Second Edition Januar 2006
ISBN 978-0-596-00974-8
Weitere Informationen zu diesem Buch
Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Index |
Probekapitel |
Rezensionen |
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface
1. XPath
1.1 Effectively Using Axes
1.2 Filtering Nodes
1.3 Working with Sequences
1.4 Shrinking Conditional Code with If Expressions
1.5 Eliminating Recursion with for Expressions
1.6 Taming Complex Logic Using Quantifiers
1.7 Using Set Operations
1.8 Using Node Comparisons
1.9 Coping with XPath 2.0's Extended Type System
1.10 Exploiting XPath 2.0's Extended Type System2. Strings
2.1 Testing If a String Ends with Another String
2.2 Finding the Position of a Substring
2.3 Removing Specific Characters from a String
2.4 Finding Substrings from the End of a String
2.5 Duplicating a String N Times
2.6 Reversing a String
2.7 Replacing Text
2.8 Converting Case
2.9 Tokenizing a String
2.10 Making Do Without Regular Expressions
2.11 Exploiting Regular Expressions
2.12 Using the EXSLT String Extensions3. Numbers and Math
3.1 Formatting Numbers
3.2 Rounding Numbers to a Specified Precision
3.3 Converting from Roman Numerals to Numbers
3.4 Converting from One Base to Another
3.5 Implementing Common Math Functions
3.6 Computing Sums and Products
3.7 Finding Minimums and Maximums
3.8 Computing Statistical Functions
3.9 Computing Combinatorial Functions
3.10 Testing Bits4. Dates and Times
4.1 Calculating the Day of the Week
4.2 Determining the Last Day of the Month
4.3 Getting Names for Days and Months
4.4 Calculating Julian and Absolute Day Numbersfrom a Specified Date
4.5 Calculating the Week Number for aSpecified Date
4.6 Working with the Julian Calendar
4.7 Working with the ISO Calendar
4.8 Working with the Islamic Calendar
4.9 Working with the Hebrew Calendar
4.10 Formatting Dates and Times
4.11 Determining Secular and Religious Holidays5. Selecting and Traversing
5.1 Ignoring Duplicate Elements
5.2 Selecting All but a Specific Element
5.3 Selecting Nodes by Context
5.4 Performing a Preorder Traversal
5.5 Performing a Postorder Traversal
5.6 Performing an In-Order Traversal
5.7 Performing a Level-Order Traversal
5.8 Processing Nodes by Position6. Exploiting XSLT 2.0
6.1 Convert Simple Named Templates to XSLT Functions
6.2 Prefer for-each-group over Muenchian Method of Grouping
6.3 Modularizing and Modes
6.4 Using Types for Safety and Precision
6.5 Avoiding 1.0 to 2.0 Porting Pitfalls
6.6 Emulating Object-Oriented Reuse and Design Patterns
6.7 Processing Unstructured Text with Regular Expressions
6.8 Solving Difficult Serialization Problems with Character Maps
6.9 Outputting Multiple Documents
6.10 Handling String Literals Containing Quote Characters
6.11 Understanding the New Capabilities of Old XSLT 1.0 Features7. XML to Text
7.1 Dealing with Whitespace
7.2 Exporting XML to Delimited Data
7.3 Creating a Columnar Report
7.4 Displaying a Hierarchy
7.5 Numbering Textual Output
7.6 Wrapping Text to a Specified Width and Alignment8. XML to XML
8.1 Converting Attributes to Elements
8.2 Converting Elements to Attributes
8.3 Renaming Elements or Attributes
8.4 Merging Documents with Identical Schema
8.5 Merging Documents with Unlike Schema
8.6 Splitting Documents
8.7 Flattening an XML Hierarchy
8.8 Deepening an XML Hierarchy
8.9 Reorganizing an XML Hierarchy9. Querying XML
9.1 Performing Set Operations on Node Sets
9.2 Performing Set Operations on Node Sets Using Value Semantics
9.3 Determining Set Equality by Value
9.4 Performing Structure-Preserving Queries
9.5 Joins
9.6 Implementing the W3C XML Query-Use Cases in XSLT10. XML to HTML
10.1 Using XSLT as a Styling Language
10.2 Creating Hyperlinked Documents
10.3 Creating HTML Tables
10.4 Creating Frames
10.5 Creating Data-Driven Stylesheets
10.6 Creating a Self-Contained HTML Transformation
10.7 Populating a Form11. XML to SVG
11.1 Transforming an Existing Boilerplate SVG
11.2 Creating Reusable SVG Generation Utilities for Graphs and Charts
11.3 Creating a Tree Diagram
11.4 Creating Interactive SVG-Enabled Web Pages12. Code Generation
12.1 Generating Constant Definitions
12.2 Generating Switching Code
12.3 Generating Message-Handling Stub Code
12.4 Generating Data Wrappers
12.5 Generating Pretty Printers
12.6 Generating a Test Data-Entry Web Client
12.7 Generating Test-Entry Web CGI
12.8 Generating Code from UML Models via XMI
12.9 Generating XSLT from XSLT13. Vertical XSLT Application Recipes
13.1 Converting Visio VDX Documents to SVG
13.2 Working with Excel XML Spreadsheets
13.3 Generating XTM Topic Maps from UML Models via XMI
13.4 Generating Web Sites from XTM Topic Maps
13.5 Serving SOAP Documentation from WSDL14. Extending and Embedding XSLT
14.1 Saxon Extension Functions
14.2 Saxon Extension Elements
14.3 Xalan-Java 2 Extension Functions
14.4 Java Extension Function Using the Class Format Namespace
14.5 Java Extension Function Using the Package Format Namespace
14.6 Java Extension Function Using the Java Format Namespace
14.7 Scripting Extension Function Using Inline Script Code
14.8 Xalan-Java 2 Extension Elements
14.9 Java Extension Element
14.10 Scripting Extension Elements
14.11 MSXML Extension Functions
14.12 Using Saxon's and Xalan's Native Extensions
14.13 Extending XSLT with JavaScript
14.14 Adding Extension Functions Using Java
14.15 Adding Extension Elements Using Java
14.16 Using XSLT from Perl
14.17 Using XSLT from Java15. Testing and Debugging
15.1 Using xsl:message Effectively
15.2 Tracing the Flow of Your Stylesheet Through Its Input Document
15.3 Automating the Insertion of Debug Output
15.4 Including Embedded Unit Test Data in Utility Stylesheets
15.5 Structuring Unit Tests
15.6 Testing Boundary and Error Conditions16. Generic and Functional Programming
16.1 Creating Polymorphic XSLT
16.2 Creating Generic Element Aggregation Functions
16.3 Creating Generic Bounded Aggregation Functions
16.4 Creating Generic Mapping Functions
16.5 Creating Generic Node-Set GeneratorsIndex
Zurück zu XSLT Cookbook