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e-RMA - Delivery options

The following information details the most common formats or mediums that can be used to deliver online information and services. It is not an exhaustive list and you should focus on what is required by the actions, rather than on technology when considering the suitability of options.

Portable Document Format (PDF)

What is it?

PDF is a way of viewing files online. Documents appear exactly like the original version but the sophisticated viewing features offered by PDF mean that it is more than a simple photographic replica. A number of programmes can be used to convert documents into PDF, including Adobe PageMaker and Adobe Acrobat.

PDFs retain their appearance across all platforms, and can be viewed independently of the software, hardware and operating system used to create the file. This provides it with a major advantage over Word or HTML documents. All that is required to read a PDF file is Adobe Acrobat Reader (AAR), a free and readily available programme that is already installed on most computers or can be downloaded from the Adobe website.

PDF does not format documents - it simply converts, without alteration, the format of the original document. In setting up a PDF document security controls can be used to permit or limit printing, copying and modifications.

Other features of PDF include:

Advantages

Disadvantages

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 Hypertext mark-up language (HTML)

HTML (hypertext markup language) is the name of the code used to create web pages and is probably the most successful document markup language in the world. Hypertext refers to the use of cross-references or links between bodies of text or images in electronic medium. HTML provides the ability to insert electronic links within the same document or externally to other documents. For example, planning maps can contain direct links to relevant provisions within a district plan, such as the relevant item on a district plan 's schedule of heritage features.

HTML uses hidden instructions (ie, 'marking up ' or 'tags ') to provide structure to information. The most common use of HTML is to create web pages with the format or design of web pages increasingly being achieved through the use of style sheets (eg, such as Cascading Style Sheets).

Formatting an HTML document is not simple, and amending the code to update an HTML-based web page (other than very simple pages) is often not an easy process, particularly when compared with a PDF document. However, a number of proprietary programmes exist which require minimal knowledge of HTML language. These include Macromedia 's Dreamweaver or Microsoft 's SharePoint Designer and Expression Web. In addition to these programs there are a number of free HTML editors that are available on the internet, but these may lack much of the functionality and site management of the proprietary products.

Documents created in HTML can have the following features:

Advantages

Disadvantages

Further reading

HTML and XHTML Frequently Asked Questions

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 Extensible mark-up language (XML)

XML is a cross-platform, software- and hardware-independent tool for transmitting information. A good way to describe XML is that it is a recognised standard or protocol for the way to describe information. It does not format documents but is a behind the scenes form of defining the data displayed on-screen. Visually it is difficult to determine whether a document is in XML or not.

While the use of XML is likely to be widespread in future, XML is currently not a replacement for HTML as most web browsers cannot readily use XML-based information. XML will therefore be used to describe the data, while PDF or HTML will still need to be used to present the information on individual browsers.

XML and HTML were designed with different goals: XML was designed to describe data and to focus on what that data is, while HTML was designed to display and structure data. XML is used to describe and carry data, with the author of the document defining all XML tags for marking up the contents.

At present few browsers would be able to directly handle XML documents, and XML documents would still need to be made available through other mediums. For example, documents created using Word can be converted into XML documents and 'published ' electronically using PDF or Rich Text mediums.

XML has been created to structure, store and send information. It is not a proprietary language - anyone can use it, and no special software is required to use it - it is simply information wrapped in tags (or labels). The author of a document in XML invents the tags to be used for that document, and they are not predefined by anyone else. The tags must, however, conform to a prescribed set of protocols (or schema). For example, different RMA plans should use compatible tags to provide consistent descriptions and allow for broader searching.

XML has the potential to make plans prepared in XML much more flexible, with the information described (ie, marked-up) in such a way as to help people use the plan (eg, in searching for information on a common topic such as all rules relating to forestry).

However, the use of XML in formal and widespread public documents such as RMA plans will be most effectively and efficiently achieved through the development and use of widely accepted schema (ie, an agreed tag structure of an XML-encoded document) to provide, for example, common descriptions to assist document searching. Until this work is done the focus should be on extending the current use of HTML and PDF for putting plans online.

Other features of XML include:

In New Zealand two large projects are currently using XML-based technology.

 The New Zealand Electronic Text Centre at Victoria University of Wellington is making New Zealand material available for study through the use of XML.

The 'Public Access to Legislation (PAL)' project of the Parliamentary Counsel Office is designed to improve the way New Zealand legislation, including Bills, is made publicly available. The aim of the PAL Project is to provide public access to up-to-date official legislation in both printed and electronic form. The PAL Project is part of the Government 's e-Government vision, which specifically refers to people being better informed because they can get up-to-date and comprehensive information about government statutes, regulations, policies and services.

Advantages

Disadvantages

Further reading

Extensible Markup Language (XML)

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