I'm interested to know what you find.  Personally, I just use a text
editor.  If I'm doing a lot of XSL debugging I'll use the
mavMaxTransforms limit parameter to get the raw XML, and then use a
standalone processor (such as msxsl) outside of the web environment.
Not very sophisticated.

Jeff

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Johan Lundberg [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2001 2:14 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [Mav-user] tools / methodology
> 
> Hi
> 
> I am trying to get up to speed with my development but the way I work
> feels a bit cumbersome.
> I finally reduced EJB-development time when I switched to xdoclet but
I
> have not found anything easy to work with when developing my
xsl-pages.
> 
> I spend too much time searching for IDEs that can help me to check the
> xsl-code and the only decent ones I can find are only available under
> Windows. The IBM XSL Editor - Java tool is not that good (IMHO) and it
> sometimes produces a different result than Maverick does.
> 
> Please help me out - how do you develop xsl-pages under Linux (most
java
> tools would work fine)? I keep some xml-output in a separate file
while
> working with the xsl files since it takes a lot of time to re-deploy
my
> WEB/EJB application each time a want to check a change in my xsl code.
> 
> Thanks
> johan
> 
> 
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