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Costello, Roger L. wrote: > Hi Folks, > > The "S" in XSLT stands for "stylesheet." But in modern web design > practices styling a document (i.e., adding text color, font-size, > borders, and so forth) is accomplished using Cascading Stylesheets > (CSS). > Since the obvious answer hasn't been mentioned in this thread, I guess I'll provide it ;-> The stylesheet language is XSL, which is routinely used to translate XML into PDF, PostScript, and other formats. When formatting documents, you often need to do transformations. The transformation language designed to support XSL stylesheets was called XSL Transformation Language. XSLT can be used quite generally, but there are certainly aspects of its design that were motivated by use cases expected for this kind of transformation. And this has affected XPath and XQuery - because of the use cases envisioned for stylesheet-oriented transformations, E1/E2 involves implicitly removing duplicates and sorting in document order. Retaining "S" in the name can help explain the history, design choices and quirks of the language. I think that's a good thing. XSLT is certainly used more widely than for stylesheets, and the designers of the language were very aware that it probably would be, but stylesheets were veyr much on their minds and influenced the language significantly. Jonathan
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