|
![]() |
![]() Resin's XSL follows the 1.0 W3C specification. Differences from the spec are contained in the errata page.
If you're unfamiliar with XSL, the introduction gives a brief overview of
creating web pages with XTP and XSL.
You can easily create custom JSP tag
libraries with XTP. Web pages can focus on content, letting
stylesheets handle the programming.
For those put off by XSL's verbosity, Resin offers XSLT-lite. XSLT-lite retains the full
capabilities of XSLT. It simplifies HTML generation by focusing on
uninterpreted text, so '<' produces 4 characters. XSLT-lite also
provides some syntactic sugar.
The examples from the tag library section are reworked in the
XSLT-lite examples.
XSL's power comes from the XML path language,
a pattern matching language for selecting nodes in an XML tree.
The most useful subset is covered here. For the full description, see
the XSLT 1.0 spec.
Reference guide to the XSL tags.
The most useful subset is covered here. For the full description, see
the XSLT 1.0 spec.
|