Either move the xsl:attribute before any children, or use an attribute value template.
Either move the xsl:attribute before any children, or use an attribute value template. From the creating attributes section of the XSLT 1 spec: The following are all errors: Adding an attribute to an element after children have been added to it; implementations may either signal the error or ignore the attribute.
A naked would suffice. – Tomalak Apr 1 '09 at 16:34 True, but that wasn't the question. – Pete Kirkham Apr 1 '09 at 16:36 It wasn't meant to be critical.It was just a comment.
:-) – Tomalak Apr 1 '09 at 16:38 This worked. The problem was partly due to the way that I was applying the template within my main template. Thanks you to all!
– Shane Larson Apr 1 '09 at 16:51.
Try this - worked for me: Trick is - first, before you do any other processing. Marc.
The was not visible therefore your answer seemed a bit strange. Just corrected it. (and +1) – Tomalak Apr 1 '09 at 16:41 Thank you for your answers.
This was helpful, Even though I did not vote it the correct answer (the other answer required fewer lines of code. ). I did vote this one up.
Thanks to all! – Shane Larson Apr 1 '09 at 16:52.
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