Subject: Re: [xsl] Combining stylesheets for baseclass-subclass type documents From: Robert Koberg <rob@xxxxxxxxxx> Date: Sun, 14 Apr 2002 15:28:39 -0800 |
Can't you just include a.xsl in b.xsl? Call a on it's own and b includes a so it does what want?Can you break out the common templates/variables/params into separate XSL documents? This way you can directly target your unique circumstance. For example, what i do is have a global_defintions.xsl that includes all the common XSLT documents (variables, params) that have common usage. Then in the unique XSLTs, I just include global_defintions.xsl. When you need the unique view you call the unique XSLT doc which includes the common stuff.
Well, in a way, my a.xsl is like your global_definitions.xsl: stylesheets for unique circumstances (e.g., b.xsl) indeed include this base stylesheet. The problem lies in how the two need to be combined (explained and examplified in my previous message) under the restrictions in place:
a.xsl has to be independent of b.xsl, and b.xsl has to inherit the a-specific information from a.xsl. Additionally, a.xsl should be able to transform a document on its own; it's not just a "library-stylesheet".
Current Thread |
---|
|
<- Previous | Index | Next -> |
---|---|---|
Re: [xsl] Combining stylesheets for, Daniel Brockman | Thread | Re: [xsl] Combining stylesheets for, Daniel Brockman |
[xsl] XSLT Java Extensions, Garvin Franco | Date | Re: [xsl] Combining stylesheets for, Robert Koberg |
Month |