee.
The EPC subcommittee, of which Harvey Bingham was co-chair and a major contributor, designed the CALS Table Model in 1989-1990. The EPC was made up of industry and military service representatives. Some represented traditional military document printing agencies. Others represented electronic publishing organizations. SGML itself was new. At that time, the CALS intent for all their technical manuals was to use that DTD to achieve system-neutral interchange of content and structure.
Its basis was a minimal description and example of a table from the prior Mil-M-38784B specification for producing technical manuals. The incomplete specification of the semantics associated with the table model allowed too much freedom for vendor interpretation, and resulted in problems with interchange. SGML-Open surveyed the implementing vendors to identify differences, as the initial step toward reaching a common interpretation. The next step was an updated CALS Table Model DTD and semantics. Both are now available from
OASIS.
As implementations of the CALS Table Model were developed, a number of ambiguities and omissions were detected and reported to the EPC committee. The differences in interpretation had led to serious interoperability problems. To resolve these differences,
OASIS identified a subset of the full CALS table model that had a high probability of successful interoperability among the OASIS vendor products. This subset is
the Exchange Table Model DTD.

Example









name



pyro-EGTA
2,2',2,2-) bistetraacetic acid


EGTA
ethylene glycol-bis-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid


EDTA
2,2',2
,2-tetraacetic acid

AATA
2,2'- phenylazanediyl)diacetic acid


APTRA
2-carboxymethoxy-aniline-N,N-diacetic acid


BAPTA
1,2-bisethane- N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid


HIDA
N-iminodiacetic acid


Carboxyglutamate
3-Aminopropane-1,1,3-tricarboxylic acid


Footnotes