Subject: Call for Implementation: XSL 1.0 Becomes a W3C Candidate Recommendation
From: Max Froumentin <mf@xxxxxx>
Date: 21 Nov 2000 19:58:43 +0100
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W3C is pleased to announce the advancement of Extensible Stylesheet
Language (XSL) 1.0 to Candidate Recommendation status.
Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL)
Version 1.0
21 November 2000
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/CR-xsl-20001121/
Authors and Contributors:
Sharon Adler, IBM
Anders Berglund, IBM
Jeff Caruso, Pageflex
Stephen Deach, Adobe
Paul Grosso, ArborText
Eduardo Gutentag, Sun
Alex Milowski, Lexica
Scott Parnell, Xerox
Jeremy Richman, BroadVision
Steve Zilles, Adobe
1 Excerpt of the Abstract
XSL is a language for expressing stylesheets. It consists of two parts:
1.a language for transforming XML documents, and
2.an XML vocabulary for specifying formatting semantics.
An XSL stylesheet specifies the presentation of a class of XML documents
by describing how an instance of the class is transformed into an XML
document that uses the formatting vocabulary.
2 Results of the Last Call
The comment period for the Last Call Working Draft produced a wide range
of comments from the developer community and W3C working groups.
Disposition of Comments
http://www.w3.org/Style/XSL/XSL1/comments.html
There were no minority objections.
3 Exit criteria
Candidate Recommendation Review Exit Criteria
The WG proposes the following exit criteria:
+ Sufficient reports of implementation experience have
been gathered to demonstrate that XSL processors based
on the specification are implementable and have compatible
behavior.
+ An implementation report shows that there is at least one
implementation for each basic formatting object and
property.
+ Providing Formal responses to all comments received.
4 Description of what Candidate Recommendation status means
The W3C Process Document describes the Candidate Recommendation status
of a specification in Section 6.2.3:
http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Process/Process-19991111/tr.html#RecsCR
Advancement of a document to Candidate Recommendation is an explicit
call to those outside of the related Working Groups or the W3C itself
for implementation and technical feedback.
5 Status of this document
This document is a W3C Candidate Recommendation. The XSL WG considers
this specification to be stable and encourges implementation and comment
during the CR review period. The Candidate Recommendation review period
ends on February 28, 2001.
Please send detailed comments and reports of implementation experience
to xsl-editors@xxxxxx before the end of the CR review period. Archives
of the comments are available. More general public discussion of XSL
takes place on the XSL-List mailing list.
Should this specification prove impossible to implement, the Working
Group will return the document to Working Draft status and make
necessary changes. Otherwise, the Working Group anticipates asking the
W3C Director to advance this document to Proposed Recommendation.
This document has been produced as part of the W3C Style Activity by the
XSL Working Group (members only).
A list of current W3C working drafts can be found at
http://www.w3.org/TR. They may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by
other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use W3C Candidate
Recommendations as reference material or to cite them as other than
"work in progress".
for Tim Berners-Lee, Director;
Janet Daly, Head of Communications
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
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