That would be a better way around but I can't see a way to
wrap the page-specific stylesheets in the common one without
breaking the common stylesheet in two stylesheets, top and
bottom, or am I missing the point.
Something like this:
[specialCase.xsl]
<xsl:stylesheet>
<xsl:import href="generalCase.xsl"/>
<xsl:template match="/" mode="page-specific">
... generate page-specific content ...
</xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>
[generalCase.xsl]
<xsl:stylesheet>
<xsl:import href="generalCase.xsl"/>
<xsl:template match="/">
<boilerplate>
<xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="page-specific"/>
</boilerplate>
</xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>
The detail can vary, depending on how much common structure there is between
the different XML source documents. As shown above, it works with no common
structure at all: the only thing the general-purpose stylesheet does it to
wrap a standard boilerplate around the page-specific output.
Michael Kay
http://www.saxonica.com/
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