Re: [xsl] shortest way to write this xsl:if statement
2012-06-15 08:17:26
Sorry, I meant to indicate that this should produce all the nodes that
should be processed by the loop,
<xsl:for-each select="....">
On 15/06/2012, Wolfgang Laun <wolfgang(_dot_)laun(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com> wrote:
You might need an XPath expression
test="D4/G10/(X,Y,Z)[. = ('A','B','C','D')]"
-W
On 15/06/2012, henry human <henry_human(_at_)yahoo(_dot_)de> wrote:
Now the problem is, the loop bellow of xsl:if is only one time created but
I
have more findings in the if statement
regarding A, B, C, D (founds at least 4 times because D4/G100/6id = 'A' ,
D4/G100/9id = 'B' , D4/G100/10id = 'C' , D4/G100/11id ='D')
=> the code bellow of the xsl:if statemnt should be repeated as much as
if
statement find A, B, C, D,..
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Von: G. Ken Holman <gkholman(_at_)CraneSoftwrights(_dot_)com>
An: xsl-list(_at_)lists(_dot_)mulberrytech(_dot_)com;
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CC:
Gesendet: 13:59 Freitag, 15.Juni 2012
Betreff: Re: [xsl] shortest way to write this xsl:if statement
At 2012-06-15 12:54 +0100, henry human wrote:
Hello
The following if statement is too long if try it as in the sample
bellow.
How could be shorter?
The if - logic to create a for-each loop:
----------------
xsl:if
D4/G100/6id or D4/G100/9id or D4/G100/12id or D4/G100/6id15 or
D4/G100/45id or D4/G100/22id, D4/G100/10id
or D4/G100/19id is 'A' or 'B' or 'C', or 'D' or 'F'
The Sample:
<xsl:if test="D4/G100/6id = 'A' OR test="D4/G100/6id = 'B' OR
test="D4/G100/6id = 'C' OR test="D4/G100/9id = 'A' OR test="D4/G100/9id
=
'B' .....>
<xsl:for-each select=" ......">
...
</xsl:for-each>
</xsl:if>
Element names cannot begin with digits, so I'm unclear how you are going
to
be testing elements such as <6id>.
But, assuming you had elements D4/G100/X and D4/G100/Y and D4/G100/Z, you
could have in XSLT2 the following:
<xsl:if test="D4/G100/(X,Y,Z) = ('A','B','C')">
... which is equivalent to:
D4/G100/X = 'A' or
D4/G100/X = 'B' or
D4/G100/X = 'C' or
D4/G100/Y = 'A' or
D4/G100/Y = 'B' or
D4/G100/Y = 'C' or
D4/G100/Z = 'A' or
D4/G100/Z = 'B' or
D4/G100/Z = 'C'
When using the "=" comparison operator, either operand can be a set. The
processor walks through the comparisons in an arbitrary order eventually
testing each of the left operand with each of the right operand and stops
when it hits a true() result and returns true(). If you get a false()
returned, you know the processor has checked every possible combination
and
every combination has returned false().
I hope this helps.
. . . . . . . . . . . Ken
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