Subject: RE: [xsl] Modern web site design with XML and XSLT From: "Michael Kay" <mike@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Sat, 2 Jan 2010 14:56:16 -0000 |
Well, a lot depends on your detailed requirements and on where you are starting from (in both technology and skills), but my preferred target architecture would probably be: use XSLT server-side to generate HTML, CSS to render the HTML, and XForms to handle the user interaction. Using XSLT client-side is viable, but I don't see many benefits over using it server-side. Regards, Michael Kay http://www.saxonica.com/ http://twitter.com/michaelhkay > -----Original Message----- > From: Rob Belics [mailto:rob_belics@xxxxxxxxxxx] > Sent: 02 January 2010 14:31 > To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: [xsl] Modern web site design with XML and XSLT > > You can't find a book with that title. Some naive questions. > I'd like to take an ecommerce online application I've written > and convert all its drop-down, CSS, blinking lights, Ajaxy > goodness to all XML/XSLT all the time but, as I have just > started tinkering with this, I run into articles about how > browsers of today don't support XSLT or it won't work with > HTML5 and all those other things that make one question > whether the effort is worth it. I think XML is ideal and I > don't know why I couldn't convert everything over. > > I need either encouragement or discouragement that my > (unknown to you) web site that uses bleeding edge modern web > development techniques (CSS3, HTML5, Ajax/Javascript/DOM, > etc., works in all browsers) can be completely recreated > without worry of gotchas halfway through the process. That > something won't ever be supported so I'm stuck and all that.
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