RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
It will work for a textarea if that is an option, but for an input, all the tags get stripped out and just the content gets included. This is a very interesting thread. So with hidden textareas or you custom class, I can pass the XML fragment. But when receiving the request parameter in my XSL, how can I transform it into a XML fragment again and out put it of the transformation? Is the noddeset() function useful in that case? This e-mail is intended only for the above addressee. It may contain privileged information. If you are not the addressee you must not copy, distribute, disclose or use any of the information in it. If you have received it in error please delete it and immediately notify the sender. Security Notice: all e-mail, sent to or from this address, may be accessed by someone other than the recipient, for system management and security reasons. This access is controlled under Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, Lawful Business Practises. - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
I used JTidy to parse the string and output it as a DOM stream into an XSP page. This DOM stream is automatically converted to a SAX stream by Cocoon. Regular XSLT can be performed after this. JTidy is readily available in Cocoon. Here's a code snip: try { Tidy tidy = new Tidy(); //Do not show parsing messages tidy.setQuiet(true); //Do not show warnings in the Servlet Engine console tidy.setShowWarnings(false); //set the output type tidy.setXmlOut(true); //Set the encoding tidy.setCharEncoding( conf.UTF8 ); //Set output options tidy.setNumEntities(true); tidy.setBreakBeforeBR(false); tidy.setQuoteNbsp(true); tidy.setQuoteAmpersand(true); tidy.setLiteralAttribs(true); //Omit the document type in the tidy output tidy.setXmlPi(false); //parse the document tot a DOM tree doc = tidy.parseDOM(in, null); } catch (Exception e) { } Bert At 10:06 24/10/2002 +0200, you wrote: It will work for a textarea if that is an option, but for an input, all the tags get stripped out and just the content gets included. This is a very interesting thread. So with hidden textareas or you custom class, I can pass the XML fragment. But when receiving the request parameter in my XSL, how can I transform it into a XML fragment again and out put it of the transformation? Is the noddeset() function useful in that case? This e-mail is intended only for the above addressee. It may contain privileged information. If you are not the addressee you must not copy, distribute, disclose or use any of the information in it. If you have received it in error please delete it and immediately notify the sender. Security Notice: all e-mail, sent to or from this address, may be accessed by someone other than the recipient, for system management and security reasons. This access is controlled under Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, Lawful Business Practises. - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
El Jueves, 24 de Octubre de 2002 02:06, ROSSEL Olivier escribió: It will work for a textarea if that is an option, but for an input, all the tags get stripped out and just the content gets included. This is a very interesting thread. So with hidden textareas or you custom class, I can pass the XML fragment. But when receiving the request parameter in my XSL, how can I transform it into a XML fragment again and out put it of the transformation? Is the noddeset() function useful in that case? This e-mail is intended only for the above addressee. It may contain privileged information. If you are not the addressee you must not copy, distribute, disclose or use any of the information in it. If you have received it in error please delete it and immediately notify the sender. I will delete it inmediately, but before that there is a XSL list that I think can help better in this. :-D The maillist is: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Antonio Gallardo Security Notice: all e-mail, sent to or from this address, may be accessed by someone other than the recipient, for system management and security reasons. This access is controlled under Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, Lawful Business Practises. - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
Yes, I use that exact same technique (hidden textareas). To get the parameter back as XML, I wrote an XSP that grabs the request parameter XML string, turns it into a DOM document, and then iterates through the DOM nodes to emit corresponding SAX events. Now my Java isn't the best in the world, there is probably a better way, but it works for me. -Original Message- From: ROSSEL Olivier [mailto:olivier.rossel;airbus.com] Sent: Thursday, October 24, 2002 4:06 AM To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form. It will work for a textarea if that is an option, but for an input, all the tags get stripped out and just the content gets included. This is a very interesting thread. So with hidden textareas or you custom class, I can pass the XML fragment. But when receiving the request parameter in my XSL, how can I transform it into a XML fragment again and out put it of the transformation? Is the noddeset() function useful in that case? This e-mail is intended only for the above addressee. It may contain privileged information. If you are not the addressee you must not copy, distribute, disclose or use any of the information in it. If you have received it in error please delete it and immediately notify the sender. Security Notice: all e-mail, sent to or from this address, may be accessed by someone other than the recipient, for system management and security reasons. This access is controlled under Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, Lawful Business Practises. - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
