It seems <![CDATA[ does the same as the htmlspecialchar
<![CDATA is just a syntactic alternative to using < and &
It just makes all occurrences of < and & within its scope be
automatically taken as character data rather than markup (it _only_
affects these two characters).
so this isn't java. (<)
It is, as encoded in XML.
The character data in the XML consists of a single < character, if you
extract the text from a DOM, or for example look at string-length() in
Xpath, you will see that there is a single < character there, it is just
that the way to write a single < character in XML is <.
Any application that extracts the text from the XMl file and passes it
to a program interpreter should pass the actual character data, not its
XML encoding, so java(script) will never see the <.
this is exactly the same as in Xpath: the Xpath test is 1 < 2 but if you
use XPath in an XML context, you need eg <xsl:if test="1 < 2">
The XPath interpretter is not confused by the entity reference as that
has been expanded by the XML parser before the Xpath system ever sees
the expression.
PS. I use xml with xsl now in a php processor(this is a better
processor than the one of the ie explorer + I get XHTML source back)
instead of using the <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl"
href="example.xsl"?> directive in the xml file.
If you are producing html, then any < or & signs appearing as content of
a script element should appear in the result as < or & (even though they
are entered using < and &, or equivalently, <![CDATA).
David
--
http://www.dcarlisle.demon.co.uk/matthew
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