an extensible HTML/XML generator written in Python. XIST is also a DOM parser (built on top of SAX2) with a very simple and pythonesque tree API. Every XML element type corresponds to a Python class and these Python classes provide a conversion method to
a free source code editor which supports several programming languages running under the MS Windows environment. based on Scintilla edit component (a very powerful editor component)
a publish/subscribe and point to point 100% Java based MOM server (message-oriented middleware) which exchanges messages between publishers and subscribers. The message is described with XML-encoded meta information. Messages may contain everything, GIF i
a free user interface builder for GTK+ and GNOME interfaces designed are saved as XML, and by using the libglade library these can be loaded by applications dynamically as needed. (Glade can also generate C code)
Leo is... * A general data management environment. Leo shows user-created relationships among any kind of data: computer programs, web sites, etc. Leo shows multiple views of data within a single outline. * An outlining editor for programmers. Leo supports optional noweb and CWEB markup. * A flexible browser for projects, programs, classes or any other data. * A project manager. * Fully scriptable using Python. * Leo's outline files are XML format.
The Django REST interface makes it easy to offer private and public APIs for existing Django models. New generic views simplify data retrieval and modification in a resource-centric architecture and provide model data in formats such as XML, JSON and YAML with very little custom code.
The Django REST interface makes it easy to offer private and public APIs for existing Django models. New generic views simplify data retrieval and modification in a resource-centric architecture
Everyone's got their data in XML these days. You need to read it. You've looked at the other XML APIs and they all contain miles of crud that's only necessary when parsing the most arcane documents. Wouldn't it be nice to have an easy-to-use API for the normal XML documents you deal with? That's xmltramp: