- Symbolics Document Examiner
Symbolics Document Examiner was a powerful and early
hypertext system developed atSymbolics (a manufacturer of high-endworkstation s) byJanet Walker in1985 . The Symbolics Document Examiner was first used for a hypertext implementation of the Symbolics manual in the sixth release of the Genera OS, and was well-liked, winning an award from theSociety of Technical Documentation . ["The Document Examiner included with Release 6 won an award from the Society of Technical Documentation. The Symbolics Graphics Division introduced S-Paint, S! ! -Geometry, S-Render, and S-Dynamics as part of an integrated video-compatible image-making and image-processing facility." " [http://www.sts.tu-harburg.de/~r.f.moeller/symbolics-info/symbolics-tech-summary.html Symbolics Technical Summary] ", 1985]The Symbolics manual was an 8,000 page document that was represented in a 10,000 node "hyperdocument" containing 23,000 links in all. The entire manual required 10 MB of storage space - a significant amount in 1985, even on the
Lisp machine s Symbolics sold. The Symbolics Document Examiner used a hierarchical structure, which differed from other experimental hypertext systems; it apparently was partially inspired by an even earlier hypertext system, the precursor toTexinfo which originated withEmacs ["We saw no reason to have the underlying information structure be reflected in the user interface model unless that structure was a good model for interacting with information. My experience in trying to help users with a tree-structured information interface (the INFO subsystem in EMACS) led me to believe that a book-like interface would be more palatable for many people." pg 8 of Janet H. Walker's " [http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=317448&coll=portal&dl=ACM Document Examiner: Delivery Interface for Hypertext Documents] ". 1987, "Proceeding of the ACM conference on Hypertext"]Symbolics Document Examiner users could add bookmarks, which allowed returning to specific items easier; this method was later incorporated in graphical
web browser s. The system also supported on-line substring searching. The biggest drawback to the Symbolics Document Examiner was that users could not make changes to any information or to a document's navigation.The authoring environment for the Document Examiner was Symbolics Concordia. With Symbolics Concordia it was possible to edit all documentation.
References
External links
* [http://www.sts.tu-harburg.de/~r.f.moeller/symbolics-info/docex/docex.html Symbolics Document Examiner screenshots]
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