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1.8 + <title>Developing Web Applications with XSLTools</title>
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1.14 +<h1>Developing Web Applications with XSLTools</h1>
1.15 +<p>This documentation introduces the XSLTools package and the XSLForms
1.16 +framework for developing forms-based Web applications using Python, <a
1.17 + href="http://www.boddie.org.uk/python/libxml2dom.html">libxml2dom</a>,
1.18 +libxml2, libxslt and (optionally) <a
1.19 + href="http://www.boddie.org.uk/python/WebStack.html">WebStack</a>.</p>
1.20 +<h2>Setting Up</h2>
1.21 +<p>First of all, let us assume that the XSLTools distribution has been
1.22 +unpacked and now sits in the <code>XSLTools-0.1</code> directory.</p>
1.23 +<p>Before we begin, we must make sure that the XSLTools package is
1.24 +available
1.25 +to Python. The easiest way to do this is to change into the <code>XSLTools-0.1</code>
1.26 +directory and to run the <code>setup.py</code>
1.27 +script provided with the version of Python you are going to be using
1.28 +(possibly as a privileged user like <code>root</code>):</p>
1.29 +<pre>cd XSLTools-0.1<br />python setup.py install</pre>
1.30 +<p>If you don't want to install XSLTools in this way, or if you can't
1.31 +do so
1.32 +because you don't have <code>root</code> privileges, you can just make
1.33 +sure
1.34 +that the <code>XSLTools-0.1</code> directory sits on your
1.35 +<code>PYTHONPATH</code>.</p>
1.36 +<h2>Viewing the API Documentation</h2>
1.37 +<p>The API documentation for use in conjunction with this
1.38 +guide can be found inside the <a href="../apidocs/index.html"><code>apidocs</code></a>
1.39 +directory within the <code>XSLTools-0.1</code> directory. Of course,
1.40 +it is always possible to view the API documentation
1.41 +within Python by importing modules (such as <a
1.42 + href="../apidocs/public/XSLOutput-module.html"><code>XSLOutput</code></a>)
1.43 +and using Python's built-in <code>help</code> function.</p>
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