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XSLT elements – a list of some commonly used XSLT structures. Muenchian grouping – a dialect differential between XSLT1 and XSLT2+. eXtensible Stylesheet Language – a family of languages of which XSLT is a member; XQuery and XSLT compared
As such, a new working group was split off from the XSL working group, and the XSL Transformations (XSLT) language became something that was considered separate from the styling information of the XSL-FO document. Even that split was expanded when XPath became its own separate specification, though still strongly tied to XSLT.
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XLink: a language used for creating hyperlinks in XML documents; XMI: an OMG standard for exchanging metadata information via XML. The most common use of XMI is as an interchange format for UML models; XML Encryption: a specification that defines how to encrypt the content of an XML element
XSLT 1.0 appeared as a Recommendation in 1999, whereas XQuery 1.0 only became a Recommendation in early 2007; as a result, XSLT is still much more widely used. Both languages have similar expressive power, though XSLT 2.0 has many features that are missing from XQuery 1.0, such as grouping, number and date formatting, and greater control over ...
Woden: used to develop a Java class library for reading, manipulating, creating and writing WSDL documents. Whimsy: tools that display and visualize various bits of data related to ASF organizations and processes. Wicket: component-based Java web framework; Xalan: XSLT processors in Java and C++; Xerces: validating XML parser
The Xalan XSLT processor is available for both the Java and C++ programming languages. It combines technology from two main sources: an XSLT processor originally created by IBM under the name LotusXSL, [2] and an XSLT compiler created by Sun Microsystems under the name XSLTC. [3] A wrapper for the Eiffel language is available. [4]
EXSLT is a community initiative to provide extensions to XSLT, [1] [2] which are broken down into a number of modules, listed below.. The creators (Jeni Tennison, Uche Ogbuji, Jim Fuller, Dave Pawson, et al.) of EXSLT aim to encourage the implementers of XSLT processors to use these extensions, in order to increase the portability of stylesheets.