Hopefully this will have whetted your appetite to play with AxKit. If you still need convincing, here are some extra things AxKit can do:
AxKit can work with filter-aware modules and, instead of XSP, use other templating systems (such as Mason) to produce XML structures that will be styled on the fly after being passed to AxKit.
XSLT, XSP, and XPathScript aren't the only possible processors. You can fairly easily create a new type of processor (such as a graph-outputting processor that would transform XML into charts, or rasterize some SVG).
Apache configuration isn't the only way to control AxKit. You can create a ConfigReader that reads the configuration from another system, such as an XML file on disk.
There are ways to choose stylesheets on the fly—for instance, to allow people to see the site with the design they prefer, based on cookies or a query string.
AxKit has an intelligent and powerful caching system that can be controlled in various ways or replaced by a custom cache if needed.
You don't need to fetch the initial content from the filesystem. The Provider interface allows you to return data from wherever Perl can get it (e.g., a content-management system).
For more information, help, support, and community chat, please visit the web site at http://axkit.org/ and join in the discussions on the mailing lists, where you will find like minded people building a range of solutions.
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