Alright this seems like a stupid question but I can\'t figure it out. I\'m writing an XSLT file to translate an XML document into an XHTML document. I\'ve used both Visual S
In Visual Studio, add the XML file to a project. Open the XML file. When the file is open and its window is active, you should see, in the Properties window, that you can specify an output filename and a stylesheet. Also, you should see that the menu bar now contains an "XML" item.
If you pick "Show XSLT output" from the "XML" menu, VS will apply the specified transform to the XML file, write its output to the file you specified, and then open that file. If the file has an .xml
extension, it'll open it in a text editor window; if it has an .htm
extension, it'll open it in a browser window.
It's a little bit clunky (it seems to me that a menu that appears and vanishes instead of being enabled/disabled is kind of hinky), but it works well enough, and it's in the tool you're already using.
There are many third-party software. One of them is "Oxygen XML Editor". In this software, simply:
If you don't mind going to the command line and XSLT 1.0 is what you want: msxsl.exe
You have two options:
Let the browser do it. Pass the XML with a reference to the XSLT and the browser (IE 6 or lower might have problems) will render it as (X)HTML:
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="http://www.example.com/my-xslt.xsl" ?>
Do it server-side. Most languages have methods for accepting XSLT and XML data, then outputting (X)HTML. Here are some options:
For a one-off task where you do not want to go thru the pain of an install, you could probably use https://www.freeformatter.com/xsl-transformer.html. I'l disclaim that I have not used this site much.