In case people are interested, I finally announced the project I've
been working on, and posted an archive of the code at Sourceforge.
I think it makes pretty heavy use of some of the important new features
in XSLT 2.0: grouping, functions, etc.
More here (including the XSLT documentation, and examples):
http://xbiblio.sourceforge.net/citeproc.html
Archive is at the project page:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/xbiblio
I'd like to thank the list, and in particular David C., M. David P.,
Mike K., Jeni T., and Wendell P, without whose help this would have
been possible. I'm just a guy -- with no programming background
(unless you count a semester in middle school learning basic) -- who
got frustrated enough as an end-user to have felt the need to invent a
better solution.
Am also hoping to get some of this into OpenOffice, where I'm the
co-project lead for the bibliographic project. Alas, this requires
getting Sun programmers to do some low-level changes to their
word-processing app.
Note: I've not yet integrated the latest issue I was posting about with
the funky punctation.
Bruce
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