NIST HOSTS XSL CONFORMANCE TESTING MEETING.NIST (National Institute of Standards & Technology, Washington, DC, www.nist.gov) The standards-defining agency of the U.S. government, formerly the National Bureau of Standards. It is one of three agencies that fall under the Technology Administration (www.technology. hosted the first XSL (eXtensible Stylesheet Language) A standard from the W3C for describing a style sheet for XML documents. It is the XML counterpart to the Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) in HTML and is compatible with CSS2. Conformance Technical Committee meeting in June 2000, at NIST. XSL (Extensible Stylesheet Language (World-Wide Web) Extensible Stylesheet Language - (XSL) A standard developed by the World Wide Web Consortium defining a language for transforming and formatting XML documents. ) is a W3C recommendation (www.w3c.org/TR/XSL) for expressing stylesheets, which enables the transformation and formatting of XML data. Simply stated, XSL specifies the format into which XML data should be transformed (i.e., reformatted). Uses of XSL include transformation of XML into HTML HTML in full HyperText Markup Language Markup language derived from SGML that is used to prepare hypertext documents. Relatively easy for nonprogrammers to master, HTML is the language used for documents on the World Wide Web. for viewing in a browser or XML as input to another process (e.g., invoicing, accounts payable or receivable), database system, or device (e.g., WML or wireless, VoXML for speech to text). Since the number of XSL processors is on the rise, the need for conformance and interoperability increases. The committee is developing a test suite for XSL processors, which will focus on two key areas. The first area is XSLT (eXtensible Stylesheet Language Transformation) Software that converts an XML document into another format such as HTML, PDF or text. It may also be used to convert one XML document to another XML document with a different set of XML tags (different schema). (XSL Transformation), which deals with applying a set of stylesheet transformation rules to the data and transforming the data into another document. The second area is XPath (XML Path Language), which provides a common syntax and semantics for the functionally shared by XSL transformations and XPointer (XML Pointer language). This version of the test suite will not include the formatting objects part of XSL. NIST also is developing a test suite harness to facilitate the delivery, presentation, and execution of the XSLT/ XPath test suite. Currently, there are approximately 1500 tests. The final test suite will be completed by March 2001. |
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