As someone who works with creating web pages with a stronger emphasis on
"formatted content" vs database applications, I find xml and dtd's a
relatively ingenious invention, however, as of yet, I see very little in xsl
that bring the other two (xml & dtd's) "to life".
Should I conclude that xsl is not useful for formatting and that that is not
its intended purpose?
I have quite a few excellent books from which I am now fairly capable in xml
and dtd's. However, these same books provide limited examples of xsl as a
formatting tool. Some of the tutorials on the net for xsl seem to
concentrate on the database benefits, rather than formatting.
I'm aware of examples where formatting is included as html, or css, which if
"xsl is to supercede", surely most accomodate those of us who do not work
with mega databases.
My questions therefore are multiple:
1) Should those of us who work primarily 'creatively' forget about xsl and
stick to css and html?
2) Are there any 'complete' examples of xml using xsl primarily for
formatting, that anyone knows of, that are IE5 renderable?
I realize there is much I need to learn, and even more confusion I have to
sort, however, if anyone can clear some of this up, it would be much
appreciated. My e-mail address is vanbc39@xxxxxxxxxxx
<!--The books I mention, which I have spent a considerable small fortune on
(!), are as current as what is available presently. -->
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