Subject: RE: When *not* to use XLST...
From: "Michael Kay" <mike@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 23 Apr 2009 22:19:15 +0100
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I can't see anything in this list that's at all difficult to do in XSLT.
>but the syntax to do takes a long time to discover by Google searches.
Perhaps you need a better strategy for learning the language. Buy yourself a
good book, and read it.
Michael Kay
http://www.saxonica.com/
> -----Original Message-----
> From: shawn.milo@xxxxxxxxx [mailto:shawn.milo@xxxxxxxxx] On
> Behalf Of Shawn Milochik
> Sent: 23 April 2009 19:51
> To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: When *not* to use XLST...
>
> I'm writing an online application (as in a form you fill
> out). When printed, it's about 30 pages long, so the site has
> to be modular. I'm putting sections of it into XML files and
> having XSLT process the controls (text boxes, etc.) into HTML forms.
>
> XSLT is fantastic for allowing me to define XML and then
> create dynamic text boxes, check boxes, and radio buttons.
> However, it gets more complicated as need to add some
> advanced features. I'm wondering if I should just create a
> (programming) class to handle my XML pages and have my
> back-end code read the XML directly and create the dynamic
> HTML instead.
>
> Below are a few things I need to do. My question is whether
> these things are easy or straightforward enough in XSLT, or
> whether I should just be writing server-side code to do all
> this. As I said earlier, I'm brand-new to XML (as of about
> two weeks ago), and have just pieced a bunch of things
> together from Google searches to get it working so far. I
> wouldn't really say I "know" XSLT -- only that I have "been
> using" XSLT.
>
> 1. For some controls, I want to automatically create
> additional controls. An example would be a table which, when
> generated, would also need a set of text boxes (one per
> column in the table), which would be used to edit data within
> a table row, or add a new row.
>
> 2. If I have many simple controls in a row, for example 15
> checkboxes, I'd like to have them two or three per line,
> rather than one per line.
> Of course, it has to gracefully handle a number of items
> which doesn't divide evenly by the desired number per line.
>
> 3. Some XML nodes of the same type may have some, but not
> all, possible attributes. The HTML for one case can be
> different than another.
>
> It seems that XSLT is designed to turn XML data into a
> formatted document, rather than use XML data to create
> dynamic forms, and maybe I should just be writing code. I
> just wanted to check in with the list to see whether the
> problem is more due to my lack of knowledge about XSLT than
> limitations of XSLT. If that's the case, let me know, and
> please recommend the best book for becoming a proficient user of XSLT.
>
> A final note which may help clarify what I'm asking for: The
> two most challenging problems I've had so far were how to get
> the value of an attribute of a parent node in the XSLT
> section that processes the child, and how to check to see
> whether any of the child nodes had a specific value in a
> named attribute when processing the parent node.
> Both are trivial to do with a class in a programming language
> by just accessing a property or method. To be fair they're
> trivial in XSLT as well, but the syntax to do takes a long
> time to discover by Google searches.
>
> Thanks,
> Shawn
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Lars Huttar - 23 Apr 2009 20:40:47 -0000
Michael Kay - 23 Apr 2009 21:19:43 -0000 <=
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