Although XML is still in the development stage and its scale is being developed by W3C, many companies have fully supported XML and developed many XML tools. Adobe FrameMaker can be used to write XML documents. Microsoft's IE4.0 already supports
Although XML is still in the development stage and its scale is being developed by W3C, many companies have fully supported XML and developed many XML tools. Adobe FrameMaker can be used to write XML documents. Microsoft's IE 4.0 has been able to display, process, and compile XML documents. Microsoft promises to support XML in the next version of Office software, such as MS Word and Excel.
Netscape and Sun are also not lonely, and they have to support XML in their Web tools. In addition to the actions of these famous companies, other small companies also regard XML as a business opportunity and have successively invested in XML development. For example, the Cedar Project of ArborText aims to develop XSL, while ArborText and Microsoft jointly propose a scale draft of XSL to W3C; grif's Symposia Doc + is a visible tool for compiling XML documents.
In addition, there are Copsol's XML development tools, Norbert's XML syntax analyzer, Jade's XSL toolkit, and Serucie 98 supporting customer/service machines.