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Subject: Re: [xsl] variable scope and test directives From: Dimitre Novatchev <dnovatchev@xxxxxxxxx> Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2003 01:37:24 -0800 (PST) |
> Is it just my Sablotron processor, or are variables declared inside
> xsl:choose trapped inside the "choose" scope(?)?
>
> That seems useless. It means I can't do things like.
>
> <xsl:choose>
> <xsl:when test="/app/presentation/series_id='0'">
> <xsl:variable name="defaultOption">
> <option value="0"> </option>
> </xsl:variable>
> </xsl:when>
> <xsl:otherwise>
> <xsl:variable name="defaultOption" select="''" />
> </xsl:otherwise>
> </xsl:choose>
Of course you can, but the xsl:variables so declared go immediately out
of scope and are useless as you have found out.
Do:
<xsl:variable name="someName">
<xsl:choose>
<!-- As many values on conditions as necessary -->
</xsl:choose>
</xsl:variable>
[skip]
> Surely no other language does this - because it's, er, stupid!
All block-structured languages have the notion of scope, e.g. in C:
if(someCondition)
{
int c = 3;
}
else
{
}
/* The above variable "c" is out of scope here */
This is direct translation of your problem in C. As you see, in C the
situation is exactly the same...
So what's stupid about it?
=====
Cheers,
Dimitre Novatchev.
http://fxsl.sourceforge.net/ -- the home of FXSL
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