Steve wrote:
What you need is: match="Records[Record]" (you need a predicate, not a
child specification).
I suppose I thought that Record[DATA_TYPE='x'] would override
Records/Record because it was more specific. Obviously my ideas about
xsl's ability to pick templates border on prescient.
Templates are chosen based on precedence rules which are clearly
defined. I don't know them by heart, but in general, I think the
following suffices: the more specific you get, the higher the
precedence, but extra predicates or parent/child specifications do not
add up and count equally.
If you want to override the default precedence (using @priority), using
something below 0 will always be lower than default precedence and
something above 1 will always be higher than default precedence.
Not really sure what you mean here. Yes, this is a much abbreviated
snippet from the actual xsl. Why do I need what, exactly?
Sorry, 'this' referred to '//beginDate'. It looks to me like a point for
improvement of your code, but I can't tell, because I know too little of
your structure. Hence the (sorry, rather vague) description of why and all.
Switching modes is something really handy why you happen to have very
similar data sets that have to be treated rather differently. It looks
like you have such sources, but I can't tell from your input.
Cheers,
-- Abel
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