Cross post from XML-SIG: --- Walter Dörwald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Martin v. Löwis sagte: > > Derek Basch wrote: > > >[...] > >> How do I get minidom to NOT render an empty script element? Should I > submit a bug report? > > > > That said, I think there is a simple solution: add an empty Text node to > the script element: > > > > script_node_0.appendChild(doc.createText(u"")) > > > > [Disclaimer: this is untested; from reading the source, I think it should > work] > > If this doesn't work, you might want to try XIST > (http://www.livinglogic.de/Python/xist) > instead of minidom. XIST knows that the script element is not EMPTY, and when > the > output is in HTML compatible XML an end tag will be produced: > > >> from ll.xist.ns import html > >>> print html.script(type="text/javascript", > src="../test.js").asBytes(xhtml=1) > <script src="../test.js" type="text/javascript"></script> > > Using pure XML mode gives: > > >>> print html.script(type="text/javascript", > src="../test.js").asBytes(xhtml=2) > <script src="../test.js" type="text/javascript"/> > > Bye, > Walter Dörwald
Wow! XIST is very elegant. Perfectly designed for what it is supposed to do. "XIST is an extensible HTML/XML generator written in Python." I guess there isn't much point in "fixing" the pyXML XHTMLPrinter when something as cool as XIST exists (pun intended). Kid also seems really neat. I like the TAL like features. However, it seems less mature than XIST. There seems to be lots of functionality crossover between the two but it is good that there is enough demand for XML output functionality in python to support two distinct modules. Thanks Everyone!, Derek Basch -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list