XML Copy Editor es un editor de documentos XML libre (GPL 2.0) y multiplataforma cuya página web es https://xml-copy-editor.sourceforge.io/.
La última versión disponible actualmente (mayo de 2023) es la versión XML Copy Editor 1.3.1.0 (del 8 de octubre de 2022). Enlace de descarga para Windows (64 bits): XML Copy Editor 1.3.1.0 (19,1 MB).
Nota: En caso de que esta versión dé problemas, se puede utilizar la versión XML Copy Editor 1.2.1.3 (del 6 de septiembre de 2014). Enlace de descarga para Windows (64 bits): XML Copy Editor 1.2.1.3 (9,5 MB).
En cdlibre.org hay una sección dedicada a editores XML libres, con información detallada sobre las últimas versiones publicadas para Windows.
Una vez descargado el instalador de XML Copy Editor, haciendo doble clic en él se inicia la instalación.
Nota: En la versión XML Copy Editor 1.2.0.7 y anteriores se podía elegir el navegador predeterminado de XML Copy Editor, independientemente del navegador predeterminado del sistema. Haciendo clic en Buscar se debía elegir el ejecutable del navegador.
La declaración xml indica el juego de caracteres del documento. El juego de caracteres que se utiliza en este curso es UTF-8:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
Se pueden utilizar otros juegos de caracteres, como ISO-8859-1 (Europeo occidental):
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
Es importante que el juego de caracteres que aparece en la declaración sea el juego de caracteres en que realmente está guardado el documento, porque si no el procesador XML puede tener problemas leyendo el documento.
XML Copy Editor tiene en cuenta el juego de caracteres indicado en la declaración. Si se modifica la declaración, al guardar el documento se guarda en el juego correspondiente. Pero hay que tener en cuenta que otros editores, como el bloc de notas de Windows, no lo hace.
Para comprobar si un documento está bien formado, se puede elegir el menú , hacer clic en el botón correspondiente, o pulsar la tecla F2.
Para comprobar si un documento es válido, se puede elegir el menú , hacer clic en el botón correspondiente, o pulsar la tecla F5.
Al crear un nuevo documento, XML Copy Editor no ofrece la posibilidad de crear una hoja de estilo css, pero se puede crear un nuevo documento XML, guardarlo con el nombre y extensión deseados (en el ejemplo, estilo.css), borrar la declaración XML y escribir la hoja de estilo. Para que se coloree el código, puede ser necesario recargar el documento (mediante el menú .
For the uninitiated, Chili Palmer is the protagonist of Elmore Leonard’s 1987 novel Get Shorty and its 1990 sequel Be Cool. Portrayed memorably on screen by John Travolta, Chili is a Miami-based shylock who isn't interested in breaking kneecaps—he’s interested in story structure. A voracious movie buff, Chili parlays his debt-collecting skills into a film production career, using mob logic to solve Hollywood problems ("Look at my fucking shoes," he famously demands of a studio executive).
But what the movies couldn’t capture—the interior monologues, the cut subplots, the original, unflinching prose—is what makes this new Chili Palmer story archive exclusive a treasure trove for Leonard purists and crime fiction addicts.
Understanding the mechanism of this product is more valuable than the product itself. It is a prime example of Persona-Based Marketing.
Beyond the manuscripts, the Chili Palmer Story Archive Exclusive contains seven reel-to-reel audio tapes. These are not interviews. They are Chili dictating his "memoirs" to a secretary named Donna who, according to notes, only lasted three weeks because "no one types fast enough to keep up with his mouth."
In Tape #4, recorded October 12, 1994—two weeks before the premiere of the Get Shorty film—Chili discusses his reaction to seeing John Travolta play him. chili palmer story archive exclusive
[Transcribed from audio tape] "So I’m sitting in the screening room. Dark. Cigarette smoke. Travolta walks in wearing my suit. Not a copy. He actually sent a guy to my closet. He looks at the director and says, 'Is the tie right?' And I’m thinking: You’re worried about the tie? You got my walk wrong. I don’t roll my shoulders. I shift my weight. But then he says the line—'Look at me.' And he does the lean. The one I do when I’m about to offer a deal you can’t refuse. And I’ll be damned. It wasn’t acting. He became me. That’s when I knew I was obsolete. My own life belonged to someone else."*
This level of meta-commentary has never been heard before. It blurs the line between creator and creation, offering a haunting reflection on identity in Hollywood.
The exclusivity of this archive means it offers material that casual fans have never seen. Key components often include:
Deleted & Alternate Scenes: Scripted moments that never made the final cut of Get Shorty, including extended dialogue with Chili’s Miami bookie connections or alternate interactions with Gene Hackman’s character, Harry Zimm. Chili Palmer Story Archive Exclusive Who is Chili Palmer
Elmore Leonard’s Original Notes: Handwritten character sketches, plot outlines, and correspondence between Leonard and director Barry Sonnenfeld. These notes reveal how Chili evolved from a novel-only character (first appearing in Leonard’s 1990 book Get Shorty) into a cinematic icon.
The “Be Cool” Epilogue Materials: While the film Be Cool was less critically acclaimed, the archive reportedly contains a darker, unmade sequel treatment where Chili moves into streaming content production—a prescient concept written by Leonard in the early 2000s.
Oral Histories: Exclusive interviews with crew members, casting directors, and second-unit directors explaining how Travolta’s performance—his calm, slow-burn charisma—redefined the “cool criminal” trope.
In the smoky, jukebox-fueled crossroads of crime fiction and Hollywood satire, no character has ever walked the line quite like Chili Palmer. For decades, fans of Elmore Leonard’s sharpest creation have been piecing together the loan shark’s journey from the grimy pools halls of Miami to the executive suites of Los Angeles. But now, for the first time, the vault doors have been cracked open. Welcome to the Chili Palmer Story Archive Exclusive—a deep, uncensored dive into the scripts, deleted scenes, and hidden lore of the coolest antihero ever put to page. Content Types:
In an era where streaming services algorithmically generate content and "tough guys" are CGI renderings, the Chili Palmer Story Archive Exclusive serves as a reminder of a tactile, dangerous, and witty America.
Elmore Leonard wrote that Chili "looked like a gangster but thought like a producer." The archive reveals the inverse: he felt like a loser but spoke like a king.
When you browse the Chili Palmer Story Archive Exclusive, you aren't just reading outtakes. You are watching a man bully the universe into letting him win. Every crossed-out sentence, every angry letter to an agent, every bad check stapled to a note that says "This guy’s a deadbeat, go to his wife’s boutique"—it’s all part of the myth.