If I write a stylesheet with version="15.0" as an attribute
of the root element, just what am I saying?
This text is essentially unchanged from the 1.0 spec. It's actually a
brilliant bit of future-proofing.
Specifying version="3.0" means that the Microsoft processor
(or any XSLT
1.0 or 2.0 processor) is obliged to execute the xsl:fallback
instruction. If you had said version="1.0" or version="2.0", then the
processor would instead have thrown a static error saying
that there is
no such instruction as xsl:perform-magic.
Thanks Michael.
1. I'm now clear as to its purpose.
2. I'm less sure if this is a one off in xslt land,
or more widely accepted in W3C as a good idea.
I'll take 2 up within W3C.
regards DaveP
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