On 9/11/14 7:46 AM, Matthew L. Avizinis matt(_at_)gleim(_dot_)com wrote:
One of the primary uses of XSLT is transforming xml to html, it seems
like. I don't have data handy, but based on what I've read on this
list over the past dozen years or so, seems like a reasonable enough
conclusion.
I've recently been reading about X-Tags, Polyfil, Web Components,
etc., and tinkering with it. (for instance, x-tags.org,
webcomponents.org, and
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/Apps/Tools_and_frameworks/x-tags).
It seems like pretty cool stuff and it occurs to me that by using it
one could pretty much eliminate the use of xslt for such
transformation, if I understand it correctly.
I can see a lot of uses for them, but I'm having trouble imagining how
web components would eliminate the use of XSLT. Can you explain more
what you mean? They are not presented as a transformation language.
They're actually presented as a browser-native way to do UI widgets that
are easy to share and use for web apps.
1) Do you think the web components concept will catch on widely?
Yes most likely in my opinion.
2) will they be supported by browser developers natively eventually,
do you suppose?
They already are supported in Google Chrome and Firefox Nightly (you
have to enable a flag). You don't need polyfills in these two browsers
that I have seen after working with them a bit.
Mark Giffin
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