Hi again, There are a couple of ways to keep this type of thing application nuetral: 1. create a Node object and pass that into the Transform. For example: Node root = null; try { DocumentBuilderFactory factory = DocumentBuilderFactory.newInstance(); factory.setNamespaceAware(true); DocumentBuilder docbuilder = factory.newDocumentBuilder(); org.w3c.dom.Document outNode = docbuilder.newDocument(); root = docbuilder.parse(new InputSource(new StringReader(restrictions.toString(; } catch (Exception e) { System.out.println(e); } 2. use something like xsl:apply-templates select=document($get.my.string.uid)/ to retrieve the string which comes back as a nodeset. best, -Rob -Original Message- From: Ryan Agler [mailto:ryanagler;hotmail.com] Sent: Thursday, October 24, 2002 8:11 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form. Yes, I use that exact same technique (hidden textareas). To get the parameter back as XML, I wrote an XSP that grabs the request parameter XML string, turns it into a DOM document, and then iterates through the DOM nodes to emit corresponding SAX events. Now my Java isn't the best in the world, there is probably a better way, but it works for me. -Original Message- From: ROSSEL Olivier [mailto:olivier.rossel;airbus.com] Sent: Thursday, October 24, 2002 4:06 AM To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form. It will work for a textarea if that is an option, but for an input, all the tags get stripped out and just the content gets included. This is a very interesting thread. So with hidden textareas or you custom class, I can pass the XML fragment. But when receiving the request parameter in my XSL, how can I transform it into a XML fragment again and out put it of the transformation? Is the noddeset() function useful in that case? This e-mail is intended only for the above addressee. It may contain privileged information. If you are not the addressee you must not copy, distribute, disclose or use any of the information in it. If you have received it in error please delete it and immediately notify the sender. Security Notice: all e-mail, sent to or from this address, may be accessed by someone other than the recipient, for system management and security reasons. This access is controlled under Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, Lawful Business Practises. - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: textarea in XMLForm Re: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
Just a comment: See XML WebAccess 2.0 from www.mozquito.com It may be interesting. I was wondering some time ago if a merge with XMLForms from cocoon and that approach (I emphasize that I mean the approach, not necessarily this specific implementation) of mozquito's to have an intelligent client (with JavaScript). If anyone had made already any simple example of this merge working please let me know. Best regards, Dario. PD: I have put both titles since they are strongly related. In order to achieve the merge you need the textarea patch and Dom representation of the form instead of javabeans (helpful for quick dirty solutions like this) and the ability to pass an XML fragment via HTML form. - Original Message - From: Emmanuil Batsis (Manos) [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 06:44 Subject: Re: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form. ROSSEL Olivier wrote: I need to pass a subtree of that XML as a parameter, via that form. Is there a way, in XSLT, to transform a XML fragment into a string? So I can have an input in my form that contains the text of this XML fragment. How about parsing the form element value to a DOM object (either client or server side) and extract the DOM node that serves as the root of the fragment you need? You think I should use Java/XSP for such a process? Ideally, before submission, you parse the form value to a DOM object via Javascript (easy in both IE and Moz). You then locate the node (fragment) of choice and use it's text serialization (XML) to replace the earlier value of the form. Your server will thus get only the fragment you need and get away with less work. Manos - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Original Message - From: Geoff Howard [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 10:12 Subject: Re: textarea in XMLForm The dev list is a better place to discuss submitting patches. I've cc'd this reply there as well. Geoff Howard --- Robert Ellis Parrott [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I noticed that in the XMLForm example that one could not hit return and have a multiline message in the additional notes textarea. Looking into it, and working on related things in which I need a textarea, I see that the xmlform2html.xsl converts xf:textarea to an input field, and not a true textarea. I don't think that this is correct; without the style attribute it defaults to a textbox. The below mods to xmlform2html.xsl replace the textarea template with one that actually creates a real textarea. I think that this is the right thing to do here. rob PS: I've modified the Form class to now support basic Maps as well as DOM and Beans; I think that having this modification would be very helpful for quick dirty solutions, and for in-development projects, because one can get data from an XMLForm into the map without creating nodes or a javabean ahead of time. Are you interested in patches? !-- xsl:template match=xf:textarea input name={@ref} type=textarea value={xf:value/text()} xsl:copy-of select=@*[not(name()='ref')]/ xsl:apply-templates select=xf:hint/ /input /xsl:template -- xsl:template match=xf:textarea textarea name={@ref} xsl:copy-of select=@*[not(name()='ref')]/ xsl:value-of select=xf:value/text()/ xsl:apply-templates select=xf:hint/ /textarea /xsl:template Robert E. Parrott Department of Physics 351 Jefferson Laboratory Harvard University 17 Oxford St. Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 (617)-495-2867 [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] (permanent) - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] __ Do you Yahoo!? Y! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your web site http://webhosting.yahoo.com/ - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please
RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
I had this problem too, and had to write a custom java class to do this inside XSLT, but it works. ?xml version=1.0? xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl=http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform; version=1.0 xmlns:java=http://xml.apache.org/xslt/java; exclude-result-prefixes=java xsl:template match=/ xsl:variable name=convertThisNode xsl:copy-of select=/page/thing/ /xsl:variable html form input name=txtNodexsl:attribute name=value xsl:value-of select=java:agler.SerializeXml.serializeXml($convertThisNode)//xsl:a ttribute /input /form /html /xsl:template /xsl:stylesheet Not sure if you are familiar with making your own Jars (took me awhile to figure out), but if you are, create you own jar and make it available to Cocoon by putting it in Tomcat's common/lib and reference it in web.xml's extra-classpath. Here is the source for SerializeXml: package agler; import org.w3c.dom.Node; import org.apache.xalan.serialize.SerializerToXML; import java.io.StringWriter; public class SerializeXml { public static String serializeXml(Node node) { String ret = ; try { StringWriter sw = new StringWriter(); SerializerToXML serxml = new SerializerToXML(); serxml.setWriter(sw); serxml.serialize(node); ret = sw.toString(); } catch (Exception e){} return ret; } } Hope this helps, good luck. +Ryan -Original Message- From: ROSSEL Olivier [mailto:olivier.rossel;airbus.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 5:05 AM To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form. I have a HTML form, created from a XML file and a XSL Treansformation. I need to pass a subtree of that XML as a parameter, via that form. Is there a way, in XSLT, to transform a XML fragment into a string? So I can have an input in my form that contains the text of this XML fragment. Corrolair when processing parameters sent by the form: is there a way, in XSLT, to transform as string into a XML fragment? ---cut here--- This e-mail is intended only for the above addressee. It may contain privileged information. If you are not the addressee you must not copy, distribute, disclose or use any of the information in it. If you have received it in error please delete it and immediately notify the sender. Security Notice: all e-mail, sent to or from this address, may be accessed by someone other than the recipient, for system management and security reasons. This access is controlled under Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, Lawful Business Practises. - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
Hi, Can you simply do: input name=txtNode xsl:attribute name=value xsl:copy-of select=/page/thing/ /xsl:attribute /input or perhaps: textarea xsl:copy-of select=/page/thing/ /textarea best, -Rob -Original Message- From: Ryan Agler [mailto:ryanagler;hotmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 10:20 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form. I had this problem too, and had to write a custom java class to do this inside XSLT, but it works. ?xml version=1.0? xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl=http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform; version=1.0 xmlns:java=http://xml.apache.org/xslt/java; exclude-result-prefixes=java xsl:template match=/ xsl:variable name=convertThisNode xsl:copy-of select=/page/thing/ /xsl:variable html form input name=txtNodexsl:attribute name=value xsl:value-of select=java:agler.SerializeXml.serializeXml($convertThisNode)//xsl:a ttribute /input /form /html /xsl:template /xsl:stylesheet Not sure if you are familiar with making your own Jars (took me awhile to figure out), but if you are, create you own jar and make it available to Cocoon by putting it in Tomcat's common/lib and reference it in web.xml's extra-classpath. Here is the source for SerializeXml: package agler; import org.w3c.dom.Node; import org.apache.xalan.serialize.SerializerToXML; import java.io.StringWriter; public class SerializeXml { public static String serializeXml(Node node) { String ret = ; try { StringWriter sw = new StringWriter(); SerializerToXML serxml = new SerializerToXML(); serxml.setWriter(sw); serxml.serialize(node); ret = sw.toString(); } catch (Exception e){} return ret; } } Hope this helps, good luck. +Ryan -Original Message- From: ROSSEL Olivier [mailto:olivier.rossel;airbus.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 5:05 AM To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form. I have a HTML form, created from a XML file and a XSL Treansformation. I need to pass a subtree of that XML as a parameter, via that form. Is there a way, in XSLT, to transform a XML fragment into a string? So I can have an input in my form that contains the text of this XML fragment. Corrolair when processing parameters sent by the form: is there a way, in XSLT, to transform as string into a XML fragment? ---cut here--- This e-mail is intended only for the above addressee. It may contain privileged information. If you are not the addressee you must not copy, distribute, disclose or use any of the information in it. If you have received it in error please delete it and immediately notify the sender. Security Notice: all e-mail, sent to or from this address, may be accessed by someone other than the recipient, for system management and security reasons. This access is controlled under Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, Lawful Business Practises. - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
