On Mon, 9 Jul 2001, Dan Brian wrote: > "program XSLT in XML"? What does that mean? It means roughly what "program Perl in ASCII" means. > Have you used XSLT? Do you understand what it is and what it does? It > makes quite a bit of sense for those performing regular conversions > from a single data set. Yes, I have used XSLT, and I do know what it is and what it does. As far as it making "quite a bit of sense" I guess that's a pretty subjective statement. I happen to disagree but I really don't see the point of going into that here. -sam
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Sam Tregar
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Adam Turoff
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Sam Tregar
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Ask Bjoern Hansen
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Adam Turoff
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Sam Tregar
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Dan Brian
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Austin Hastings
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Sam Tregar
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Buddha Buck
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Adam Turoff
- Re: http://www.ora.com/news/vhll_1299.html Buddha Buck