As you can see, it declares the namespace "date" and then
instructs the processor to exclude it in the output. At least
that's what I think it does. Nonetheless the namespace
declaration (and a second on that I have no clue as to where
it originates) appears in each element that is placed into
the output via <xsl:copy-of>.
The exclude-result-prefixes option only affects namespaces added to the
result tree from the stylesheet by processing a literal result element.
It doesn't affect namespaces copied from the source document using
xsl:copy-of.
If you don't want the result tree to be an exact copy of the source
(namespaces and all) then you can't use xsl:copy-of, you have to do an
apply-templates walk of the tree changing nodes as you go.
Michael Kay
Here is an example of one element from the output:
<pmml:name xmlns:date="http://exslt.org/dates-and-times"
xmlns:func="http://exslt.org/functions">Task 1</pmml:name>
As you can see both the "date" and "func" namespace
declarations are added. I didn't declare the "func" namespace
in my stylesheet and it isn't declared in the included (via
<xsl:include>) stylesheet, nor does the included stylesheet
include a third stylesheet that might be the source of "func".
What am I missing?
--
Charles Knell
cknell(_at_)onebox(_dot_)com - email
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list