I've been doing some frustrating maintenance work on some XML/XSLT code. Working with XSLT is awkward enough as it is, but trying to debug XSLT problems without an interactive debugger is just maddening - it's like randomly poking in a black box.
A coworker was complaining about XML Spy, so I thought I'd take a look at the <oXygen/> XML editor. The interactive XSLT debugger is great! You can step through the XSL file, set breakpoints, look at the stack, and even use different XSL processors (choose from Xalan and a few versions of Saxon). I think I've regained my sanity now.
It's a little sluggish on my G4 PB15, but still very usable. The fact that it's java-based and therefore cross-platform is a big plus. My coworker is totally sold on it too - he loves the Outline view, real-time validation, and built-in spell-checker. Cheap, too at less than 50 bucks for a personal license.
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