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Claudio,
At 09:18 AM 7/1/2003, David wrote:
You can still, however, write XML at home and convert it into HTML in batch mode, then serve up the HTML the old-fashioned way.
"Poor man's XML". Yet a surprisingly effective way to use it -- you still get many or most of the advantages of XML: you can tag your documents to their type instead of maintaining the HTML tagging, which is useless for anything but web pages. Assuming you do the design right, you'll still get XML's economies of scale (from the "separation of format from content" etc. etc.), robustness and reusability of your data, and all that. (Whether this would be worthwhile in your particular case, of course, depends on why you're using XML.)
It's the application of markup language technologies in back offices like this, invisible to the world, that led Chet Ensign to title a book "SGML: the Billion-Dollar Secret".
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
Re: [xsl] xsl:sort in old MSXML
Subject: Re: [xsl] xsl:sort in old MSXML From: Wendell Piez <wapiez@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Tue, 01 Jul 2003 11:58:02 -0400 |
Claudio,
At 09:18 AM 7/1/2003, David wrote:
> I don't have access to a server (I did some applications in a free > site hosting), the transformations aren't done in this case in the > client side?
If you don't have access to either a sever or a client that can do XSLT then you can't use XSLT, you have to just write HTML.
You can still, however, write XML at home and convert it into HTML in batch mode, then serve up the HTML the old-fashioned way.
"Poor man's XML". Yet a surprisingly effective way to use it -- you still get many or most of the advantages of XML: you can tag your documents to their type instead of maintaining the HTML tagging, which is useless for anything but web pages. Assuming you do the design right, you'll still get XML's economies of scale (from the "separation of format from content" etc. etc.), robustness and reusability of your data, and all that. (Whether this would be worthwhile in your particular case, of course, depends on why you're using XML.)
It's the application of markup language technologies in back offices like this, invisible to the world, that led Chet Ensign to title a book "SGML: the Billion-Dollar Secret".
====================================================================== Wendell Piez mailto:wapiez@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Mulberry Technologies, Inc. http://www.mulberrytech.com 17 West Jefferson Street Direct Phone: 301/315-9635 Suite 207 Phone: 301/315-9631 Rockville, MD 20850 Fax: 301/315-8285 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Mulberry Technologies: A Consultancy Specializing in SGML and XML ======================================================================
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