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Re: Namespace Identifiers - URI, URN, URL?
- To: xsl-list at lists dot mulberrytech dot com
- Subject: Re: [xsl] Namespace Identifiers - URI, URN, URL?
- From: David Carlisle <davidc at nag dot co dot uk>
- Date: Wed, 29 Aug 2001 13:38:43 +0100
- References: <6B3877B8D238D511852700B0D068CA9D207B3A@SH24X693>
- Reply-To: xsl-list at lists dot mulberrytech dot com
> Thanks for the reply. This might be one of the great unsolved mysteries, but
> isn't it confusing since "'xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-xsl" does not
it is a real URL it is just that a URL may refer to any kind of
resource, not just a web page. Note though that is the _wrong_ URL.
As mentioned in the earlier replies, the URL (URI) for the XSLT namespace is
http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform
the one you gave is for an entirely different Microsoft-specific
language which is not the subject of this list.
> Just wondering why the W3 couldn't use
> something else that doesn't start with "http"..
they could, but they don't as using http URI with a domain name that you
control is the easiest way to allocate yourself a globally unique
identifier.
> Ohh...so I do not need the <?xml ... > declaration in the stylesheets? Quick
> side question; does having that cause any problems?
that's an XMl question not an XSL one, an XML declaration is never
required by the XMl parser if the file is in UTF-8 or UTF-16 encoding
(but adding one does no harm) and it is always required if the file is
not in one of those encodings.
David
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