- From: Matthias Gille Levenson <matthias.gille-levenson@e...>
- To: xml-dev@l...
- Date: Fri, 25 Feb 2022 22:42:21 +0100
Hi,
Are you sure xsl:attribute-value is a valid XSL element ? Does
xsl:attribute work ?
Best,
Matthias
On 25/02/2022 22:35, Richard Watt
wrote:
Hello,
I was hoping I could get some advice on
formatting a HTML table row from an XSL style sheet in Google
Chrome running on Windows 10 - I can get the exact versions if
needed and I'm running a SQL query on a database to get a list
of orders for a customer with a CSS style sheet with a set of
styles defined for the table rows according to the possible
status values for an order:
-
Completed: trCompleted = { color: green; }
-
Rejected: trRejected = { filter: alpha(opacity=50); }
-
Cancelled: trCancelled = { color: red; }
-
In Progress: trInProgress = { color: orange; }
I'm displaying the data in the following columns
in the table:
- Order Number
- Customer Name
- Account Number
- Description
- Net Value
- Sales Tax
- Gross Value
- Order Status
I want to format the rows so that their values
are formatted with the appropriate CSS style class for the
order status: what I've got at the moment is something along
these lines after a
<TR> tag (I've just listed the line for a row
displaying a completed order and split up the formatting to
make it more readable):
<xsl:if test="ORDERSTATUS='Completed'">
<xsl:attribute-value name="class">trCompleted</xsl:attribute>
</xsl:if>
This seems to be ignored by Chrome and the
order data is displayed in a regular black font.
I've tried a few different ways of correcting
this, including using a <xsl:choose> tag with a
<xsl:when> for each case and a _javascript_ function to
determine the style name from the order status, but none of
these appear to have worked and
I was wondering what I'm doing
wrong?
Best regards,
--
Doctorant, ÉNS de Lyon.
CIHAM - UMR 5648
Membre scientifique de la Casa de Velázquez
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