Hmm, never expected something like that! Bad news is, I "thought" it was
working (better) with the "@". Now I know it was just suppressing the error
message. :-(
Thanks for straightening me out. I am determined to switch from ASP to PHP
for this app, but the XSLT processing has me dogged. Pumping ADO recordsets
into MSXML and applying a transformation to them is pretty straightforward.
I'm finding it way different and the details poorly described with PHP's
interface - at least when the data is "streamed" out to the browser (not
read or written from files). But I keep edging closer and closer.
thanks...
--
"Bent Stigsen" <ng**@thevoid.dk> wrote in message
news:41***********************@dread15.news.tele.d k...
Jeb Hunter wrote: Seems to be arbitrarily specified or omitted in various documents.
Maybe this is a PHP element that I've not encountered yet, being new to it.
Or is there some XSLT-specific reason for this?
Can someone tell me what it means to have it, or omit it? Naturally,
you can't search Google for the "@" character. :-(
http://www.php.net/manual/en/languag...rorcontrol.php
/Bent