| Uh-oh... Microsoft Office 2007 not OK with OOXML |
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| by Alex Zaharov-Reutt | |
| Wednesday, 23 April 2008 | |
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Page 1 of 3 OOXML is Microsoft’s own XML standard, which was rushed through the ISO standardisations process, and which passed as a standard, reportedly by a slim margin, leading to two competing XML document formats: ODF, used in Open Office, an open source Microsoft Office clone, and OOXML, Microsoft’s ‘new’ XML standard. Brown said that he was “excited to receive from Murata Makoto a set of the RELAX NG schemas for the (post-BRM) revision of OOXML, and thought it would be interesting to validate some real-world content against them, to get a rough idea of how non-conformant the standardisation of 29500 had made MS Office 2007.” Brown’s blog post goes into much more detail on the testing, but in short, there are two “conformance” models – ‘strict’ and ‘transitional’. Testing against the ‘strict’ model, 122,000 ‘invalidity messages’ were generated, while testing against the ‘transitional’ model saw only 84 errors of the same type occur: “<m:degHide m:val="on"/>”. Brown suggests that Microsoft can rectify this situation with a service pack or other Office 2007 update, and wonders how compliant the ODF standard would be if similarly tested, saying that he wants to “repeat the exercise with ISO/IEC 26300:2006 (ODF 1.0) and a popular implementation of OpenDocument”, and he asks if “anybody [will] be brave enough to predict what kind of result that exercise will have?” Please read onto page 2 to see a response to Brown’s testing. |
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