Re: [xsl] XSLT Processor

Subject: Re: [xsl] XSLT Processor
From: himanshu padmanabhi <himanshu.padmanabhi@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 17:44:01 +0530
ohhh..ok....Thank you very much both.
I read in your book that IE5 onwards with MSXML3 version can run XML
file in browser(if stylesheet specified).

On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 5:28 PM, Michael Kay <mike@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> The XSLT processor you are using is called LibXSLT.
>
> I suspect you are only using Firefox to display the HTML output of the
> transformation. Firefox does have its own XSLT transformation engine, but
> you would normally invoke this not from Perl, but either (a) by opening an
> XML document in Firefox, when the XML document has an <?xml-stylesheet?>
> processing instruction, or (b) by running Javascript code within an HTML
> page to invoke the transformation.
>
> Michael Kay
> http://www.saxonica.com/
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: himanshu padmanabhi [mailto:himanshu.padmanabhi@xxxxxxxxx]
>> Sent: 25 March 2009 11:48
>> To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> Subject: [xsl] XSLT Processor
>>
>> Thank you very much.
>>
>> I am calling XSL file from my perl script and using perl
>> module 'XML:LibXML' and 'XML::LibXSLT',running result on
>> 'Firefox 3 Beta 5'.I did not required any XSLT processor to
>> be installed separately.
>>
>> Is firefox 3 having default XSLT processors ? If not,can you
>> please tell me which processor these perl modules use?or I am
>> completely wrong here?
>>
>> On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 4:34 PM, Michael Kay
>> <mike@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >
>> > Anything you see in an attribute named "select" or "test"
>> is an XPath
>> > expression.
>> >
>> > Michael Kay
>> > http://www.saxonica.com/
>> >
>> >> -----Original Message-----
>> >> From: himanshu padmanabhi [mailto:himanshu.padmanabhi@xxxxxxxxx]
>> >> Sent: 25 March 2009 10:50
>> >> To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> >> Subject: [xsl] XPath expressions
>> >>
>> >> Processing language must incorporate a declarative query
>> syntax for
>> >> selecting the data that needs to be processed. In SQL, that's the
>> >> SELECT statement. In XSLT, the equivalent is the XPath expression.
>> >>
>> >> --Book from Micheal Kay
>> >>
>> >> Means we have to pass single quotes within double quotes like this.
>> >> Is this method called the XPath expression?
>> >>
>> >> <xsl:template name="str:tokenize">
>> >>     <xsl:param name="args" select="'$args'" />
>> >>     <xsl:param name="delimiters" select="' '" />
>> >>
>> >> It will be surely there in later part of the book.But can
>> anyone tell
>> >> me now which are exactly XPath expressions?
>> >>
>> >> ---------------
>> >> Thanks and Regards,
>> >> Himanshu Padmanabhi
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> ---------------------------------
>> Thanks and Regards,
>> Himanshu Padmanabhi
>
>



--
---------------------------------
Thanks and Regards,
Himanshu Padmanabhi

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