Juha Lindfors <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Hey,
>
>At 21:06 24.5.2000 +0100, you wrote:
>>XSLT will do the hard work: question (as usual) is how to make it user-
>>friendly.
>
>Ok, there's something I need to study (for a while now). I have some vague
>idea what XSLT is but could you brief real quick?

Sure, the whole content of my brain on the subject will fit on a couple
of lines :-)

XSLT is a declarative language for specifying XSL transformations. You
can write rules that contain a pattern to be recognised, and replacement
XML to be generated. It is powerful, and has an escape hatch into
procedural scripting (e.g. in JavaScript) for cases that go beyond its
built-in power.

You could start your study at: http://www.xslt.com/what_is.htm

Meta-advice: 

Whatever you are looking for, start your search at
http://www.google.com/ .  

I found the link above by just entering "XSLT" (without the quotes) and
hitting search - it was the third link offered in the results ("Google
results 1-10 of about 6,077 for XSLT. Search took 0.04 seconds").

Google now also recognises categories - the results came back under:

"Category :   Computers > Data Formats > Markup Languages > XML >
Resource Sites "

which is itself a link to top sites in that category.


-- 
Justin Forder

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