But the second stylesheet, which is doing the addition, doesn't depend
on the nodes that the first one processes, it depends on the nodes that
the first one adds. And these nodes (<aaa>) habe the same name as some
aleady existing nodes. The question is, is it possible for the xslt
processor to find out which <aaa> elemnts are from the source xml and
which are added by the stylesheet without adding extra inforomation to
the added elements.
Maybe the example is not the best but i wanted to keep it short and
simple. I am just looking for a way to influence a template's behavior
from outside. In this case I want to control whether stylesheet2
processes all <aaa> nodes or only the ones added by the first stylesheet.
regards,
Garvin
Well, in that case, you could write your template to only apply the
second template on the nodes/items that the first template processes.
But this isn't strictly composition, I think.
On 15/11/2007, Garvin Riensche <g(_dot_)riensche(_at_)gmx(_dot_)net> wrote:
As far as I know, you can't use a temporary tree to compose
stylesheets at all. You have to write the output of one stylesheet,
and read it again in the second.
I should have written "template composition" instead of stylesheet
composition. Than it would be possible to save the result of one
template in a temporary tree (variable) and apply another template on
the result.
regards,
Garvin
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