I have
<xsl:for-each select="//article[articletype/@id=15 and position() =1]">
which pulls back nothing. I then change it to
<xsl:f开发者_C百科or-each select="//article[articletype/@id=15]">
<p><xsl:value-of select="position()"/></p>
which pulls back
1 2 3 4
Any reason why this is happening? I've even tried number(position())
. It only works if I use a large numbers and not the position I'm expecting
<xsl:for-each select="//article[articletype/@id=15 and position() < 100]">
This question reduces to: what does //article[1]
mean? The answer is that it means
/descendant-or-self::node()/child::article[1]
which selects the first "article" child of every node in the document. This is different from (//article)[1]
, which selects the first article in the document.
So the expression you want is
<xsl:for-each select="(//article[articletype/@id=15])[1]">
With the first XPath you listed: //article[articletype/@id=15 and position() =1]
, you are asking for the first article
element at every axis (in document order) that must have an articletype/@id=15
.
For each axis, if the first article
element does not have an articletype
element with @id=15
, then nothing matches.
With the second XPath: //article[articletype/@id=15]
you are asking for all of the article
elements that have an articletype
child that has @id=15
. Apparently, there are 4 of them in your document.
You should use the following XPath:
(//article[articletype/@id=15])[1]
Dr. Michael Kay's answer better explains why it behaves this way. Also refer to this answer from Dimitri Novatchev
I think you want the following xpath expression:
<xsl:for-each select="//article[articletype/@id=15][1]">
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