Subject: Re: XSLT and formatters From: Jeni Tennison <jeni.tennison@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Fri, 11 Aug 2000 11:23:10 +0100 |
Hans-Guenter, >Now: is there any solution for inserting all the surrounding >table-formating stuff into the final HTML-output without having the >XSLT-processor parsing all the table-formating and building a very large >DOM-object? Possibly. Rather than producing all the tables using XSLT, you could just produce a file (or files) containing the content that are then referenced as entities within the HTML page. To do this, your HTML page needs to be XHTML (i.e. XML using HTML elements/attributes), but that shouldn't be a problem. Your XHTML file should look like: ---- <?xml verision="1.0"?> <!-- use whatever level of XHTML (strict, transitional, framset) you want --> <!-- insert your own reference to a local copy of the XHTML DTD --> <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd" [ <!ENTITY content SYSTEM "content.html"> ]> <html> <head><title>Document with lots of nested tables</title></head> <body> <table> ... <table> <tr><td>&content;</td></tr> </table> ... </table> </body> </html> ---- The content in content.html will be inserted wherever you put the entity reference (&content;). You can then produce the content.html from the XSLT stylesheet on your XML input, making sure it's a well-formed external parsed text entity (see http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#TextEntities). You could use several entities if you wanted to, but the more you're using, the more likely it is that just producing the whole file through XSLT is the best solution. This approach won't work well if the information that you want to include is to be scattered around within the tables, only if you have a few discrete chunks of generated output. Also, the XHTML page will not be viewable properly unless you're using a browser that recognises the HTML entities (i.e. an XML-aware browser). That means that you will have to convert it to HTML, but I would have thought that the standard html-formatter applied by Cocoon would be able to do this for you. In a flow chart, the suggested solution is sort of: XML/XSP input --- (XSLT) --> XML content --| +-- (html formatter) --> HTML XHTML format --| I hope this is a viable solution for you, Jeni Dr Jeni Tennison Epistemics Ltd, Strelley Hall, Nottingham, NG8 6PE Telephone 0115 9061301 ? Fax 0115 9061304 ? Email jeni.tennison@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
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