Well, I just tested and this seems to not be the case :(

On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 5:47 PM, Derek Chen-Becker <[email protected]>wrote:

> I think David could better answer this (I haven't looked at this part of
> the code for a while), but I think that anything outside of the
> <lift:surround> tag is tossed, so you could have a fully compliant XML file
> that will only have a portion used.
>
> Derek
>
>
> On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 5:40 PM, Marc Boschma 
> <[email protected]<marc%[email protected]>
> > wrote:
>
>>
>> Hi Mal,
>>
>> That aspect of the lift templating approach also warped my head for a
>> while, having seen so many examples of the opposite approach (PHP,
>> JSP, etc)...
>>
>> There is a certain part of me that still is unsettled about it, but I
>> can see the advantages of it.
>>
>> Marc
>> Ps. can the files such as index.html in the examples be full XML
>> compliant documents?
>>
>> On 13/03/2009, at 3:30 PM, mal3 wrote:
>>
>> >
>> > Why does HelloWorld index.html contain a snippet rather than a
>> > complete XHTML page?
>> >
>> > When I first saw the HelloWorld example I thought there must be a
>> > mistake,
>> > because the index.html file contains a snippet, while default.html
>> > contains
>> > what looked more like a complete XHTML page.
>> >
>> > Why doesn't lift initially reference a complete XHTML page and then
>> > pull in the snippet(s)?
>> >
>> > Is it to make it difficult/impossible for logic to creep into the
>> > view?
>> >
>> > Mal.
>> >
>> > >
>>
>>
>> >>
>>
>

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