T
The Doormouse
I update a web page once a week that may contain up to 13
pages of content. Editing that much content takes a LOT of
time. It was my goal to learn XML so that I could streamline
this process.
Here's what I learned:
* Tagging content is never easy, but you need only one XML tag
for each item (an important time saver)
* XML files are much easier to browse and understand than HTML
* Tag once, reuse (or edit) many times
* For-each is my friend
Here's what I'm guessing due to what I read:
* I can combine XSLT routines into a larger routine
* Write XSLT subroutines once, reuse many times
The Doormouse
pages of content. Editing that much content takes a LOT of
time. It was my goal to learn XML so that I could streamline
this process.
Here's what I learned:
* Tagging content is never easy, but you need only one XML tag
for each item (an important time saver)
* XML files are much easier to browse and understand than HTML
* Tag once, reuse (or edit) many times
* For-each is my friend
Here's what I'm guessing due to what I read:
* I can combine XSLT routines into a larger routine
* Write XSLT subroutines once, reuse many times
The Doormouse