On this note, it seems to me that xsl:value-of is one of the most
misunderstood instructions for novices. For that matter, even more
experienced users seem to use it in places where xsl:apply-templates,
xsl:copy-of or, in XSLT 2.0, xsl:sequence might be better choices.
I'd kind of like to see XSLT provide an alternative in the form of
allowing the "select" attribute on xsl:text with the same effect as on
xsl:value-of. This would be a) slightly more concise, b) in line with
other node-type instructions, such as xsl:attribute, and c) more
descriptive (IMHO) of the result, in that "text" suggests that the
result will be a string, rather than the more ambiguous "value". I
dare say XSLT might even consider deprecating xsl:value-of in favor of
this, for the relatively few (compared to how often it seems to be
used, today) cases where this particular functionality is needed.
-Brandon :)
On Thu, May 5, 2011 at 4:06 PM, John McGowan <john(_at_)steakfest(_dot_)com>
wrote:
Thank you Andrew, Michael and Ken!
I use value-of so much I forgot about it's impact on "non-strings".
This information also helped me with a very similar issue I just ran
into today where I was writing a function that was returning a boolean
true or false, but it was always true... because value-of was turning
it into a string.
/John
On Thu, May 5, 2011 at 3:25 AM, Andrew Welch
<andrew(_dot_)j(_dot_)welch(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com> wrote:
<option value="{@value}>
<xsl:value-of select="isSelected(@value,something)">
other stuff
</option>
with a reusable function like this
<xsl:function name="isSelected">
<xsl:param name="v1"/>
<xsl:param name="v2"/>
<xsl:if test="$v1 eq $v2"><xsl:attribute name="selected"
select="'selected'" /></xsl:if>
</xsl:function>
As has been said you need xsl:sequence or xsl:copy-of to get the whole
node not just the value of the node, but you could also make that
function a little more generic to create any attribute:
<xsl:function name="f:createAtt">
<xsl:param name="name"/>
<xsl:param name="value"/>
<xsl:attribute name="{$name}" select="$value"/>
</xsl:function>
and then call it passing the the name value pair for the attribute,
and put the condition in a predicate:
<foo>
<xsl:sequence select="f:createAtt('foo', 'bar')[current()/@value =
$something]"/>
cheers
andrew
--
Andrew Welch
http://andrewjwelch.com
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