Calling Static Methods in a Java Class
Static methods can be called directly.
For example (in XSLT):
<xsl:value-of select="math:sqrt($arg)" xmlns:math="java:java.lang.Math"/>This will invoke the static method java.lang.Math#sqrt()
, applying it to the
value of the variable $arg
, and copying the value of the square root of
$arg
to the result tree.
Similarly (in XQuery):
<a xmlns:double="java:java.lang.Double"> {double:MAX_VALUE()} </a>This will output the value of the static field java.lang.Double#MAX_VALUE
. (In
practice, it is better to declare the namespace in the query prolog, because it will then
not be copied to the result tree.)
A static Java method called as an extension function may have an extra first argument of
class net.sf.saxon.expr.XPathContext. This argument is not supplied by the calling XPath or
XQuery code, but by Saxon itself. The XPathContext
object provides methods to
access many internal Saxon resources, the most useful being getContextItem()
which returns the context item from the dynamic context. The XPathContext object is
available with static or instance-level methods, but not with constructors.
The following example shows a function that obtains the line number of the context node (this is actually a built-in Saxon extension):
/** * Return the line number of the context node. */ public static int lineNumber(XPathContext c) { Item item = c.getCurrentIterator().current(); if (item instanceof NodeInfo) { return ((NodeInfo)item).getLineNumber(); } else { return -1; } }If this method appears in class com.example.code.NodeData
, then it can be
accessed using the following code in XSLT:
or the following in XQuery:
<line xmlns:nd="java:com.example.code.NodeData"> { nd:line-number() } </line>