The most efficient way would be to limit the XML source - having the search engine do 
the sorting and limiting for yourself. That being impossible, you can do it with an 
XSLT transformation for sorting: 
 http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt.html#sorting
 http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt.html#copying
and another to select the topmost N:
 http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt.html#section-Applying-Template-Rules
 http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath.html#function-position

You can get better help at XML/XSL specific mailing lists.

On Tue, 10 Jul 2001 15:27:19 -0400, Jason Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
--
> I'm kind of new at this whole XML/XSP/XSL thing, so if this has a simple
> solution,
> please bear with me.
> 
> Here's the situation: I have a search engine that passes out search results
> as XML
> to anything that can make a HTTP request to it. When it returns the results,
> it looks 
> something like this:
> 
> <searchresults>
>       <result>
>               <name>Result 1</name>
>               <description>This is result 1</description>
>               <href>http://here.com/index.html</href>
>               <score>2.3</score>
>       </result>
> 
>       <result>
>               <name>Result 2</name>
>               <description>This is another result</description>
>               <href>http://there.com/index.html</href>
>               <score>1.2</score>
>       </result>               
> 
>       etc.
> </searchresults>
> 
> 
> The <result> elements can be repeated infinitely depending on how many
> search
> results the engine finds that match search query. <score> is the search
> result's 
> ranking against the search query; the rest of the elements in <result> are 
> self-explanatory. 
> 
> The search engine returns ALL matches at once in one big XML file. There
> could be a dozen search results, 100, or 1.
> 
> How would one go about limiting those results in Cocoon? Say I get 100
> results,
> but I only want to display the top 10 results by score. I'm assuming XSP
> is the answer, but I've been going nuts trying to get this stuff to work.
> I have O'Reilly's "Java and XML" on back-order, so hopefully that can clear
> up my confusion, but until then, anybody got any ideas or some direction
> for me?
> 
> Thanks for any help.
> 
> J
> 
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--
Sergio Carvalho
---------------
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you

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