Structured writing

Structured writing is a form of technical writing that uses and creates structured documents.

The term was coined by Robert E. Horn and became a central part of his Information Mapping method of analyzing, organizing, and displaying knowledge in print and in the new online presentation of text and graphics.

Horn and colleagues identified dozens of common documentation types, then analyzed them into structural components called information blocks. They identified over 200 common block types. These were assembled into information types using information maps.

The seven most common information types were concept, procedure, process, principle, fact, structure, and classification.

These types are loosely related to the three basic information types in Darwin Information Typing Architecture (DITA): concept, task, and reference. An Information Mapping procedure is a set of steps for a person. A process is a set of steps for a system. Both resemble the DITA task. DITA topics are assembled into documents using DITA maps.

Some of the problems that structured writing addresses

Structured writing has been developed to address common problems in complex writing:[1]

References

Notes

  1. Horn, Robert E. (1998). "Structured Writing as a Paradigm" (PDF). rhetcomp.gsu.edu. Educational Technology Publications. Retrieved 22 October 2014.
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