User:Siringa/RenderX-Inc

RenderX, Inc., is a software development company that provides standards-based software products, used for typeset-quality electronic and print output of business content. RenderX provides tools - from pre-built applications to integration kits - to solve business needs of getting XML content into printable formats such as PDF, PostScript and AFP. RenderX has provided many valuable services to the XSL-FO community, including a free DTD validator for XSL-FO.

Based on patented  XML-to-PDF technology, RenderX products are used in three technical markets: data reporting, dynamic publishing and traditional publishing of products such as user guides, manuals and books.

The company provides integration support for its software products and professional services for custom software development and document design, generation, and management. RenderX's customers include the Global 500 organizations in different market segments - financial services, insurance, telecommunications, manufacturing, government, publishing, pharmaceuticals and software companies - where the mass production of dynamic documents using the flexibility of XML is an integral part of the business operation.

RenderX products
RenderX's products include XEP Engine, VisualXSL, EnMasse, Docbench, Microsoft WordprocessingML to XSL-FO Converter. The main RenderX's product is a Java-based XSL-FO formatting engine called XEP. XEP fully conforms to W3C Recommendation on XSL Formatting Objects (XSL-FO), Version 1.0, October 15, 2001, the official PDF version of which is formatted by RenderX XEP from the XML source. Pawson also calls XEP "the most established product" in its class. It also supports a subset of Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG).

RenderX software can be integrated with Oracle database and SAP for generation of database reports and transactional documents assembled from multiple sources. RenderX has technical solutions for injecting Transpromo variable marketing advertisements during the format process into customer's documents, leveraging XEP to calculate available space "on the fly".