From: sgunderson@bigfoot.com <> Date: Wed, 6 Sep 2006 16:05:24 +0000 (+0200) Subject: Document that we've got a Python version. X-Git-Url: https://git.sesse.net/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=7968d0b32bb6bc3628ce6f54952aeda2b8c0a700;p=xml-template Document that we've got a Python version. --- diff --git a/doc/intro.txt b/doc/intro.txt index e9807e5..8f7afa3 100644 --- a/doc/intro.txt +++ b/doc/intro.txt @@ -17,8 +17,8 @@ to check out the code and this documentation. There is a lot to be said about design philosophy, but let's first give a simple example to give you the feel of how it works. (The example is in -Perl, but there's also a functionally equivalent PHP version, and more -languages should probably come soon.) +Perl, but there are also functionally equivalent PHP and Python versions, +and more languages should probably come soon.) Template (simple.xml): @@ -249,8 +249,8 @@ The main thoughts behind XML::Template have been, in no particular order: the entire DOM with wrappers for each language. (Thankfully, by relying on the DOM support in each language, the code so far is under 200 lines per implementation, so maintaining this hopefully shouldn't be much work.) - As proof-of-concept, I've got Perl and PHP implementations that work and - feel largely the same -- Python, Ruby and other implementations are welcome. + As proof-of-concept, I've got Perl, PHP and Python implementations that work + and feel largely the same -- Ruby and other implementations are welcome. As a side note to the second point, I've spent some time wondering exactly _why_ you want to separate the back-end logic from your HTML, and why people