- From: Julian Reschke <julian.reschke@gmx.de>
- Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2009 19:21:24 +0100
- To: Boris Zbarsky <bzbarsky@MIT.EDU>
- CC: "Henry S. Thompson" <ht@inf.ed.ac.uk>, public-html@w3.org
Boris Zbarsky wrote: > Henry S. Thompson wrote: >> All the browsers I'm familiar with (I haven't installed Chrome yet) >> support XML+XSLT via the xml-stylesheet processing instruction. >> >> So they all have case-preserving tokenizers whose performance is >> acceptable for the people who serve and read XML+XSLT. > > Which is, in the grand scheme of things, pretty much no one. Also, if > you're using client-side XSLT performance on the browser is not at the > top of your concerns (if it were you'd be doing the transform once on > server-side), nor is web page responsiveness (e.g. no incremental > rendering with XSLT). Except in IE... > ... BR, Julian
Received on Monday, 23 March 2009 18:22:12 UTC