On Fri, 25 Oct 2013, Alexander Johannesen wrote:
[...]
Let me put it this way; XSLT is a nice to have rather than a must-have
on every single job I've ever had.
I'm part of a 3-person department where XSLT is a must-have skill for every one
of us. Reason being that our entire workflow depends on various pipelines that
transform document XML from one schema or format to another, both in
preprocessing and in online Web delivery. For example, the website
founders.archives.gov as designed is extremely reliant on XSLT 2.0/3.0 as
implement in Saxon and MarkLogic. It all could have been done with different
technologies, of course, but for large sets of semi-structured documents
XSLT/XQuery are the most natural environment.
DS
--
David Sewell, Editorial and Technical Manager
ROTUNDA, The University of Virginia Press
PO Box 400314, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4314 USA
Email: dsewell(_at_)virginia(_dot_)edu Tel: +1 434 924 9973
Web: http://rotunda.upress.virginia.edu/
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