Kjetil Kjernsmo wrote:
The textarea element is in the default namespace of the stylesheet, I
have not assigned any namespace to that.
you mean that your xpatch declaration is in the default namespace, your
source document, or the textarea element in the source document? The
xpath namespace must match the namespace of the textarea in the source
document. Perhaps you can provide us with a smallest working example
(with your error in it) with source/xslt/output?
The fragment I get from
TinyMCE is asserted to be XHTML under some conditions I think I have
met, but I have not actually seen a namespace on these elements either.
If there's no namespace attached in the source, then you can use it
without namespace declarations in your XSLT.
I suspect "valid XHTML" ignores a few things, such as the namespace
If you mean what browsers do with it: indeed, they ignore the namespace
declaration.
declaration. Also, TinyMCE gives me a whole document, but I manipulate
the DOM in my application to only include children of the body.
But what is the part that eventually gets to the XSLT processor? A bunch
of nodes surely must have a root node. Do you give the DOM to the XSLT
processor? Does the DOM that you create have a namespace?
I tried to insert a xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" and
xhtml:textarea, but it made no difference.
In the source, the xpath or the xslt root declaration? If this is your
XHTML:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head><title>some title</title></head>
<body>
<form>
<textarea>Some data</textarea>
</form>
</body>
</html>
And this is your XSLT:
<xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<xsl:template match="/">
<xsl:apply-template select="xhtml:textarea" />
</xsl:template>
<xsl:template match="xhtml:textarea">
<textarea>
Do something with this node
</textarea>
</xsl:template>
Then your output will look like this:
<textarea xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
Do something with this node
</textarea>
Note that the output has no namespace attached for the textarea element.
But the input document has and the XSLT document has (for the xhtml
prefix, that is), and the XPath has.
Cheers,
-- Abel Braaksma
http://www.nuntia.com
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