PSP, Cheetah, PTL, ZOPE, etc ...
Chuck Esterbrook
ChuckEsterbrook at yahoo.com
Fri Aug 3 00:42:14 EDT 2001
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Fri Aug 3 00:42:14 EDT 2001
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paul at boddie.net (Paul Boddie) wrote in message news:<23891c90.0108020149.1c07ddfa at posting.google.com>... > Andrew Kuchling <akuchlin at mems-exchange.org> wrote in message news:<3dofpzk3vq.fsf at ute.cnri.reston.va.us>... > > ChuckEsterbrook at yahoo.com (Chuck Esterbrook) writes: > > > The *ML camp uses XML or XML-like tags for all instructions and > > > substitutions. These include ZPT, Ehydra and others. There is a *ML > > > like kit for Webware, but I don't think any serious time was put into > > > it, hence it is hard to recommend (for Webware). > > You might be referring to my package, which I would like to develop > further if I only had the time. I get the feeling that it's too > different from what people expect in a template system, though. Actually I was referring to "TALKit" which I think was an attempt to have something like ZPT for Webware. (I think.) I actually forgot that XMLForms could be used for templating, which you pointed out earlier, and hence, wasn't thinking of it. I suppose the name throws me off. > > I've become quite fond of PTL's Python-based syntax. Here's an > > explanation of why (quoting from a not-yet-public article): > > > > This syntax is quite different from most HTML templating > > languages, which usually look like HTML with magical > > delimiters (e.g. <%...%>, <?...?>, <!--#... -->) sprinkled > > Horrible, isn't it? ;-) In Cheetah, the only escape code for substitution is $. The only code for directives like "if" and "for" is #. Therefore, Cheetah doesn't suffer from the problem that PTL is solving (for ASP, JSP, PHP, etc.) > What would be interesting is a template environment where one can > visualise the final form of the template and interact with it, without > having to go through stages of rebuilding and refreshing it, along > with the potential of the document "breaking" and requiring low-level > intervention. A GUI IDE for Templates? Interesting. > I thought that W3C's Amaya might lend itself to such applications, but > that just has to be added to my list of things that I would like to do > if I only had the time. Hey, I've got one of those too! ;-) -Chuck
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