On 11/22/2023 2:30 AM, Benjamin Buchmuller wrote:
Hi list,
I came across this old thread as I was trying to use \xmlpos{#1} to "dynamically" create references such as \item[mystep:\xmlpos{#1}] to be referenced when other elements of this node are parsed at a later point.
In fact, it seems that \xmlpos{#1} returns duplicate values. This might indeed be the intended meaning of \xmlpos{#1} as it seems related to the XML query foo/bar/index() which only looks up the position in the parent node. (I noticed that if I run this repeatedly, I get somehow different values from times to times. I can't say why.)
Anyways, I was wondering if there is a TeX command to access the absolute position of an element in the tree? Similar to foo/bar[rootposition()] (or foo/bar[order()]? – Can't make sense of the entry in the XML manual.) normally elements are unique, and within n xml instance #1 itself is rather unique (but the same even over runs i.e. when it goes via the tuc file)
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