Yeah, I decided to scrap it and start from scratch. When I did that things 
began to work. However, I am getting the following error: 

ServletException in:/j2ee/jsf/tiles/jsf_body_section.jsp] It is not possible 
to have tags which produce DOM-XML and text in the body. Perhaps you want to 
use the attribute wants='string'?'


The above error happens whenever I am using tag <mm:write> to write out a url. 
The following is what my code looks like.
.
.
.
 <mm:formatter xslt="../xslt/ssw_test_2xhtml.xslt" >
                       <a href='<mm:write referid="url"/>'><mm:field name="title" 
/></a> 
                        <mm:field name="abstract"/>
                         
                        <mm:listrelations role="idrel"> 
                                <mm:relatednode /> 
                        </mm:listrelations> 
                         
 </mm:formatter>

It seems like I cannot combined regular text..?

Curtney

On Tuesday 03 August 2004 01:20 am, Michiel Meeuwissen wrote:
> Curtney Jacobs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I have been feedling aroiund with the 2xhtml.xsl  to produce font-size,
> > and font color changes, but I am not seeing the changes in the resulting
> > xhtml. I am pretty confident my jsp page is referencing the correct style
> > sheet. I have been at this for a few hours now. But no luck.
> >
> > I made a copy of 2xhtml (ssw_test_2xhtml.xslt) and made sure my jsp page
> > is pointing towards it. But still no results. Below are markup snipet:
> >
> > Any assistance, as usual, is greatly appreciated.
>
> I cannot immediately understand the problem, but I could perhaps give some
> hints for sollution.
>
> Firstly you could (temporary) switch off all XSL related cached which you
> find in caches.xml. Otherwise changes could have a delay and so on, which
> can be rather confusing, especially when not certain yet of other things.
>
> Secondly I would make absolutely sure that it is actually using my XSL, by
> making it very simple and writing out a lot of messages on any hit template
> or so. If that works, then it was an issue in the XSL (XSL being a quit
> obscure language, makes that not implausible), if it doesn't hit at all,
> then obviously there is something wrong with resolving it.
>
> I suppose you have already studied the 'formatter.jsp' examples? I'm pretty
> sure that there is one adding color.
>
> Michiel


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