I also thought so in the past, but one can quickly get a powerful
language construction/editing environment -- by simply providing a
schema to an intelligent editor one can get correct
structure/intellisense support. And this is an example of really good
use of schemas.
Cheers,
Dimitre.
Too right, my life has been made much easier since I managed to get Visual
Studio to validate my XSLT docs on the fly as I type as well as advising on
available elements and attributes. As far as I can tell there's no way I can
create both versions and still have intellisense in Visual Studio because
they both use the sane namespace uri.
--
Joe