Thanks David
It looked so eazy the way you described that.
You are a genius.
Thanks a lot
alex
On Wed, 11 Sep 2002 David Carlisle wrote :
> and It is working but I did not understand
> exactly what it is doing
This is Steve Meunch's devious trick.
To see how it works it helps to lie down in a darkened rule and
repeat
the secret XSLT chant until you are in the correct frame of mind.
Then
just look at the code again and it all becomes clear.
Basically the problem is that you have a node "." and a set of
nodes
returned by the key() function. What you want to know is if the
node you
have is teh first element in the set. so..
key('contacts-by-surname', surname)[1]
is the first element (in document order) in the set.
and you want to know if this is the same node as .
you can't do
. = key('contacts-by-surname', surname)[1]
because that will test the string values of the nodes, it does
not
test whether the nodes are the same. (So for example all empty
elements
would be equal if tested with = as they all have string value
"")
However
the set
(. | key('contacts-by-surname', surname)[1])
is the union of the set set consisting of . and the set
consisting of
the first element returned by key(). Either this union has 1
element
or two. If it has two it means the key() function has returned a
node
other than the current one.
David
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