[XSL-LIST Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Does XQuery allow you to modify the XML? (remove
Hi, I too have had some success embedding XSLT in XQuery inside BaseX. Here is a demo project, showing BaseX and XSLT inside Docker - https://github.com/wendellpiez/XMLLunchbox. It includes a demo application that uses XQuery and XSLT to draw an I Ching hexagram thrown at random (with yarrow stalk probabilities). I am not running Docker on a server on the open web so with my apologies, you will have to run it yourself. But the code is all there. NB this is server-side Saxon, as opposed to the demonstrations in the XMLJellySandwich repository, which use SaxonJS in your browser (and hence require no setup at all). Of course, both can also be used together -- BaseX can serve up SaxonJS -- Cheers, Wendell Of course, you don't need Docker if you want to install and run BaseX natively. On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 11:52 AM Steven D. Majewski steve.majewski@xxxxxxxxx <xsl-list-service@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > BaseX had an XSLT module, so you can use both methods where appropriate. > By default, it uses Java XSLT 1.0, but if you drop Saxon into /lib, it will use that and give you XSLT 2 and 3. > > Ibm using (WIP) RESTXQ and typeswitch to dispatch on document root node to XSLT transform for that document type. You can also easily chain transforms together, and Ibm trying to use this separate local customizations and branding to separate transforms. This also allows preprocessing to deal with namespaces schema based documents vs non-namespaces DTD based docs, or other version differences ( TEI P4 vs P5 ) with a normalization/conversion step. You can also easily mix XSLT transforms and XQuery functions in a chain. Ibm also looking at trying to use Query to access sections of document ( like chapters ) and to use XSLT to transform to HTML instead of transforming complete document. > > > b Steve M. > > > > On Oct 17, 2019, at 12:51 PM, Adam Retter adam.retter@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx <xsl-list-service@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Yes, you can either write a type-switch transformation in XQuery to > create a new document by filtering the content of your original > document, or you could use XQuery Update if your processor supports > it. > > For typeswitches, this might be useful - > https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/XQuery/Typeswitch_Transformations > > On Thu, 17 Oct 2019 at 16:55, Costello, Roger L. costello@xxxxxxxxx > <xsl-list-service@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Hi Folks, > > It's been a long time since I've looked at XQuery. > > I need to identify certain elements in XHTML documents and then either remove the elements or modify their values. Can XQuery do this? Are there fee XQuery tools? > > XHTML --> XQuery --> XHTML' (a modified version of the input XHTML document) > > /Roger > > > > > -- > Adam Retter > > skype: adam.retter > tweet: adamretter > http://www.adamretter.org.uk > > > XSL-List info and archive > EasyUnsubscribe (by email) -- ...Wendell Piez... ...wendell -at- nist -dot- gov... ...wendellpiez.com... ...pellucidliterature.org... ...pausepress.org... ...github.com/wendellpiez... ...gitlab.coko.foundation/wendell...
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