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#1
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Do the botanists need a XML data modeling/data entry tool?
Hello,
I'm Kevin Garwood, a software developer at the University of Manchester. We've just finished making Pedro, a free data modelling tool that renders XML data entry forms for a model expressed in a particular style of XMLSchema. The tool is featured in this month's Nature Biotech Issue: "A systematic approach to modeling, capturing, and disseminating proteomics experimental data". (http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/dynapa.../n3/index.html) The application was originally developed for the proteomics community, but it is actually domain independent. In the download, you'll see a proteomics data model and a crude model on botany. [For the botanists who do download the application, please know that I built the data model very quickly and used some field guides on flowers in Britain. Your models will doubtlessly make way more sense!) Imagine for a moment that you want a tool that lets you do rapid data modelling, so that your group can come to a consensus about what kind of data to record in your experiment files. With Pedro, once you've developed your own data model, you immediately have a data entry tool that lets you produce XML files that conform to that model. Now suppose you want to put in field-based validation that picks up simple errors such as leaving required fields blank, typing a number that lies outside of an acceptable domain, or having a date field that doesn't conform to a particular format. In addition, you can cause Pedro to validate a field against a regular expression. Pedro has some neat features: *it's free, open-source, and we're going to support it on reserved bug-fix/software development time blocks *allows your users to tag text fields with terms taken from controlled vocabulary services (botany has a lot of classification in it so this might be especially useful). *context sensitive help that links to HTML document pages made and maintained by the model developer *field-based validation, including the ability to have fields validated against regular expressions *genomics and proteomics communities are already expressing interests in the tool When you first use Pedro, you'll probably incrementally tune a data model with the fields and validation you want. Then you'll have a data entry tool others can use to make XML data files. We're curious about whether some of you might want to use Pedro to design data models for a variety of scientific fields such as immunology, chemistry, physics... Please let us know what you think! Kevin Garwood Work: http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/~garwood Personal: http://uk.geocities.com/zaredbaron |
#2
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Do the botanists need a XML data modeling/data entry tool?
Kevin, do you know about TDWG? If not, you should join them.
Una Smith Los Alamos National Laboratory, MS K-710, Los Alamos, NM 87545 |
#4
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Do the botanists need a XML data modeling/data entry tool?
Phred wrote:
What/who is TDWG? http://www.tdwg.org/ Una Smith Los Alamos National Laboratory, MS K-710, Los Alamos, NM 87545 |
#5
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Do the botanists need a XML data modeling/data entry tool?
Hi!
I can't believe I didn't post the link! Argh! I apologise! Get it at: http://pedrodownload.man.ac.uk My info: Right now you can reach me at: +44 0161 275 0647. I'd prefer you e-mailed me, only because we're moving upstairs within half a month and I can't take my phone with me! Work web address: http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/~garwood -- I'm trying to upgrade the way it looks. Personal web address: http://uk.geocities.com/zaredbaron. Address: Kilburn Building The University of Manchester Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL UK Sorry! Kev |
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