Ron,
I guess that I did not explain adequately. Class is not the dimensional
unit. We have many classes already implicit in the names (na, iso, asme, jis
etc). The intent is to use the fact that the sizes in each class implicitly
define the measurement units, just as in your original proposal. The change
adds no additional parsing requirements over what was required before. And
if, as is reasonably expected, a standard printer or driver need not know
anything but inches and mm, then it need just recognize NA and OE classes as
English units with all other as metric.
The idea of adding an explicit units field was discussed, and dismissed as
redundant. It is unclear that there is any benefit in the redundancy.
Bill Wagner
-----Original Message-----
From: Bergman, Ron [mailto:Ron.Bergman at Hitachi-hkis.com]
Sent: Monday, April 30, 2001 8:25 PM
To: 'Wagner,William'; Bergman, Ron; 'Harry Lewis'; Hastings, Tom N; Don
Wright (E-mail)
Cc: IPP Group; Norbert Schade; Mark VanderWiele; 'RonBergman at aol.com'
Subject: RE: IPP> global media; comment on yesterday's proposal
Bill,
Thank you for the explanation. I am sure this was extensively
discussed at the meeting and I wish I could have attended.
I have no problem with the concept of "class". It certainly is cleaner
than my original proposal of "na indicates the dimensions are in inches
and all others are metric." And I also agree that the concept of class
allows possible future expansion.
As long as we are adding the "class" part it should be very well
defined as to the meaning of the classes. Since we really only have
2 classes currently defined, I would suggest that they be called:
'inch' or 'in' for the class that specifies inch dimensions.
'millimeters' or 'mm' for the class that specifies mm dimensions.
Examples: in_na-letter_8.5-11
mm_iso-a4_210-297
Although this results in a longer total name, I feel it is cleaner
and does not require a parser in a simple printer to decode a large
number of names for metric sizes. And I don't see how this breaks
the ability to add additional sizes in the future. In fact, this
allows a device to quickly recognize that it does not understand the
class if another class is defined. And it may prevent problems, since
under the Portland agreement the device may look for 'na' as inches
and anything else as millimeters.
Ron
-----Original Message-----
From: Wagner,William [mailto:wwagner at netsilicon.com]
Sent: Monday, April 30, 2001 4:15 PM
To: 'Bergman, Ron'; 'Harry Lewis'; Hastings, Tom N; Don Wright (E-mail)
Cc: IPP Group; Norbert Schade; Mark VanderWiele; 'RonBergman at aol.com'
Subject: RE: IPP> global media; comment on yesterday's proposal
Ron,
I think the point is that the "Class" is already required in most of the
instances as part of the common name (NA, iso, jis, etc.) The units are
implicit in the class, but are not the only reason for the class. This is
what was done before. The only change was to make this relation more clear,
consistent and expandable by representing class as a separate field and by
defining classes for those few sizes that did not already have one
associated. The reason that there are many classes identified are that
there are many classes in common use. And yes, one of the objections made to
the original proposal was that it did not allow for other units; allowing
that is a by-product of the proposed approach; it is not the primary intent.
Bill Wagner
-----Original Message-----
From: Bergman, Ron [mailto:Ron.Bergman at Hitachi-hkis.com]
Sent: Monday, April 30, 2001 4:45 PM
To: 'Harry Lewis'; Hastings, Tom N; Don Wright (E-mail)
Cc: IPP Group; Norbert Schade; Mark VanderWiele; 'RonBergman at aol.com'
Subject: RE: IPP> global media; comment on yesterday's proposal
Harry,
I thought that Norbert's proposal was cleaner than the complicated
"class" proposal made in Portland. I have been trying to understand
the purpose of "class", other than to define the size. Unless, there
is another purpose, why do we need so many ways to indicate mm?
The need for iso, jis, jpn, prc, asme, and etc etc seems to make a
simple task vary complex.
I still prefer the definition of all sizes in their native dimensions,
rather than a conversion to a common base. But unless we can simplify
the "class" to just inches and mm, I would favor Norbert's method.
I like all the other suggestions from Portland, but this one does not
appear correct.
Ron
-----Original Message-----
From: Harry Lewis [mailto:harryl at us.ibm.com]
Sent: Sunday, April 29, 2001 9:24 PM
To: Hastings, Tom N
Cc: IPP Group; Norbert Schade; Mark VanderWiele
Subject: RE: IPP> global media; comment on yesterday's proposal
This "shows to go ya" that we still don't (collectively) agree on the
purpose of the "self describing name". Seems the folks who write drivers
feel more natural operating in one set of units. (Norbets comments are
similar to those I received from our driver folks).
BUT....
in Portland (at least) we spent quite some time hammering out the intent
of this beast... which I would describe as...
STANDARD media size "names" with distinct elements ("class", "size name"
and "dimensions") in a (machine and developer-human) parsable syntax.
The "class" is supposed to indicate the units (typically inches or mm...
but hypothetically angstrom's or whatever if appropriate... which is
unlikely).
It would seem counter intuitive for "na_letter" to be represented in mm as
it is well known in the industry as "English".
Conversions are the realm of the application. If a driver wants to
(convert the English) and store everything in mm... that's OK... but the
STANDARD name should not change.
