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On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 20:43:43 -0500, M. David Peterson <m.david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I think you are missing the point. It is not that it /can/ be done. It is, can it be done very *fast*. Native XPath over HTML usually is going to be the fastest. So far the fastest cross browser seem to be the very new dojo.query and this:
http://www.jackslocum.com/blog/2007/01/11/domquery-css-selector-basic-xpath-implementation-with-benchmarks/
Re: [xsl] XSLT-related Links/News of Interest
Subject: Re: [xsl] XSLT-related Links/News of Interest From: "Robert Koberg" <rob@xxxxxxxxxx> Date: Mon, 05 Feb 2007 21:49:49 -0500 |
On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 20:43:43 -0500, M. David Peterson <m.david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 18:31:28 -0700, Robert Koberg <rob@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
http://blog.dojotoolkit.org/2007/02/04/dojoquery-a-css-query-engine-for-dojo
Oh, CSS Query? Dean Edwards has a cross-platform tool that works equally well in IE and Moz. Not sure about Safari and Opera, but I assume this is true of them as well.
http://dean.edwards.name/my/cssQuery/
I think you are missing the point. It is not that it /can/ be done. It is, can it be done very *fast*. Native XPath over HTML usually is going to be the fastest. So far the fastest cross browser seem to be the very new dojo.query and this:
http://www.jackslocum.com/blog/2007/01/11/domquery-css-selector-basic-xpath-implementation-with-benchmarks/
best, -Rob
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