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  2. Help:Export - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Export

    This format is not intended for viewing in a web browser, though some browsers show you pretty-printed XML with "+" and "-" links to view or hide selected parts. Alternatively the XML-source can be viewed using the "view source" feature of the browser, or after saving the XML file locally, with a program of choice.

  3. XSLT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XSLT

    The .NET runtime includes a separate built-in XSLT processor in its System.Xml.Xsl library. Saxon is an XSLT 3.0 and XQuery 3.1 processor with open-source and proprietary versions for stand-alone operation and for Java, JavaScript and .NET. A separate product Saxon-JS [39] offers XSLT 3.0 processing on Node.js and in the browser.

  4. XInclude - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XInclude

    XInclude is a generic mechanism for merging XML documents, by writing inclusion tags in the "main" document to automatically include other documents or parts thereof. [1] The resulting document becomes a single composite XML Information Set. The XInclude mechanism can be used to incorporate content from either XML files or non-XML text files.

  5. Thymeleaf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thymeleaf

    Thymeleaf is a Java XML/XHTML/HTML5 template engine that can work both in web (servlet-based) and non-web environments.It is better suited for serving XHTML/HTML5 at the view layer of MVC-based web applications, but it can process any XML file even in offline environments.

  6. Document Object Model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_Object_Model

    DOM Level 2 was published in late 2000. It introduced the getElementById function as well as an event model and support for XML namespaces and CSS. DOM Level 3, published in April 2004, added support for XPath and keyboard event handling, as well as an interface for serializing documents as XML. HTML5 was published in October 2014.

  7. XMLStarlet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XMLStarlet

    XMLStarlet is a set of command line utilities (toolkit) to query, transform, validate, and edit XML documents and files using a simple set of shell commands in a way similar to how it is done with UNIX grep, sed, awk, diff, patch, join, etc commands.

  8. XML editor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XML_editor

    An XML editor is a markup language editor with added functionality to facilitate the editing of XML.This can be done using a plain text editor, with all the code visible, but XML editors have added facilities like tag completion and menus and buttons for tasks that are common in XML editing, based on data supplied with document type definition (DTD) or the XML tree.

  9. TeX4ht - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TeX4ht

    TeX4ht was developed in the 1990s to convert (La)TeX to HTML, helping to publish scientific documents that were written in (La)TeX on the World Wide Web for display in a web browser. Particularly, hypertext features were supported, so it became possible to include hyperlinks in the web version of documents.