Subject: RE: [xsl] RE: [SPAM] - Re: [xsl] characters in xsl - Bayesian Filter detected spam From: "Bradley, Peter" <PBradley@xxxxxxxxxx> Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 16:01:19 -0000 |
Actually, while we're on this topic, would somebody mind explaining the // notation for me? Maybe I've oversimplified it in my own mind, but I understand the / character to act as a path separator such that anything to the left of the / is the parent of anything to the right. But I haven't been able to visualise the // notation at all. Can anyone explain (and perhaps give examples of where it's useful)? Cheers Peter -----Original Message----- From: Osman Ginar Eren [mailto:Cinar.Eren@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: 11 November 2004 15:57 To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [xsl] RE: [SPAM] - Re: [xsl] characters in xsl - Bayesian Filter detected spam thanks for your help.. any other secial characters? i know about "/" and "//". -----Original Message----- From: Colin Paul Adams [mailto:colin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, November 11, 2004 5:52 PM To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [SPAM] - Re: [xsl] characters in xsl - Bayesian Filter detected spam >>>>> "Osman" == Osman Ginar Eren <Cinar.Eren@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: Osman> hi, a sily question but i want to learn the meaning of the Osman> following characters in xsl: Osman> "@", ".", "$" ... Not so silly. Except it's XPath, not XSLT. @ = attribute:: = attribute axis. So @fred means attribute named fred . = context node (or context item in XSLT 2.0) - that's the item that is the current subject of apply-templates or for-each in XSLT . $ = variable reference, so $fred is the value of the variable (or parameter) named fred. -- Colin Paul Adams Preston Lancashire
Current Thread |
---|
|
<- Previous | Index | Next -> |
---|---|---|
Re: [xsl] characters in xsl, Kevin Rodgers | Thread | [xsl] Re: [SPAM] RE: [xsl] RE: [SPA, M. David Peterson |
[xsl] RE: [SPAM] - Re: [xsl] charac, Osman Çinar Eren | Date | [xsl] RE: [SPAM] - RE: [xsl] RE: [S, Osman Çinar Eren |
Month |