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Re: XSLT Engine for Linux
- To: <xsl-list at mulberrytech dot com>
- Subject: Re: XSLT Engine for Linux
- From: John Robert Gardner <John dot Robert dot Gardner at east dot sun dot com>
- Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2000 09:51:38 -0500
- Cc: <jonathan dot irving at sun dot com>, <robin at isogen dot com>
- Reply-To: xsl-list at mulberrytech dot com
Thanks Lars:
I saw the "customizable using XSL and CSS" and so had asked to learn the extent--i.e., XSL extent--of the "customizable" -- so this is not transformative, then? I'm assuming you have used it?
Following the spec., since any XSL processing is a transformation - in section 1 ". . . when XSLT is trandorming into the XSL formatting vocabulary, the transformation functions as a stylesheet" -- this is a part of the spec that left it unclear to me where the actual use of XSL and the transformation engine would define this Linux tool. Thanks for clarifying.
jr
<xsl-list@mulberrytech.com> wrote:
|Date: 12 Sep 2000 10:46:11 +0200
|
|* John Robert Gardner
|| Anyone try this yet?
||
|| <snip>
|| subject: XSLies 0.54
|| added by: S. Lempinen on Sep 09th 2000, 11:49 EDT
|| license: Apache style
|| category: Web/Pre-Processors
||
|| description:
|| XSLies [pronounced: "excess lies"] is a simple XSLT application for
|| making Web-based presentations. It uses a simple XML input file to
|| generate an HTML slideset. The resulting layout is completely
|| customizable using XSL and CSS.
|
|From the project description it is not an XSLT engine, but an XSLT
|_application_, that is a DTD implemented in XSLT. Xalan-J comes with
|the XSLies distribution...
|
|--Lars M.
|
|
| XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
John Robert Gardner
Enterprise Management Architecture
Sun Microsystems
Burlington, MA 01803
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