Cool. So here's an interesting thought, couldn't we basically produce a version of XSP this way? I haven't thought this all the way through, but it seems like it would be possible to use a stylesheet to build a 'taglib' that was really just a set of XSLT callbacks to defined sets of functions and/or chunks of perl. I guess the real question is 'would it offer any advantages over the existing XSP language processor?'.

Tom Schindl wrote:

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The uploaded file

Apache-AxKit-Language-LibXSLTEnhanced-0.01.tar.gz

has entered CPAN as

file: $CPAN/authors/id/T/TO/TOMSON/Apache-AxKit-Language-LibXSLTEnhanced-0.01.tar.gz

  size: 4378 bytes
   md5: a5f833adfcc0128bce3e9cda57ad77c6

No action is required on your part
Request entered by: TOMSON (Tom Schindl)
Request entered on: Mon, 05 Apr 2004 18:41:18 GMT
Request completed:  Mon, 05 Apr 2004 18:42:07 GMT
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Short discription:

LibXSLTEnhanced offers the possibility to register Perl-Subs in XML::LibXSLT and use them in your XSL-Stylesheets. This is useful if exslt is not sufficient for you. The rest is completely equal to Language::LibXSLT.

Tom

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