- From: Jeni Tennison <jeni@jenitennison.com>
- Date: Thu, 9 May 2002 09:02:11 -0400 (EDT)
- To: public-qt-comments@w3.org
- CC: xsl-editors <xsl-editors@w3.org>
Hi,
[I didn't realise that the email address for XSLT 2.0 comments had
changed as well...]
This is a follow-on from my last message about indeterminate
comparisons between durations and date/times in the F&O WD and
sorting. Currently the XSLT 2.0 WD says:
The items in the initial sequence are ordered into a sorted sequence
by comparing their sort keys. The relative position of two items A
and B in the sorted sequence is determined as follows. The first
sort key of A is compared with the first sort key of B, according to
the rules of the first sort key definition. If, under these rules, A
is less than B, then A will precede B in the sorted sequence, unless
the order attribute of this sort key definition specifies
descending, in which case B will precede A in the sorted sequence.
If, however, the relevant sort keys compare equal, then the second
sort key of A is compared with the second sort key of B, according
to the rules of the second sort key definition. This continues until
two sort keys are found that compare unequal. If all the sort keys
compare equal, then A will precede B in the sorted sequence if A
preceded B in the initial sequence, and vice versa.
In general, comparison of two values is performed according to the
rules of the XPath lt operator. However, special rules apply to
certain data types, as described below. [ERR069] It is a dynamic
error if, for any sort key definition, the set of sort keys
evaluated for all the items in the initial sequence, after any type
conversion requested, contains a pair of values for which the result
of the XPath lt operator is an error or an empty sequence. The
processor must either signal the error, or must recover by assigning
an arbitrary ordering to any such pair of values.
Given that indeterminate comparisons were allowed, I think that it
would be much more helpful if the comparisons between pairs of values
were described in terms of only lt rather than lt and eq. The second
part of the first paragraph would be:
If, however, B is not less than A, then the second sort key of A is
compared with the second sort key of B, according to the rules of
the second sort key definition. This continues until two sort keys
are found for which A is less than B or B is less than A. If all the
sort keys compare equal, then A will precede B in the sorted
sequence if A preceded B in the initial sequence, and vice versa.
For totally ordered data types, this makes no difference. For
partially ordered data types, this will create an intuitive ordering,
and not require an error to be raised. For example, with the source:
<relationship length="P1M">...</relationship>
<relationship length="P21D">...</relationship>
<relationship length="P5Y1D">...</relationship>
<relationship length="P28D">...</relationship>
<relationship length="P3M">...</relationship>
it would be possible to sort them with:
<xsl:for-each select="relationship">
<xsl:sort select="@length" data-type="xs:duration" />
<xsl:copy-of select="." />
</xsl:for-each>
in order to get:
<relationship length="P21D">...</relationship>
<relationship length="P1M">...</relationship>
<relationship length="P28D">...</relationship>
<relationship length="P3M">...</relationship>
<relationship length="P5Y1D">...</relationship>
without getting an error of any kind.
Cheers,
Jeni
---
Jeni Tennison
http://www.jenitennison.com/
Received on Thursday, 9 May 2002 14:46:15 UTC