Re: [xsl] saxon xmlspy discrepancy in whitespace handling

Subject: Re: [xsl] saxon xmlspy discrepancy in whitespace handling
From: Abel Braaksma <abel.online@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2007 14:45:24 +0100
David Carlisle wrote:
<xsl:variable name="newline" select=" '&#10;' " />

2nd one, not the 1st (which is equivalent to <xsl:variable
name="newline"/>

Oops!


(side note:)
I tend to solve my own whitespace problems with character maps, so that I can use a private use character everywhere in my code. That way I do not need to think about the whitespace removal of the stylesheet:


inside a stylesheet dtd:

<!ENTITY newline "&#38;#x0A;" >
<!ENTITY newline_substitute "&#xE0F2;" >   <!-- mapped to newline -->
<!ENTITY nsub "&newline_substitute;" >     <!-- alias -->

the xslt:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE xsl:stylesheet SYSTEM "../../xslt-common/dtd/webitor-transformation.dtd" >


<xsl:stylesheet
   version                    = "2.0"
   xmlns:xsl                = "http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"; >

<xsl:character-map name="substitutes">
<xsl:output-character character="&newline_substitute;" string="&newline;"/>
</xsl:character-map>


<xsl:output use-character-map="substitutes" />

   <xsl:template match="/">
       <xsl:value-of select=" '&nsub;' " />
   </xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>


In the example above there is no reason at all of course for using &nbsub; instead of &#10; unless for readability (but you could use &newline; too). However, when passing around variables, doing copy-of, value-of etc, or even a normalice-space, you can loose the newlines. This way you can preserve them more easily and, the better part, when I place an &nsub; anywhere, it will always be output (which is not so for &#10;)


There are other possibilities that have to do with linebreaking and proper indentation that are otherwise hard to achieve or may get lost in parameter passing as value-of instead of copy-of etc., but I am drifting too far away now from the OP's question....

(I wonder if this technique is used by others, too and for what purposes; I use similar tricks for easier handling of quote-escapes in source documents and outputting tab characters for indentation when normal indentation does not suffice)

-- Abel Braaksma

Current Thread