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Hi Dimitre,
I have no problem with what you say, because what you are doing is metonymically identifying a node with its string representation. So you're talking about span containment vs. span overlap (in the other cases, mentioned before). Nesting, perhaps by virtue of its lexical origin, associates in my mind with trees more readily ;-) but, yeah, the way you present it, it's much more palatable. Thanks for the explanation.
Best,
Piotr
On 14/01/14 23:08, Dimitre Novatchev wrote:
Re: [xsl] Does the count() function require access to the whole subtree?
Subject: Re: [xsl] Does the count() function require access to the whole subtree? From: Piotr Bański <bansp@xxxxx> Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2014 23:23:44 +0100 |
Hi Dimitre,
I have no problem with what you say, because what you are doing is metonymically identifying a node with its string representation. So you're talking about span containment vs. span overlap (in the other cases, mentioned before). Nesting, perhaps by virtue of its lexical origin, associates in my mind with trees more readily ;-) but, yeah, the way you present it, it's much more palatable. Thanks for the explanation.
Best,
Piotr
On 14/01/14 23:08, Dimitre Novatchev wrote:
On Tue, Jan 14, 2014 at 1:49 PM, Piotr BaEski <bansp@xxxxx> wrote:But to speak of a node nested inside another... urgle. Sounds wrongish.
Yes, if we speak about *trees*
However, with *streaming* the string representation of a descendant node (and of whole subtrees) is actually, physically nested in the string representation of the root of the tree (it is *physically* between the start-tag and the end-tag of the root element).
As we are struggling to understand streaming better, it is good to use terminology that is best reflecting the actual streaming -- thus "nested" is a precise reflection of the real, physical nesting during streaming.
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