XSLT = [XSL] '''T'''ransformations. The specification can be found at http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt [[Explain what XSLT is.]] [[Point to http://starbase.neosoft.com/~claird/comp.text.xml/XSLT.html also.]] The March 2002 '''Linux Journal''' [http://www.linuxjournal.com] leads off with an introduction to XSLT [http://www.linuxjournal.com/article.php?sid=5622] which features [tDOM]. ---- Two implementations are already in industrial production. [Zveno]'s [TclXSLT] .... Early in development, Zveno also wrapped [James Clark]'s XSL processor with [TclBlend] (!). This is now obsolete. Zveno's standard TclXSLT, like its [TclXML], comes in both [pure-Tcl] and compiled-with-C flavors. [Jochen Loewer]'s [tDOM] includes XSLT (and [XPath]!) capabilities which make it the fastest raw engine available, better even than any of the commercial Java offerings. ---- [Neil Madden], aware of the existing XSLT implementations, is considering wrapping ([Apache]'s) Xalan or even coding a subset of XSLT in pure Tcl. ''[NEM]'' - I've given up on this as I managed to compile [tDOM] with XSLT support for the platforms I need. ---- Would Graphlet [http://www.infosun.fmi.uni-passau.de/Graphlet/] make for a nice XSLT front end? What are the other [Graph editors]? [AK] I do not believe so, at least not at first glance. At its core XSLT is a tree transformation language. ---- [[Recommend Mike Kay's XSLT Programmer's Reference.]] ---- [Category Acronym]