On Dec 6, 2006, at 3:01 PM, Si Chen wrote:
You're right. I just ready the license for the XSLT. It seems to
me to be pretty much the MIT Public License plus this clause:
both the above copyright notice(s) and this permission notice
appear in supporting documentation.
I wonder if that would make it incompatible with Apache license?
What exactly does it mean?
It means a notice would have to go in the NOTICE file.
JTidy's license is here: http://aurora.regenstrief.org/~schadow/
text/jtidy/LICENSE
It's copyrighted the W3C consortium, but what exactly does this
license mean?
Look in the LICENSE/NOTICE files, there is a W3C licensed file
already in place. Guess which one it is too... ;)
-David
On Dec 6, 2006, at 1:42 PM, Chris Howe wrote:
The xsl contains the licensing information. The other
links were provided for background since the xsl is
meant to accompany antennahouse's product and there
may be some snags.
--- Si Chen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks. They all point to the transformer by
antennahouse. Do they
have any license information on it?
On Dec 6, 2006, at 12:20 PM, Chris Howe wrote:
I had done a similar search before and came across
this page. However, I haven't tried his
implementation yet.
http://www.javaworld.com/javaworld/jw-04-2006/jw-0410-html.html
http://www.antennahouse.com/XSLsample/XSLsample.htm
http://www.antennahouse.com/XSLsample/sample-xsl-xhtml2fo/
xhtml2fo.xsl
--- Si Chen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Hi.
Does anybody know of an open source html to
xsl:fo
transformation
(via xslt) possibly?
This is what I'd like to do: be able to have a
tag
like <html-xslfo>
which can be used like this
<platform-specific><html-xslfo>
<html-template
location="component://mycomponent/webapp/mywebapp/myPage.ftl"/></
html>
</platform-specific>
and then the contents of a myPage.ftl to xsl:fo
and
output as PDF.
Best Regards,
Si
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Best Regards,
Si
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Best Regards,
Si
[EMAIL PROTECTED]