I would think you'd be using these:
xmlns:c="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/core"
xmlns:x="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/xml"
Isabelle Phan wrote:
Hi Kris
the x taglib is declared like other jstl libraries:
xmlns:x="jstl-xml"
it follows the taglib declarations in web.xml, but from the output you
are right, it seems like the tag is ignored:
<x:parse escapeXml="true" xml="<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
etc...
I have the vague feeling it's some stupid typo...
thanks for your help
Isabelle
Kris Schneider wrote:
Are you sure you're properly declaring the x taglib? It almost looks
like <x:parse> is being treated as a plain XML element and ${rssFeed}
is simply evaluated and used for the value of the xml attribute. Can
you view the source of the generated page?
Isabelle Phan wrote:
My problem: x:parse is outputting the RSS feed content even though
the JSP does not contain <x:out> or <c:out> statement
The code:
<c:import var="rssFeed"
url="http://www.expasy.org/spotlight/index.xml"/>
<x:parse var="rss" xml="${rssFeed}"/>
output:
http://www.expasy.org/spotlight/ one month, one protein en-us
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 2007-03-26T10:13:59+01:00 hourly 1
2000-01-01T12:00+00:00
etc...
until:
while obestatin reports adequacy.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.expasy.org/spotlight/ Article
2006-01-19T13:22:59+01:00 " var="rss"/>
It looks as if part of the x:parse tag is printed on the HTML page!
I am using JSTL 1.1
Anybody seen this before?
--
Kris Schneider <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
D.O.Tech <http://www.dotech.com/>
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]