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Re: hiding some of the source


Subject: Re: hiding some of the source
From: Matthew MacKenzie <matt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sun, 11 Apr 1999 17:43:59 -0300

John,
  Thanks, I will try that.  I am glad to hear it works with XT though,
because I will be using XT soon.

Matt

"John E. Simpson" wrote:
<*snip*>
> 
> Matt, I'm the one that asked about suppressing source-tree elements before.
> Since then, I've found that one thing that works is to establish empty
> template rules (i.e., containing only the pattern and no template) for the
> content you want to suppress. Using your above example, something like this:
> 
>         <xsl:template match="XSLCONTROL">
>         </xsl:template>
> 
>         <xsl:template match="PRODUCT">
>                 <xsl:apply-templates/> <!-- other template stuff, if any -->
>         </xsl:template>
> 
> The absence of a template for XSLCONTROL works to suppress it, and all its
> descendants, while the presence of a template for PRODUCT copies the
> contents of the PRODUCT element (and its descendants) to the result.
> 
> Btw, I'm using XT as an XSL processor. I don't know if IE5 behaves the same
> way.
> 
> ==========================================================
> John E. Simpson            | The secret of eternal youth
> simpson@xxxxxxxxxxx        | is arrested development.
> http://www.flixml.org      |  -- Alice Roosevelt Longworth
> 
>  XSL-List info and archive:  http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list


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