On Jan 7, 2007, at 6:13 AM, Toby wrote:
2. XSLT's (actually XPath's) document() function
The document() function allows you to access more than one xml source
file from within a XSLT. See for example the "styleless stylesheet"
approach (it was on some blog... I don't have the link handy right
Hey, thanks for all your help! That's seems to be pretty much what I
searched for :).
Regards,
Daniel Süpke
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Daniel Süpke wrote:
> xml1 is the generator with all the contents for the overall-structure
> of the page, being transformed by some xsl-file. The contents has
> various block with headings etc. Inside these blocks I want to parse
> external xml-files, which contain the actual data to be represente
From: Daniel Süpke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sun, 07 Jan 2007 13:27:52 +0100
Hi,
I read a couple of websites about Cocoon and took a look inside the
samples and Cocoon seems to be really nice, especially since I need to
have various output formats later (pdf, html, ...).
But right now, I am hav
Hi Daniel,
Hope I could explain the problem somewhat understandable ;).
If I understood your question you might want to take a look at:
http://cocoon.apache.org/2.1/userdocs/xinclude-transformer.html
http://cocoon.apache.org/2.1/userdocs/cinclude-transformer.html
HTH,
Benjamin
Hi,
I read a couple of websites about Cocoon and took a look inside the
samples and Cocoon seems to be really nice, especially since I need to
have various output formats later (pdf, html, ...).
But right now, I am having a rather basic question (I guess). I want to
include and transform contents