Re: [xsl] Microsoft XML Team blog: XSLT 2.0

Subject: Re: [xsl] Microsoft XML Team blog: XSLT 2.0
From: "Dimitre Novatchev" <dnovatchev@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 5 Feb 2007 06:38:42 -0800
"Those who urgently need an implementation of that runs in the .NET
environment may wish to check out the Saxon open source project or the
schema-aware commercial version produced by Saxonica"

I have personally used Saxon.NET in my free time in creating the XPath Visualizer 2.0 (For XPath 2.0), which I hope to be able to make available soon.

Let me confirm, that using Saxon.NET in the .NET environment was a
nice experience. The recent addition of  writing extension functions
in a .NET language makes this experience even nicer.

Also, I believe that having Saxon (,which raises the bar so high) as
the primary competitor in the field will affect very favourably the
development of any future XSLT 2.0 processor.

We clearly owe this to Dr. Kay and M.D.Peterson.

Cheers,
Dimitre Novatchev

On 2/4/07, Michael Kay <mike@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
It seems that no-one has drawn the attention of the list to

http://blogs.msdn.com/xmlteam/archive/2007/01/29/xslt-2-0.aspx

Key points:

"[Microsoft's] users have made it very clear that they want an XSLT 2.0
implementation once the Recommendation is complete.   A team of XSLT experts
is now in place to do this...  The XSLT team will be putting out Community
Technology Previews (CTP) with the XSLT 2 functionality and appropriate
tooling as the implementation matures.  The eventual release date and ship
vehicles (e.g. a future version of .NET or a standalone release over the
Web) have not been determined..."

"Those who urgently need an implementation of that runs in the .NET
environment may wish to check out the Saxon open source project or the
schema-aware commercial version produced by Saxonica"


Michael Kay http://www.saxonica.com/




--
Cheers,
Dimitre Novatchev
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Truly great madness cannot be achieved without significant intelligence.
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To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk
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You've achieved success in your field when you don't know whether what
you're doing is work or play

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