Subject: Re: [xsl] XSL Beginner Resources [was XSL equivalent of SQL having] From: Brian Chrisman <incubus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Wed, 22 Sep 2004 12:33:21 -0700 |
On Wed, Sep 22, 2004 at 02:13:06PM -0400, john-xsl-list wrote: > On Wed, 22 Sep 2004 14:07:30 -0400, Francesco Barresi wrote > > Yes, you can nest the [], like you writed before: > > /one/two[child::three[@atribute='value']] > > > > You can also do it in other ways, for example: > > > > //three[parent::two and @attribute='value'] > > > > yes I know, this example is pretty stupid, but was only to show that > > in Xpath you can match the same thing with dirrente expressions. > > Thanks very much; I appreciate the examples. > > I am curious where people learn these things. I feel like I am missing some > parts of the big XSL picture. In other programming languages I generally > just read the API documentation, but think language (declarative?) is > completely unfamiliar to me. I went through the tutorial stuff on w3schools first, and then went on to the zvon.org XSLT tutorials. The zvon stuff is more advanced and gives you a bit more thorough understanding of xpath than the w3schools stuff... and of course, xpath is fundamental to xslt... > > What are some good web resources to start with? I know of w3c, w3schools > and msdn, which can be pretty good for low-level stuff, but is there some > kind of cheat-sheet for the high-level things? I don't have time for a > thick book. > > Thanks, > > -John
Current Thread |
---|
|
<- Previous | Index | Next -> |
---|---|---|
RE: [xsl] XSL Beginner Resources [w, Raffaele Sena | Thread | Re: [xsl] XSL Beginner Resources [w, Wendell Piez |
RE: [xsl] XSL Beginner Resources [w, Raffaele Sena | Date | Re: [xsl] XSL Beginner Resources [w, Wendell Piez |
Month |