Juan David Ibáñez Palomar <address@hidden> wrote:
It's inspired on XSLT, but it's not XSLT. It's not a new
language either. Just less than 200 lines of Python code
that provide an easier to use interface to manipulate DOM
trees.
Select the nodes with XPath expressions. Then apply rules
written in Python (instead of XSLT).
Data in the ZODB (for example), presentation in pure XHTML
(for example) and logic in a set of rules written in Python.
This leads to better separation between presentation and
logic than ZPT. With all the logic in Python and with the
expression matching/rules system full and easy refactoring
becomes posible.
Interesting. It looks a bit like the path schemes (Robust, NodePath) of
ParsedXML.