Hi,
At 09:19 AM 12/2/2009, Ken wrote:
At 2009-12-01 21:46 -0500, ohaya(_at_)cox(_dot_)net wrote:
the problem was that the match I was using was not matching
anything, so that xsl:template was not "catching", and the reason
for not matching was because of the namespace.
Is that right?
Indeed.
At 2009-12-01 21:48 -0500, ohaya(_at_)cox(_dot_)net wrote:
Also, I think that what was 'throwing me off' was that the "sig:"
namespace was implicit. That was why I was using just "Signature"
instead of "sig:Signature".
That it was not implicit was the problem. And even if you had
declared the default namespace in your stylesheet it still would not
have worked, because in an XPath address in XSLT an element without
a prefix is assumed to be in no namespace (note in XSLT 2 there is
an option to declare the default namespace to use for elements in
XPath addresses).
So, one has to associate the desired input namespace with a prefix
to use in the stylesheet, regardless of whether the input file is or
is not using a prefix for namespaces.
In other words, if the element in the input document is in a
namespace, it must be matched with a name in the same namespace, and
in XSLT there are only two ways to do this. First, the namespace may
be made explicit in the match pattern (even if it is only implicit
elsewhere), or second, in XSLT 2.0 a top-level declaration may be
used to bind unprefixed names in XPath expressions, throughout the
stylesheet, to a namespace (a considerable convenience). Note that
only the first option is available in XSLT 1.0.
Binding unprefixed names to a namespace in the stylesheet in the
usual way (with a namespace declaration) does not do this, since
while it affects unprefixed names of XML elements in the stylesheet
(as it is supposed to), it does not affect unprefixed names inside
XPath expressions, which are only inside attribute values in the
XSLT-as-XML -- that is, as "namespaces in content".
An illustration:
<illustration xmlns="data:,illustration">
<element attribute="value"/>
</illustration>
While the 'illustration' and 'element' elements are in the declared
(unprefixed) namespace, there's nothing in XML that says the value
"value" should be modified in any way. This is exactly analogous to:
<xsl:template xmlns="data:,illustration" match="element">
...
</xsl:template>
(Nor would it be wise for XSLT to specify this for its XPath
expressions, if you want to think about the case where a stylesheet
needs to work with elements in different namespaces, either matching
them or generating them, while any or all of them may appear
unprefixed in the data.)
This is a very common gotcha for beginners or sometime users, since
it becomes relevant as soon as namespaces come into play, and it's
somewhat counterintuitive until you wrap your head around all of it
-- both how namespaces work, and how XSLT stylesheets are XML
documents and follow the rules thereof.
Only then does it make sense: the stylesheet works only if the names
are the same, but to be the same, they have to look different.
Cheers,
Wendell
======================================================================
Wendell Piez
mailto:wapiez(_at_)mulberrytech(_dot_)com
Mulberry Technologies, Inc. http://www.mulberrytech.com
17 West Jefferson Street Direct Phone: 301/315-9635
Suite 207 Phone: 301/315-9631
Rockville, MD 20850 Fax: 301/315-8285
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