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106

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3

I am just learning XML and how to use XSL files. In an XSL file I found the following term:

xsl:template match="/"

What does this stand for ? And what could I use instead of the "/" ?? Could I write "table" or any other html tag instead of "/" ?

+4  A: 

The match attribute indicates on which parts the template transformation is going to be applied. In that particular case the "/" means the root of the xml document. The the value you have to provide into the match attribute should be XPath expression. XPath is the language you have to use to refer specific parts of the target xml file.

To gain a meaningful understanding of what else you can put into mathc atribute you need to understand what xpath is and how to use it. I suggest yo look at links I've provided for youat the bottom of the answer.

Could I write "table" or any other html tag instead of "/" ?

Yes you can. But this depends what exactly you are trying to do. if your target xml file contains HMTL elements and you are triyng to apply this xsl:template on them it makes sense to use table, div or anithing else.

Here a few links:

Koynov
This answer is not actually correct. Not every XPath expression can be specified as a legal match pattern.
Dimitre Novatchev
I agree but in my opinion it is better for a beginner to consider the match pattern as it is defined using XPath.
Koynov
+2  A: 

The value of the match attribute of the <xsl:template> instruction must be a match pattern.

Match patterns form a subset of the set of all possible XPath expressions. The first, natural, limitation is that a match pattern must select a set of nodes. There are also other limitations. In particular, reverse axes are not allowed in the location steps (but can be specified within the predicates). Also, no variable or parameter references are allowed in XSLT 1.0, but using these is legal in XSLT 2.x.

/ in XPath denotes the root or document node. In XPath 2.0 (and hence XSLT 2.x) this can also be written as document-node().

Examples of match patterns:

<xsl:template match="table">

can be applied on any element named table.

<xsl:template match="x/y">

can be applied on any element named y whose parent is an element named x.

<xsl:template match="*">

can be applied to any element.

<xsl:template match="/*">

can be applied only to the top element of an XML document.

<xsl:template match="@*">

can be applied to any attribute.

<xsl:template match="text()">

can be applied to any text node.

<xsl:template match="comment()">

can be applied to any comment node.

<xsl:template match="processing-instruction()">

can be applied to any processing instruction node.

<xsl:template match="node()">

can be applied to any node: element, text, comment or processing instructon.

Dimitre Novatchev
+1 from myside .. complete reference :) :D
infant programmer
+1  A: 

It's worth noting, since it's confusing for people new to XML, that the root (or document node) of an XML document is not the top-level element. It's the parent of the top-level element. This is confusing because it doesn't seem like the top-level element can have a parent. Isn't it the top level?

But look at this, a well-formed XML document:

<?xml-stylesheet href="my_transform.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>
<!-- Comments and processing instructions are XML nodes too, remember. -->
<TopLevelElement/>

The root of this document has three children: a processing instruction, a comment, and an element.

So, for example, if you wanted to write a transform that got rid of that comment, but left in any comments appearing anywhere else in the document, you'd add this to the identity transform:

<xsl:template match="/comment()"/>

Even simpler (and more commonly useful), here's an XPath pattern that matches the document's top-level element irrespective of its name: /*.

Robert Rossney
+1 .. good explanation :)
infant programmer