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Hi:
I have a question that I've been wanting to ask for a while and thought today would be a pretty good day (for me anyways) to ask.
How come the current() function is part of the XSLT spec ant not XPath? It seems from what I've seen of it/how its been used, it would be more appropriate to be in XPath instead of being only available as XSLT. For example, in the case XPath only implementations how would a user do a comparison of two separate branches without resorting to some sort of extension function (which XPath doesn't deal with).
Just curious.
Thanks
Chris
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
[xsl] A really easy (hopefully) question
Subject: [xsl] A really easy (hopefully) question From: Chris Gow <cgow@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Thu, 08 Feb 2001 15:47:13 -0500 |
Hi:
I have a question that I've been wanting to ask for a while and thought today would be a pretty good day (for me anyways) to ask.
How come the current() function is part of the XSLT spec ant not XPath? It seems from what I've seen of it/how its been used, it would be more appropriate to be in XPath instead of being only available as XSLT. For example, in the case XPath only implementations how would a user do a comparison of two separate branches without resorting to some sort of extension function (which XPath doesn't deal with).
Just curious.
Thanks
Chris
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
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