Subject: RE: [xsl] Speed: xsl with xml vs. html and the world From: "Daniel Joshua" <daniel.joshua@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Thu, 19 Aug 2004 14:05:40 +0800 |
Well I am not too sure on that... If by speed you mean internet bandwidth (hence file size), then maybe depending on the situation serving a XML (with data only) + XSL (with presentation instructions) might be better, especially if the template is used often by other pages that would have cached the XSL. Regards, Daniel -----Original Message----- From: Josh Canfield [mailto:joshcanfield@xxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, 19 August, 2004 1:45 PM To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [xsl] Speed: xsl with xml vs. html and the world Performance wise you can't get much faster than feeding up a static html file... On Thu, 19 Aug 2004 01:52:51 -0300, IceT <icetbr@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > My lastest messages in this list has remembered me of this question. I > belive it may have already be discussed here, but could someone please > explain to me a little bit of the state of the art of the creation of > webpages? > > I mean, specially regarding xml and xsl. Which is better (speedwise at > least): to publish an xml file to be rendered with an xsl or to > preprocess it and generate an html file to be used? I believe html is > faster, although not dynamic. But there is many ways to add dynamic code > to html. So wich is the way to go? Is the answer related to the size of > the page? > > Also, if I were to preprocess my xml + xsl files, I could use as well > xslt 2.0, because I wouldn't need to worry about incompabilities. > > thanks
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