Ken,
Why do you use double *s and not just a single one?

On Sun, May 3, 2009 at 7:09 PM, Ken Starks <[email protected]>wrote:

> Yet another person wrote:
>
>> I've been trying to use a css stylesheet in my xsl transformation but It
>> doesn't come through.
>>
>> It seems cocoon doesn't understand relative paths
>>
> For local paths, you can use something like the following.
> (I usually put all my Graphics in a 'Graphics' sub-folder,
> and put xslt and css files together in a 'Style' sub-folder )
>
> ********************  quote from a sitemap **********************
>
> <!-- for many file-types that are not caught already we
> just serve them up.
>
> They are graphics types, pdf, and cascading stylesheets -->
>  <map:match pattern="**.png">
> <map:read src="Graphics/{1}.png" />
> </map:match>
>
> <map:match pattern="**.gif">
> <map:read src="Graphics/{1}.gif" />
> </map:match>
>
> <map:match pattern="**.jpg">
> <map:read src="Graphics/{1}.jpg" />
> </map:match>
>
> <map:match pattern="**.jpeg">
> <map:read src="Graphics/{1}.jpeg" />
> </map:match>
>
>
> <map:match pattern="**.pdf">
> <map:read src="PDF/{1}.pdf" />
> </map:match>
>
> <map:match pattern="**.css">
> <map:read src="Style/{1}.css" />
> </map:match>
>
> ********************  end quote *********************************
>
>
>  nor does it understand resource/internal/stylesheets/file.css or any other
>> link i've tried.
>>
>> I even made a pipeline to match the css from my sitemap but that didn't
>> work either.
>>
>> It's probably something silly but I can't seem to find it - any help would
>> be greatly appreciated
>>
>>
>>
>> Thanks in advance!
>>
>
>
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