- From: Stephen Deach <sdeach@Adobe.COM>
- Date: Wed, 16 Feb 2000 14:49:53 -0800
- To: Tapio Markula <tapio1@gamma.nic.fi>
- Cc: xsl-editors@w3.org
Have you looked at James Clark's XT? At 18:14 2000-02-16 +0200, Tapio Markula wrote: >I'm going to a course to learn java-programming. How big task could create >together java virtual machine servlett tree transformation application. The >application could support >XPath, XSLT, XPointer pattern and location path syntax, but the tree >transformation could be created with sripts like in my proposal >http://www.nic.fi/~tapio1/Teaching/CSST.html >The server side programming could do the same as XSLT. The server >application could read link relation information like <link >rel="stylesheet" type="text/tssl" href="transformation.tssl"> >(transformation style sheet language). >The another possibility it to use embedded script like in php3. I just hate >XSLT and XSL-fo. XML syntax is just too heave to layout/styling and tree >transformation language. > > >Then CSS + XML + TSL => XHTML > >If php3 style scripts could do tree transfomatian and sorting, I would like >to use it! This is in principle possible to make with server side >application without XSLT. In my mind XSLT + XLS-fo are like elephants in a >porcelain boutique! >------------------------------------------------------ >Tapio Markula >Expert on > __ >¦__¦__ Cascading >¦__¦__¦__ Style >¦__¦__¦__¦ Sheets > >I have made something also with XML and XSL >------------------------------------------------------ >E:mail: tapio.markula@nic.fi >http://www.nic.fi/~tapio1/index.html (Finnish) >http://www.nic.fi/~tapio1/index_e.html (English) >http://www.nic.fi/~tapio1/Opetus/ (CSS2) >http://www.nic.fi/~tapio1/Teaching/ (CSS2) >http://www.nic.fi/~tapio1/Opetus/XSL-new.html (XML) >http://www.nic.fi/~tapio1/Teahing/XSL-new.html (XML) >------------------------------------------------------ > > > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- This e-mail reflects the personal opinion of the author. -- Unless explicitly so stated in the text, it does not represent an official position of Adobe Systems, Inc. -- Unless explicitly so stated in the text, it does not represent an official opinion of the W3C XSL Working group. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Stephen Deach | Sr Computer Scientist 408-536-6521 (office) | Adobe Systems Inc. 408-537-4214 (fax) | Mail Stop W15-424 sdeach@adobe.com (no advertizing) | 345 Park Ave | San Jose, CA 95110-2704 | USA ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -
Received on Wednesday, 16 February 2000 17:46:47 UTC