Subject: RE: [xsl] Site structured on XSLT. From: "Robert Koberg" <rob@xxxxxxxxxx> Date: Tue, 8 Jul 2003 18:45:26 -0700 |
Hi, > -----Original Message----- > From: owner-xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:owner-xsl- > list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Wendell Piez > Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2003 1:43 PM > To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > Claudio, > > At 03:58 PM 7/8/2003, you wrote: > >As I've been addressing this issue tangencially, and I understand a > little > >bit where I want to be in my next step, I would like to know if somebody > >can help me on this task: I would like to create a site entirely using > XSLT. > > That's cool. > > >My initial approach was, as I said efore, an HTML with frames, which > loads > >a DOM, > >that passes parameters to an XSLT, which is run and fills the HTML > fields. > > This is fine -- but going down this road, you are in advance (considerably > in advance!) of where web standards have specified behaviors on clients. > There are simply no vendor-neutral specifications for loading an HTML > document with a DOM, invoking an XSLT process (with or without > parameters), > and "fill[ing] the HTML fields". You could check out Sarissa: http://sarissa.sourceforge.net/ >From the overview: " Sarissa is a JavaScript meta-API. It bridges the gap of DOM XML extentions between Internet Explorer and Mozilla (or Moz-based) browsers. It is an effort to provide a common interface for those extentions, bringing them closer to eachother. It was originally created to protect my sanity ;-)" Best, -Rob XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
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