[Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries]
> Completely? I think you are using the colors black and white a > bit careless here. of course:-) > In our environment we author in XML following > some appropriate schema, say DocBook. Then we generate > HTML+CSS, XSL-FO and occasionally SVG+CSS. same here, but I don't really see the advantage in css styling in that case. Except for those features that are only available in CSS rather than native html/svg. In the case of FO there are no such features as it's a superset of CSS rendering model (I think?). > So from my > standpoint HTML and XSL-FO are used in the same manner > only that it's a lot more tiring to manage font-sizes, colors, margins > etc in the XSL-FO case. Why is it easier to generate class="foo" in the XSLT together with some css styling for .foo than to generate that set of attributes directly in the XSLT using an attribute set or variable containing a set of attribute nodes? I don't understand. David _____________________________________________________________________ This message has been checked for all known viruses by Star Internet delivered through the MessageLabs Virus Scanning Service. For further information visit http://www.star.net.uk/stats.asp or alternatively call Star Internet for details on the Virus Scanning Service.
|

Cart



