> in which case you can (if you want) concatenate the regexp together
> separated by | and just use one regexp and one xsl:analyze-string then
> test inside the xsl:matching-substring which case you are in by
looking
> which regex-group() are non empty.
Here is one of my regular expressions which is capturing 13 groups.
<xsl:analyze-string select="$input-file"
regex="<body><tab>(.*?)?<tab>(.*?)\(([a-z]+)\.([a-z]+)
\.([0-9]+) ex (.*?)<enr>(.*?)\)([0-9,
]+)?<tab>([0-9]+)<tab>([0-9]+)<tab>([0-9]+)<tab>
([0-9]+)<tab>([0-9]+)$">
So I probably don't want to concatenate all ten into one line!!
Any other suggestions?
Kind regards.
--
Kevin
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