On 18 Mai, 08:54, Stefan Behnel <stefan...@behnel.de> wrote: > Emanuele D'Arrigo wrote: > > I'm looking at pxdom and in particular at its foundation class > > DOMObject > > I didn't know pxdom, but looking at it now I can see that it hasn't been > updated since 2006. Not sure if that means that it is complete or that it > has been abandoned.
Maybe the developer is mostly satisfied with it. > Anyway, seeing that it only provides DOM compliance, without anything > further like XPath or whatever, and that it doesn't focus on performance in > any way, you might still be better off with ElementTree, which is in the > stdlib since Python 2.5 (and available for Py2.2+). To put the inquirer's remarks in context, I suggested that he look at pxdom specifically as a replacement for minidom and in response to the following statement: "I've used etree and lxml successfully before but I wanted to understand how close I can get to the W3C DOM standards." Maybe you missed that thread, but here's a link to it: http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_frm/thread/d445363b99001ad6 Paul -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list