I agree. I've had a number of times when I've been volunteering for organizations building web sites, and I could clearly see that if I was building it myself, AxKit would make it easy, fast, scalable and easy (for me) to maintain. But I couldn't expect them to find people to grok XML and XSLT after I left. :-P

How does AxKit performance compare to Cocoon?

simon

On Oct 1, 2004, at 10:58 AM, Tod Harter wrote:

Personally I think the only really MAJOR question is customer acceptance. Someone is going to have to maintain your application and depending on the application there may be people (possibly 3rd parties) managing content and styling information. Those people may need to be exposed to technologies like XSLT. A common kind of thing with webapps you may get is 'Yeah, well our designers cannot deal with this XSLT stuff, they want (plug in whatever here CF, ASP, Mason, PHP, etc) templating technology instead'.


-- http://simonwoodside.com


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