Had originally sent the response shown below detailing the problem he was
having - but it did not make it to the userlist when I sent the response -
here it is again if any one was interested in what what happening

Dave Flanagan

Michael - making one of two changes should correct the problem you are
experiencing:
Solution #1:
    Instead of dealing with the Document Element of the source which you are
    obtaining with the following line:
        Element docRoot = db.parse(inName).getDocumentElement();
    change it to
        Document docRoot = db.parse(inName);
-------
Solution #2:
If no change to your java code is desired then
     in the stylesheet change
          <xsl:template match="/files">
     to
          <xsl:template match="files">

Dave Flanagan

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Joseph Kesselman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2003 10:16 AM
Subject: Re: transform() fails for DOMSource but succeeds for StreamSource


>
>
>
>
> I strongly suspect you've misdiagnosed the problem, and your glitch is
tied
> to the use of a DOMResult rather than a DOMSource.
>
> When outputting to a DOM Document, your generated document *must* meet the
> DOM's well-formedness requirements -- single root element, no text nodes
> outside that root element, etc.  If you violate those constraints, the DOM
> will throw a HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR.
>
> I haven't analysed your testcase in detail, but if my guess is right your
> options are:
>
> 1) Fix the stylesheet to produce a well-formed XML document.
>
> 2) Output to SAX rather than DOM, since SAX doesn't enforce as many of the
> well-formedness constraints.
>
> 3) If you really need DOM and really something other than a well-formed
> document, you could try wrapping the DOMResult around a DocumentFragment
> rather than a Document. That would permit multiple top-level elements and
> text at the top level; depending on exactly what the system is complaining
> about, that might be enough to get you over the hump.
>
> ______________________________________
> Joe Kesselman, IBM Next-Generation Web Technologies: XML, XSL and more.
> "The world changed profoundly and unpredictably the day Tim Berners Lee
> got bitten by a radioactive spider." -- Rafe Culpin, in r.m.filk
>
>


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