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RE: [xsl] manage errors and terminations, child thread of Re: [saxon] Too many attribute value templates? ++

2008-01-25 03:31:11

Firsly, xsl:message terminate="yes" is I think semantically equivalent to
error(); both cause the transformation to fail with a dynamic error, and to
produce no output. (Though XSLT states that any output produced using
xsl:result-document calls prior to termination may or may not be available
on completion.)

You seem to be looking for some kind of termination that "closes and tidies
everything up" before dying. By that, I assume you mean that you want some
kind of partial output to be available to the calling application? I wonder
if you could explain this idea more clearly - are you thinking perhaps of
some kind of model where everything on the call stack returns an empty
sequence to its caller, bypassing all type checking, and then makes the
half-written result tree available to the application? What would be the use
case for this?

Clearly, one of the rules for xsl:message and error() is that order of
execution is unpredictable, and therefore it's unpredictable how far
execution has proceeded at the time of termination.

Michael Kay
http://www.saxonica.com/
 

-----Original Message-----
From: ac [mailto:ac(_at_)hyperbase(_dot_)com] 
Sent: 25 January 2008 09:56
To: lists(_at_)fgeorges(_dot_)org; 
xsl-list(_at_)lists(_dot_)mulberrytech(_dot_)com
Subject: [xsl] manage errors and terminations, child thread 
of Re: [saxon] Too many attribute value templates? ++

Hi Florent,

I find xsl:message with @terminate useful, yet, somewhat 
radical.  It might be nice to also pass it a closure 
function/template(/or selector
of) as attribute/child, to possibly clean things up, in 
various ways, before dying.  error() is fine two but it is 
just even a little bit more radical. error() may also benefit 
from the additional closing selector.

Still, the current xslt options are fine, as an application 
that manages errors, leaves @terminate mostly for testing & 
debugging, as well as for that application's error management 
service, after closing and tidying everything up, ready to 
die.  Since tests and debugs may be harder to structure ;-}, 
and since in such an application, one only shuts down once, 
error() is probably more useful in other context.

Although interesting, I have some doubts on how much of this 
is directly related to Saxon.  Would you agree that it might 
now more be relevant on the xsl list, and allow me to throw it there?

Thanks.
Cheers,
ac


  If you want a run-time error in this case, you can simply use 
xsl:message with @terminate or xsl:sequence with error().  I feel
error() is not used often while this is of great help to check some 
assumptions, while developing and even in production...

  Regards,

--drkm



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