I'm currently writing a web application where I'm generating a DOM-
object in memory and then transforming it to HTML with XSL. This works fine,
but the time it takes to finish a request is not acceptable.

Currently (Tomcat 3.2.x) it looks like something like this

        Generate the DOM-object for a page : 50-70 ms (acceptable)
        Transforming DOM-object : 300-600 ms (not acceptable)

Are these numbers "normal", or am I doing something terrible wrong
somewhere?
I'm using Xerces and Xalan from Apache.

But, do get back on topic, I heard some time ago that some modern browsers
(IE 5.5, Mozilla 6) handle client-side XSL-transformations. I assume this
is done by sending both the XSL-document and the DOM-strukture to the
browser and letting that take of everything (which would save server time).
I'd like to be able to detect a browser which supports this so the server
won't have to perform the transformation when the client can do it instead.

Does anyone have information on this?

[ Matthias Carlsson ]
[ Programmer (Java, XML/XSL, CGI/Perl, HTML/JS) ] [ Web Designer ]
[ E-Mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED] ] [ ICQ: 1430647 ]

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