Vehicle-Anti-Theft-Face-Rec.../venv/Lib/site-packages/win32com/test/testxslt.xsl

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XML

<!-- include in the xsl:stylesheet element:
(a) the version attribute as usual
(b) the XSLT namespace declaration as usual
(c) the MSXSL namespace declaration
(d) a namespace declaration to identify your functions
(e) the 'extension-element-prefixes' attribute to give the
namespace prefixes that indicate extension elements
(i.e. 'msxsl')
(f) the 'exclude-result-prefixes' attribute to indicate the
namespaces that aren't supposed to be part of the result
tree (i.e. 'foo') -->
<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0"
xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
xmlns:msxsl="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xslt"
xmlns:foo="http://www.pythoncom-test.com/foo"
xmlns:bar="http://www.pythoncom-test.com/bar"
extension-element-prefixes="msxsl"
exclude-result-prefixes="foo bar">
<!-- do whatever output you want - you can use full XSLT functionality
-->
<xsl:output method="html" />
<!-- define the Javascript functions that you want to include within
a msxsl:script element.
- language indicates the scripting language
- implements-prefix gives the namespace prefix that you declared
for your function (i.e. foo) -->
<msxsl:script language="javascript"
implements-prefix="foo">
function worked() {
return "The jscript test worked";
}
</msxsl:script>
<!-- ditto for Python, using the 'bar' namespace
-->
<msxsl:script language="python"
implements-prefix="bar">
def worked():
return "The Python test worked"
</msxsl:script>
<xsl:template match="/">
<!-- The output template. Keep whitespace down as our test matches text exactly -->
<!-- call your functions using the prefix that you've used (i.e.
foo) anywhere you can normally use an XPath function, but
make sure it's returning the right kind of object -->
<xsl:value-of select="foo:worked()" />.
<xsl:value-of select="bar:worked()" />
</xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>