Note that page 118 cites the diagram on page 72 and talks about
proximity order and in what order nodes are found along each of the axes.
. . . . . . . . Ken
At 2012-05-23 11:36 -0400, I wrote:
I have such a diagram on page 72 of my "Practical Transformation
Using XSLT and XPath" PDF book on my web site. It is available for
free preview on a "Try and buy" basis: you download the entire PDF
book at no charge and if you decide to keep the book you pay for it,
otherwise you delete it. Same for my XSL-FO, UBL and code lists books:
http://www.CraneSoftwrights.com/training/#ptux
My students have found this diagram very helpful and I've given
written permission to some other training organizations to use it in
their training. I have not given permission for the diagram to be
posted visibly on the web.
I hope you find it useful.
. . . . . . . . . Ken
At 2012-05-23 11:30 -0400, mlcook(_at_)Wabtec(_dot_)com wrote:
Someone recently posted a link to a tree diagram showing the
relationship of ancestors, siblings, descendents, etc. This
diagram was to help show what some XPath expressions would return.
I've lost the link.
If anyone has a link to such a diagram, I'd appreciate it.
Thanks, Mike Cook
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