this is the structure of my source xml:
<root>
<DataSet Value="A">
<Data Value1="1" Value2="anythingA1" />
<Data Value1="2" Value2="anythingA2" />
<Data Value1="3" Value2="anythingA3" />
<Data Value1="4" Value2="anythingA4" />
<Data Value1="5" Value2="anythingA5" />
</DataSet>
</root>
from which I like to create some variables e.g. from all with Value1="2" and all with Value1="5" should result myVar1 with anythingA2 and myVar2 with anythingA5
My approch looks like this
<xsl:variable name="myVarA" select="/DataSet/Data/[@Value1='2']/@Value2" />
but of course is not working since Value2 is no child of Value1.
thanks for any hints in advance!
Just remove the slash after Data
and prepend the root:
<xsl:variable name="myVarA" select="/root/DataSet/Data[@Value1='2']/@Value2"/>
There are two problems with your xpath - first you need to remove the child selector from after Data
like phihag mentioned. Also you forgot to include root
in your xpath. Here is what you want to do:
select="/root/DataSet/Data[@Value1='2']/@Value2"
Try this
xsl:variable name="myVarA" select="//DataSet/Data[@Value1='2']/@Value2" />
The '//' will search for DataSet at any depth
Note: using // at the beginning of the xpath is a bit CPU intensitve -- it will search every node for a match. Using a more specific path, such as /root/DataSet will create a faster query.
I would do it by creating a variable that points to the nodes that have the proper value in Value1 then referring to t
<xsl:variable name="myVarANode" select="root//DataSet/Data[@Value1='2']" />
<xsl:value-of select="$myVarANode/@Value2"/>
Everyone else's answers are right too - more right in fact since I didn't notice the extra slash in your XPATH that would mess things up. Still, this will also work , and might work for different things, so keep this method in your toolbox.