Package net.sf.saxon.trans

This package provides a miscellaneous collection of helper classes for XSLT transformation.

See:
          Description

Class Summary
CompilerInfo This class exists to hold information associated with a specific XSLT compilation episode.
DecimalFormatManager DecimalFormatManager manages the collection of named and unnamed decimal formats
DecimalSymbols This class is modelled on Java's DecimalFormatSymbols, but it allows the use of any Unicode character to represent symbols such as the decimal point and the grouping separator, whereas DecimalFormatSymbols restricts these to a char (1-65535).
IndependentContext An IndependentContext provides a context for parsing an expression or pattern appearing in a context other than a stylesheet.
KeyDefinition Corresponds to a single xsl:key declaration.
KeyManager KeyManager manages the set of key definitions in a stylesheet, and the indexes associated with these key definitions.
Mode A Mode is a collection of rules; the selection of a rule to apply to a given element is determined by a Pattern.
Mode.Rule Inner class Rule used to support the implementation
RuleManager RuleManager maintains a set of template rules, one set for each mode
SaxonErrorCode The class acts as a register of Saxon-specific error codes.
Variable An object representing an XPath variable for use in the standalone XPath API.
 

Exception Summary
DynamicError Subclass of XPathException used for dynamic errors
StaticError Exception used for static errors in XPath, XSLT, or XQuery
UncheckedXPathException When tree construction is deferred, innocuous methods such as NodeInfo#getLocalName() may trigger a dynamic error.
XPathException XPathException is used to indicate an error in an XPath expression.
XPathException.Circularity Subclass used to report circularities
 

Package net.sf.saxon.trans Description

This package provides a miscellaneous collection of helper classes for XSLT transformation. They are of no direct interest to user applications, except for the XPathException class, which is used to represent many errors in public methods.


Michael H. Kay
Saxonica Limited
9 February 2005