I've got an XSL issue. With the following code I exclude Box1
<xsl:for-each select="//box[@id!='box1']">
But I also want to exclude Box7. Is that possible and how can I do that?
I've got an XSL issue. With the following code I exclude Box1
<xsl:for-each select="//box[@id!='box1']">
But I also want to exclude Box7. Is that possible and how can I do that?
You can AND those predicates together:
<xsl:for-each select="//box[@id!='box1'][@id!='box7']">
and
operator.
Use:
//box[not(@id='box1') and not(@id='box2')]
If you have many ids to exclude, use (in this example I am excluding "box1" - "box4"):
//box[not(contains('|box1|box2|box3|box4|', concat('|', @id, '|'))]
@id
attribute selected, the !=
operator is enough. It might not be the case in other scenario, of course.
!=
even in this case -- never use !=
(maybe only in exceptional cases it may give you some expressional advantage) and thus never have nasty problems.
Feb 16, 2011 at 18:15
$nums
containing a nodeset: <num>1</num><num>2</num><num>3</num>
and you compare '1' != $nums
, the result is true()
. The result of comparing '1' = $nums
is also true()
. This is the anomaly that people need to avoid. It is very embarassing to find this fact when debugging your code.
Feb 17, 2011 at 0:05