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On 12/04/2010 18:37, Costello, Roger L. wrote:
Is it a correct explanation of what?
The XSLT language is designed so that most of the time the system can serialise the output as it goes along without ever having to build the result as a tree in memory. However (except for error conditions) it has to behave as if it doesn't do that.
David
Re: [xsl] The output of evaluating an XSLT transform is the same regardless of the order in which output elements are evaluated. Right?
Subject: Re: [xsl] The output of evaluating an XSLT transform is the same regardless of the order in which output elements are evaluated. Right? From: David Carlisle <davidc@xxxxxxxxx> Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2010 18:46:52 +0100 |
On 12/04/2010 18:37, Costello, Roger L. wrote:
Is this explanation correct:
Is it a correct explanation of what?
Of the XSLT processing model: perhaps. of the behaviour of an XSLT implementation: probably not.
The XSLT language is designed so that most of the time the system can serialise the output as it goes along without ever having to build the result as a tree in memory. However (except for error conditions) it has to behave as if it doesn't do that.
David
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