|
Subject: RE: The document() function....again !! From: Kay Michael <Michael.Kay@xxxxxxx> Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2000 11:12:56 +0100 |
> While I am an eager to get help from anyone, I want to direct
> this question
> to "our teachers" in the group (Alan Kay, Jeni Tennison, and others).
Alan Kay is the Smalltalk man. Wrong language...
> Could someone please explain what goes on in the the XSLT call to
> document().
>
> <xsl:apply-templates
> select="document(somefile.xml)/some_element[@aval='true']"
try document('somfile.xml')
> 2.) In [Mike] Kay's Wrox text on XSLT he goes to great length
> to draw the
> schematics of the XML input tree, XSLT transform and output trees.
> How is that structure impacted by a call to document()
> ? Is a second
> Input tree created ? If so what mechanism is used to
> alternate between those data structures.
Yes, a second input tree is created. To get back to the original tree, it's
a good idea to have a global variable
<xsl:variable name="root" select="/"/>
so you can get back any time using $root. To get back to the secondary
document, just call document() again with the same URI, or set up another
global variable.
Note that many XPath expressions such as "//item" or "key('k', $val)"
implicitly access the "current document", i.e. the one containing the
context node.
Mike Kay
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
| Current Thread |
|---|
|
| <- Previous | Index | Next -> |
|---|---|---|
| RE: The document() function....agai, Andrew Kimball | Thread | RE: The document() function....agai, v . rudowitsch |
| RE: xslt assistance please, Kay Michael | Date | some sample examples needed, suresh talluri |
| Month |