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  • From: "Michael Kay" <mike@s...>
  • To: "'David A. Lee'" <dlee@c...>
  • Date: Mon, 21 Sep 2009 14:45:23 +0100


 
Ouch.  If this cant be done in xquery syntax then my goal of de-serializing an XML representation using a XQuery example implementation is out the door.

Here's my best shot ...


attribute
   { fn:QName( "U" , "P:N" ) }
   { my:IdType( "S" ) }    (: wont work will it :( :)


Ok I admit I'm totally stumped.  *IS* there a way to re-animate this example using XQuery (or XSLT?)  ?
I have a feeling that my goal of providing a reference implementation in XQuery will be impossible.  Not even sure how to get element type information re-animated.


 
I think that in XSLT, the following comes close:
 
<xsl:attribute name="P:N" namespace="U" type="my:IdType" select="'S'"/>
 
provided that the recipient has a schema (the correct schema) for the global attribute declaration my:IdType. There are problems if the type is anonymous (you might have to construct a variant of the original schema in which all types have names). As for the isID property, it is ALMOST redundant in XDM: it can in nearly all cases be inferred from the type annotation. The exception is where IDness was established as a result of DTD validation rather than schema validation. In that case, yes, I think you're going to have difficulty reconstituting the original sequence using tools written in XSLT or XQuery. (Actually, it hadn't occurred to me this was one of your goals.)
 
XQuery 1.0 (unlike XSLT 2.0) doesn't allow validation against a type name, and doesn't allow validation of individual attributes. 
 
Other limitations of using XSLT/XQuery
 
(a) neither language gives you any way of creating unparsed entities
 
(b) XQuery 1.0 gives you no way of creating arbitrary namespace nodes
 

Regards,

Michael Kay
http://www.saxonica.com/
http://twitter.com/michaelhkay

 


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