Following up on my own message, I can think of an
additional use case for Lenya that does not involve
navigational elements being added by the foo2xhtml.xsl
stylesheet: machine readable content.
One of the applications that we'd like to use Lenya
for is to maintain content that will be read by
machine using XML-RPC.
In this use case, the 'live' site will simply be the
XML files. We will also use parameterized URL access
to render the pages for humans by use of stylesheet.
In this case the stylesheet for the human readable
version will not contain any navigation widgets
because the machine readable XML won't have that
information.
Any pointers to a simple example of the pipeline,
without any Lenua elements or processing in it would
be very helpful.
Regards,
- Steve
--- Nunez Steve <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Lenya Users (and Andreas),
>
> I think I see the problem here. It appears that
> Lenya,
> at least in the default configuration, is placing
> the
> navigation elements into the XHTML via the XSLT.
> Looking at the included stylesheet, page2xhtml, the
> 'structure' of the page is constructed with a table
> to
> place the various navigation elements in the
> required
> locations.
>
> This is one common way of structuring HTML pages,
> but
> not the only way. If you look at the source code for
> the Illation website, you'll see that there is *no*
> structure in the XHTML -- all of the positioning and
> layout of navigational elements is done with CSS.
>
> Has anyone else used Lenya in a configuration where
> the entire page layout is controlled by CSS?
>
> As a more practical question, how exactly can we
> remove all of the default Lenya publication XSLT
> from
> the pipeline, and implement only a single
> transformation?
>
> E.g.
>
> XML --XSLT--> XHTML Strict ----> Browser (using CSS)
>
> Regards,
> - Steve Nunez
>
> --- Andreas Hartmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > If you really want to use your XSLTs as they are,
> > you can remove the
> > pipelines you mentioned above and put your XSLTs
> in
> > your publication.
> >
> > But this is not the way Lenya was designed to be
> > used.
> > I'd recommend that you use the navigation
> framework
> > to generate your
> > navigation elements (in the case of the illation
> > website that would
> > be the horizontal menus at the top of the page and
> > the "Products" menus
> > at the right hand side of the page) and use the
> > XSLTs in the publication
> > to assemble the page.
>
>
>
>
>
>
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