On 8/22/2015 1:29 PM, Meer, H. van der wrote:
There is a behaviour of xmlconcat that I do not understand. Calling as \xmlconcat{#1}{test}{xxx} correctly interjects the "xxx" between the successive members, in according with the documentation.
But using the command version for calling: \xmlconcat{#1}{test/command(xmltest:test)}{yyy} does typeset the nodes but not the text from the third argument.
It might be the correct behaviour but it confuses me. Any comments or enlightment? Thamks in advance.
Hans van der Meer
Minimal example:
\setuppapersize[A6][A6] \startxmlsetups xmltest:setups \xmlsetsetup{\xmldocument}{root|test}{xmltest:*} \stopxmlsetups \xmlregistersetup{xmltest:setups} \startxmlsetups xmltest:root \writestatus{TEST}{calling xmltest:root} \xmlconcat{#1}{test}{xxx}\crlf \xmlconcat{#1}{test/command(xmltest:test)}{yyy}\crlf \stopxmlsetups \startxmlsetups xmltest:test \xmlflush{#1} \stopxmlsetups \startbuffer[xmlbuffer] <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <root> <test>node-1</test> <test>node-2</test> <test>node-3</test> <test>node-4</test> </root> \stopbuffer \starttext \xmlprocessbuffer{root}{xmlbuffer}{} \stoptext \endinput
\xmlconcat{#1}{test}{xxx}\crlf \xmlconcat{#1}{test/command(xmltest:test)}{yyy}\crlf command(...) is applied and is stronger than concat you can also apply concat, compare this: \startxmlsetups xmltest:root \writestatus{TEST}{calling xmltest:root} \xmlconcat{#1}{test}{xxx}\crlf \xmlconcat{#1}{test/command(xmltest:test)}{yyy}\crlf \xmlall {#1}{test/concat('zzz')}\crlf \stopxmlsetups \startxmlsetups xmltest:test [\xmlflush{#1}] \stopxmlsetups ----------------------------------------------------------------- Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands tel: 038 477 53 69 | voip: 087 875 68 74 | www.pragma-ade.com | www.pragma-pod.nl -----------------------------------------------------------------