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Re: [xsl] Free XML Editor?

From: Robert Raleigh <rraleigh@------------>
To:
Date: 2/5/2009 5:02:00 PM
XMLMind is quite nice.



Robert



Lou Iorio wrote:
I am an Oxygen user, but I've had pretty good luck with JEdit. It has 
pretty good plugin

support for XML, XPATH, and XQUERY.



Unlike the Windows-only applications previously mentioned, JEdit is a 
Java app, so

it will run on all major platforms.



On Feb 5, 2009, at 10:43 AM, Scott Trenda wrote:



I use Notepad++ for pretty much all of my text editing too. I agree 
with the comments below regarding loading time and usability. But if 
your students are working with complicated XML dialects 
(XSLT/XSD/WSDL/etc.) often, I'd really recommend them just to get the 
academic version of oXygenXML. It's $49, last I checked, and has the 
full feature set of the Enterprise version.



~ Scott



-----Original Message-----
From: Manuel Souto Pico [mailto:manuel.souto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Thursday, February 05, 2009 8:17 AM
To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [xsl] Free XML Editor?

Hi,



I use Notepad++ quite often and the only big limitation that it has 
for me is that it doesn't allow you to combine, in the same single 
search, what it calls extended characters (\n, \t, \r, etc.) and the 
rest of normal regex.



Cheers, Manuel







Darcy Parker escribis:
My favourite editor is Notepad++.  It loads quickly, has a small
memory foot print, and is easily customizable.

It's not as powerful as Oxygen etc... but for learning XSLT I think it
is a good editor because it forces you to type things out.

It has an XML plug in tool that has many nice features.  (You need to
download the ext-tools.zip and put those files in a folder that is in
your %PATH% environment variable.  Then as with other plugins, you
need to add the XMLTools.dll to the plugin folder.)

(I believe Eclipse has some free plugins with XML editing support and
some support for generating xsd schemas.  But I tend to use notepad++
for all of my editing needs.)

Microsoft's XMLNotepad 2007 is also interesting... but I still 
prefer notepad++.



Darcy

On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 6:39 AM, Jesper Tverskov <jesper@xxxxxxxxxxx> 
wrote:



Hi list



I use XMLSpy, Oxygen and Stylus Studio all the time but my students
sometimes ask me if I can recommend an all free XML Editor to use at
home or if their company can't be persuaded to invest in one.

I'm looking for a dedicated XML editor like the ones mentioned, good
at making xsd-schemas and XSLT but all free not just for an evaluation
period?

It is easy to google and start downloading, but too often the
downloads are less serious than I can accept, they can only do dtd or
they are only free for a period, etc.

So some hints in the right direction woud be appreciated to save me a
lot of time.

Cheers,
Jesper Tverskov

http://www.xmlkurser.dk
http://www.xmlplease.com

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