It will work for a textarea if that is an option, but for an input, all the tags get stripped out and just the content gets included. -Original Message- From: Robert Koberg [mailto:rob;koberg.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 1:41 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form. Hi, Can you simply do: input name=txtNode xsl:attribute name=value xsl:copy-of select=/page/thing/ /xsl:attribute /input or perhaps: textarea xsl:copy-of select=/page/thing/ /textarea best, -Rob -Original Message- From: Ryan Agler [mailto:ryanagler;hotmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 10:20 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form. I had this problem too, and had to write a custom java class to do this inside XSLT, but it works. ?xml version=1.0? xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl=http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform; version=1.0 xmlns:java=http://xml.apache.org/xslt/java; exclude-result-prefixes=java xsl:template match=/ xsl:variable name=convertThisNode xsl:copy-of select=/page/thing/ /xsl:variable html form input name=txtNodexsl:attribute name=value xsl:value-of select=java:agler.SerializeXml.serializeXml($convertThisNode)//xsl:a ttribute /input /form /html /xsl:template /xsl:stylesheet Not sure if you are familiar with making your own Jars (took me awhile to figure out), but if you are, create you own jar and make it available to Cocoon by putting it in Tomcat's common/lib and reference it in web.xml's extra-classpath. Here is the source for SerializeXml: package agler; import org.w3c.dom.Node; import org.apache.xalan.serialize.SerializerToXML; import java.io.StringWriter; public class SerializeXml { public static String serializeXml(Node node) { String ret = ; try { StringWriter sw = new StringWriter(); SerializerToXML serxml = new SerializerToXML(); serxml.setWriter(sw); serxml.serialize(node); ret = sw.toString(); } catch (Exception e){} return ret; } } Hope this helps, good luck. +Ryan -Original Message- From: ROSSEL Olivier [mailto:olivier.rossel;airbus.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 5:05 AM To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form. I have a HTML form, created from a XML file and a XSL Treansformation. I need to pass a subtree of that XML as a parameter, via that form. Is there a way, in XSLT, to transform a XML fragment into a string? So I can have an input in my form that contains the text of this XML fragment. Corrolair when processing parameters sent by the form: is there a way, in XSLT, to transform as string into a XML fragment? ---cut here--- This e-mail is intended only for the above addressee. It may contain privileged information. If you are not the addressee you must not copy, distribute, disclose or use any of the information in it. If you have received it in error please delete it and immediately notify the sender. Security Notice: all e-mail, sent to or from this address, may be accessed by someone other than the recipient, for system management and security reasons. This access is controlled under Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, Lawful Business Practises. - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
ROSSEL Olivier wrote: I need to pass a subtree of that XML as a parameter, via that form. Is there a way, in XSLT, to transform a XML fragment into a string? So I can have an input in my form that contains the text of this XML fragment. How about parsing the form element value to a DOM object (either client or server side) and extract the DOM node that serves as the root of the fragment you need? Manos - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
I need to pass a subtree of that XML as a parameter, via that form. Is there a way, in XSLT, to transform a XML fragment into a string? So I can have an input in my form that contains the text of this XML fragment. How about parsing the form element value to a DOM object (either client or server side) and extract the DOM node that serves as the root of the fragment you need? You think I should use Java/XSP for such a process? Ok. Let's say I put the subtree to be sent into a DOM object. How do I stringify it? (I presume I cannot pass a Java object via a HTML form :-) This e-mail is intended only for the above addressee. It may contain privileged information. If you are not the addressee you must not copy, distribute, disclose or use any of the information in it. If you have received it in error please delete it and immediately notify the sender. Security Notice: all e-mail, sent to or from this address, may be accessed by someone other than the recipient, for system management and security reasons. This access is controlled under Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, Lawful Business Practises. - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [Off-topic:XSLT] Passing an XML fragment via a HTML form.
ROSSEL Olivier wrote: I need to pass a subtree of that XML as a parameter, via that form. Is there a way, in XSLT, to transform a XML fragment into a string? So I can have an input in my form that contains the text of this XML fragment. How about parsing the form element value to a DOM object (either client or server side) and extract the DOM node that serves as the root of the fragment you need? You think I should use Java/XSP for such a process? Ideally, before submission, you parse the form value to a DOM object via Javascript (easy in both IE and Moz). You then locate the node (fragment) of choice and use it's text serialization (XML) to replace the earlier value of the form. Your server will thus get only the fragment you need and get away with less work. Manos - Please check that your question has not already been answered in the FAQ before posting. http://xml.apache.org/cocoon/faq/index.html To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]