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The Accidental Businessman: php|architect's new clothes mtabini.blogspot.com
    Next, we needed a frontend templating solution. Over the last few years, I have been particularly partial to XSL, and all of the new system uses XSLT exclusively for the frontend presentation layer (as well as some e-mail work). I cannot stress enough just how good this has turned out to be for us. XSL transformations are powerful but limited, thus forcing the developer to keep the frontend layer and the business logic (or the view and the controller if you live in MVC world) completely separate. PHP 5 has some incredible XML and XSL manipulation libraries, and the end result is a system where the frontend developer is free to much around as much as he wants without encroaching on the backend developer's turf—all the while using skills that are completely transferable, so that practically any frontend developer could step in and completely change the way our site looks without a single line of PHP code needing changes.   remove

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