In the early 1980s, IBM developed a dedicated publishing tool called Information Structure Identification Language (ISIL) based on GML. ISIL was used to generate much of IBM documentation for the
IBM PC and other products at this time. In the late 1980s, a commercial product called BookMaster was developed, based mostly on ISIL. During the early 1980s, Don Williams at IBM developed DWScript to use the SCRIPT/VS on the IBM PC. In 1986, he developed a PC version of ISIL called DWISIL. These products were used only internally at IBM. IBM uses GML as description language on
IBM i and predecessors for objects called "panel groups". Panel groups can present just formatted help text to the user when pressing the
help key (often F1), resemble the typical IBM i menus with embedded help texts, or complete application displays with input/output fields, and other
TUI elements being formatted on screen according to
IBM CUA Standards. The overall facility is called
User Interface Manager (UIM) and documented in
Application Display Programming. == See also ==