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Re: mathml xsl stylesheets?
- To: xsl-list at mulberrytech dot com
- Subject: Re: mathml xsl stylesheets?
- From: Sebastian Rahtz <sebastian dot rahtz at computing-services dot oxford dot ac dot uk>
- Date: Mon, 23 Oct 2000 14:11:24 +0100
- References: <C1256981.0040BDC4.00@d12mta07.de.ibm.com>
- Reply-To: xsl-list at mulberrytech dot com
STENZEL@de.ibm.com writes:
> ... transform Docbook/MathML documents to something, which can be viewed
> with a HTML browser ...
> Note, this might include
> - transforming the MathML to GIFs
> - transforming the MathML to something else
> - keeping the MathML and use a browser pug-in
IBM's techexplorer covers at least some of this, no?
Mozilla also displays MathML natively.
> >thats _fairly_ easy. the xmltex package includes a partial
> >implementation of MathML2, which could easily be turned into XSLT in a
> >matter of minutes
>
> :-) You would not have these minutes it takes, would you? :-)
I didn't say how _many_ minutes! but really, it just needs some fairly
tedious editing to make it XSLese. I just tried it. taking
\XMLelement{m:mfenced}
{ }
{\left\XML@fenceopen}
{\right\XML@fenceclose}
and turning it into
<xsl:template match="m:mfenced">
<xsl:text>\left</xsl:text><xsl:value-of select="@fenceopen"/>
<xsl:apply-templates/>
<xsl:text>\right</xsl:text><xsl:value-of select="@fenceclose"/>
</xsl:template>
did not take me long. of course, xmltex's MathML support is not
complete yet!
Perhaps the MathML conference now taking place will have thrown up all
the answers
Sebastian
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