WYSIWYM is an alternative to WYSIWYG. The acronym refers to slightly different things depending on the context of use.
The term WYSIWYM is also used for XML editorsXML: WYSIWYG to WYSIWYM - A brief look at XML document authoring An article on existing XML authoring software (May 2005) that do not display the formatting of the XML Data. Since XML does not define the actual formatting of the XML content, these editors are very useful in visually creating the data.
A specialized editor lets a user repeatedly select and refine spans of an initially more or less vacuous text, such as the sentence An event occurs. Using a mouse, place-holders in the initial text can be further refined by choosing options that are generated by natural language generation technology based on an ontology. During this process and invisible to the user, an underlying knowledge representation is created which can be used for multilingual document generation, formal knowledge formation, or any other task that requires formally specified information.
The team that developed WYSIWYM at Brighton University has moved to the Open University in 2005 and is now generalizing the approach to something they call Conceptual AuthoringConceptual Authoring explained by the Natural Language Generation group of the Open University.
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