I have a website that has links to documents that are dynamically populated based on the document type and all the data is located in one central xml file. I wanted have JQuery pass a parameter to the style sheet, the style sheet segregate out the the nodes using xpath based on the passed parameter, and then sort the notes based on an attribute. From all the documentation I found, JQuery doesn't natively support XSLT and none of the 3rd party plugins can return a new XML object once the original xml has been transformed. Am I missing something or is what I'm trying to do not possible? The xsl file has been tested outside of javascript and it works flawlessly.
Here is a sample of the code without the transform
$.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: "xml/charts.xml",
dataType: "xml",
success: function(xml) {
$(xml).find('chart').each(function(){
// Create link here
});
}
});
Another one is jquery.xslTransform on http://jquery.glyphix.com/jquery.xslTransform/example/index.html
Or as general documentation states:
There's an example of usage on the linked page, guess it can suit your needs although it's a javascript wrapper of sarissa which is trying to make a browser-independent API for XSL tools in all browsers.
A more portable implementation is ajaxslt ( http://goog-ajaxslt.sourceforge.net/ ), it is limited but it works fine in many situations. I used it some time ago for a proyect and it worked even in explorer 6.
You can do XSLT transformations in Javascript, jQuery is not even involved in this process, however I seriously doubt that you would be able to pass any parameters to the processor.
There is a tutorial on XSLT processing using javascript on w3schools.