----------------------------------------------
Harry Lewis
IBM Printing Systems
----------------------------------------------
"Hastings, Tom N" <hastings at cp10.es.xerox.com>
Sent by: owner-ipp at pwg.org
04/27/2001 05:22 PM
To: Norbert Schade <norbertschade at oaktech.com>
cc: IPP Group <ipp at pwg.org>
Subject: RE: IPP> global media; comment on yesterday's
proposal
Norbert,
So your proposal is to always use one set of units, namely 1000ths of a mm
(i.e., a micrometer); never use inches for any media sizes. It certainly
is simple.
1000th of a mm is precise enough so that the English sizes can be
represented in 1000ths of a mm without round off error (which would create
differences in names, if some rounded and others truncated).
We used the same strategy of using only a single unit system in the IPP
Production Printing Attributes - Set1 extension, instead of having both
metric and English. The only minor difference was that we used 100th of a
mm, instead of 1000th of a mm for use in the "media-size" member attribute
of the "media-col" attribute. We felt that was precise enough. See
section 3.13.8 in:
ftp://ftp.pwg.org/pub/pwg/standards/pwg5100.3.pdf, .doc, .rtf
The 1000th of a mm is one of the two units used in the Printer MIB (the
other being 10000th of an inch).
We did agree at the meeting that the client shouldn't simply display the
Media Size name to the user if it doesn't have it in its localization data
base (thought there will always be simple minded clients that will). The
client should do some parsing and possible converting of units to the one
that the user prefers. So there is no real advantage to the client to
have the units be in inches for English sizes and metric for metric sizes
(except for the really simple clients that never convert units).
What do others think of just always using micrometers for the size
dimensions for our Media Size Self Describing Names?
Tom
-----Original Message-----
From: Norbert Schade [mailto:norbertschade at oaktech.com]
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2001 13:50
To: IPP Group
Subject: IPP> global media; comment on yesterday's proposal
I have my problems with the new proposal.
I am going to rephrase my previous statements commenting that proposal.
Splitting the media size name into three components (unit, name,
dimensions) is a very new idea.
My main problem with this proposal is the first component.
In Ron's current version of the spec we have two units: inch/1000 and
mm/10. We have implemented that version to learn about problems.
With the new proposal there is the danger to have an even bigger number of
units.
Supporting more than one unit is a serious problem for any driver. Ask any
driver developer. It's not about what unit I want to show in the UI. It's
about necessary conversions when dealing with applications. Please study
Mark's feedback from 4/20. I repeat it in easy words (I hope).
Scenario excerpt
1. Workstation 1 with driver 1
Driver 1 is supporting a media size 'Letter.2159-2794' (the developer of
the driver has chosen the metric way). You could do the sample with any
other size.
2. User 1 sitting at workstation 1 writes one page of text with
application xyz and saves the document.
this means that the size information 'Letter.2159-2794' is saved in the
document file as well in many, many applications.
3. User 1 sends his document to user 2.
4. User 2 sitting at workstation 2 with driver 2 (different from driver 1)
opens the document. This second the driver 2 is already involved.
5. Imagine driver 2 is not supporting 'Letter.2159-2794', but
'na-Letter.8500-1100' instead, which in fact is the same size with a
different name.
Now it's the question what is driver 2 doing.
It could start some investigation to match or emulate the required size.
-> bad performance.
The same situation will happen again when printing. It will happen very
often, repeatedly.
So we already have a problem with two units. If we now open a gate to be
able to define even more units, it will be aweful code and a terrible
performance. Every driver developer should be able to prove that.
However everything would be fine, if there'd be one and one only unit.
Make it small enough that any rounding for a UI string or whatever is
needed, can be done properly. Our proposal within UPDF was mm/1000, which
is certainly small enough (and used in the industry anyhow).
I treated strings like 'jis' or 'iso' just as parts of the name to make it
more apparent. 'na' was the only exception so far.
If all names are unique (I think they are in Ron's current concept), I
don't have a problem splitting the name and the dimensions into two
components. In that case we may even work with the name only and handle
the dimensions with an include file.
I thought the idea of combining the name and the dimensions is ok, as we
need it for custom size anyhow.
BTW: I am happy to have proper keywords, but my drivers certainly will
never, never, never show them in the UI. Be also sure that in UPDF we are
providing the chance to assign a proper human readable UI string to it.
So from a driver's point of view the easiest case is to work with 1 unit
(mm/1000), remove the prefix 'na-' and convert all the dimensions.
This ensures a good performance, consistent routines and readability.
Whatever the internal unit of a driver is, it most probably has all
converting routines available to work with 1 unit, but not all necessary
functions to match between different units.
I would be very surprised if Mark does not feel very, very similarly,
although I have been told differently today. Unfortunately I couldn't get
hold of him on his trip today.
I call this proposal '1unit mm/1000, unchanged naming', where unchanged
naming means no separate components, but converted dimensions into that 1
unit. I do not insist on unchanged naming, but I haven't seen the big
advantage of it so far.
Regards
Norbert Schade
Principle Software Engineer
Host Software Group
Oak Technology, Inc.
10 Presidential Way
Woburn, MA 01801
USA
Phone: 1-781-638-7614
Fax: 1-781-638-7555
email: norbertschade at oaktech.com