Dear George,
If a stylesheet isn't valid on its own when the user initiates
validation, perhaps the user could be prompted to nominate another
stylesheet (i.e. the main one) to validate in its place. Perhaps this
setting could be "sticky" in a session.
That is, I'm in favor of option 1, except I'd like the default
behavior to be to validate this stylesheet, with the option of
validating another one offered only if there's trouble.
As far as the difficulty of having many of these to set when an
import tree is complex, perhaps this is the point when heuristics
could be applied to a project, and a likely candidate or candidates
for "main stylesheet" nominated in a pick-list. That would alleviate
some of the burden, while allowing developers to retain control.
I've sometimes had modules that had more than one calling stylesheet,
after all (it's part of the point of a modular design), so I'd rather
not leave this completely up to the machine to decide.
Cheers,
Wendell
At 08:20 AM 2/2/2006, you wrote:
When you perform a stylesheet validation in oXygen it tries to
create a Transformer out of that using the XSLT processor you have
configured for XSLT validation. By default that is Saxon 6.5.5 for
XSLT 1.0 and SaxonB 8.6.1 for XSLT 2.0.
Now it is true that some stylesheets are not valid by themselves but
are ok if they are imported or included from other stylesheets. In
fact this is one of the things we discussed recently internally at
oXygen and I would like to get some feedback from XSLT users.
Basically for a stylesheet module (that is not intended to be used
by itself) the validation should be performed on the main stylesheet
(on the one that includes/imports directly or indirectly the module).
Now the problem is how that situation is handled:
1. One possibility is to allow the user to specify the main
stylesheet through some action (for instance click on a button and
enter the main stylesheet in a dialog).
2. Another approach is to analyze all the stylesheets from the
current project and see how they are related wrt include/import and
determine automatically the main stylesheet.
Both these approaches have bad points.
In the first case if there are a lot of modules the user has to make
a lot of actions to specify for each module the main stylesheet and
that may be annoying.
In the second case analyzing all the stylesheets in the project can
take some time and after doing that it is possible to get more
possible master stylesheets and in that case the user action will be
required to determine the actual main stylesheet to be used.
So, what would you prefer? If you want to work in a totally
different way, how would that be?
Best Regards,
George
---------------------------------------------------------------------
George Cristian Bina
<oXygen/> XML Editor, Schema Editor and XSLT Editor/Debugger
http://www.oxygenxml.com
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