On Fri, 14 Nov 2003 12:18:22 +0100
Thomas Schrader
Hi everybody,
would you please put this right, if I'm mistaken.
Isn't ConTeXt capable to typeset XML? And isn't it really simple to make XHTML from HTML?
In theory, yes :-), practically it can be a huge effort.
So, is there any obstacle against using ConTeXt as customizable quality-typesetting backend for (readjusted/simplyfied) (X)HTML pages? What about power/complexity? How to style output?
I think pdf from xhtml is a very good usecase for context. Although I wouldn't think to do it directly, but transform the xhtml somewhat to a context friendly xml. If you generate modern xhtml on your site, you will have most of the styling in css files and have mostly structural information in the xhtml. A tool can decide with the help of the css definitions in the tags which layout macros it should use. On the other side I do not think, that this approach is the equivilant to the print function of the modern browsers. __Janko Hauser