On 02.02.22 18:07, Joseph Kesselman wrote:
Or has everyone moved to other tools?

As kesh...@watson.ibm.com, I was involved in Xalan's development. (And Xerxes, to a _much_ lesser extent; I wrote their first DOM implementation.)

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Hi,

just my personal view: Several years ago, we moved away from XSL/T 1.0 to XSL/T 2.0, as it provided so much more functionality and allowed us to simplify our tasks. We are currently using the open source Saxon "Home Edition" as the processor. It is limited in its functionality, however, while the limitations do exist, they do not prevent anyone from taking advantage of the important features of XSLT/2+. So this is more than fair and the said shall not be regarded as any kind of negative critics on Michael Kay's business model. Nevertheless, to my knowledge, there is no open source Java implementation available that fully implements XSL/T 2.0 and later versions.

On the other hand, one has to admit that XML and the related technologies are no longer everyone's darling. XML and the related technologies are nowadays regarded as verbose, cumbersome and no longer as modern or state-of-the-art. The next generation of developers probably might see these as dinosaurs like my generation saw the mainframes and COBOL. They are more and more replaced by other technologies (which are IMHO in no way better). For example, in a recently project, I could not convince my younger colleagues to use XSL/T for a specific task as we did in previous projects – a much simpler, but also much less powerful approach was chosen.

That said, I believe there is surely a community that would appreciate your work, but that community will likely shrink over time (cannot say how fast, though).

Hope that helps,

Klaus


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