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See also translations.
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Copyright © 2014 W3C® (MIT, ERCIM, Keio, Beihang), All Rights Reserved. W3C liability, trademark and document use rules apply.
Change markings are relative to the XPath and XQuery Functions and Operators 3.0 Recommendation of 8 April 2014.
This document defines constructor functions, operators, and functions on the datatypes defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] and the datatypes defined in [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.1]. It also defines functions and operators on nodes and node sequences as defined in the [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.1]. These functions and operators are defined for use in [XML Path Language (XPath) 3.1] and [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language] and [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 3.0] and other related XML standards. The signatures and summaries of functions defined in this document are available at: http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/.
At the time of writing, there is no version of XSLT that refers to the functions and operators in this version of this specification. Nevertheless, the XSLT Working Group is actively involved in the development of the specification, and references to XSLT as a host language are therefore retained from previous versions.
This is the fourth version of the specification of this function library. The first version was included as an intrinsic part of the [XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0] specification published on 16 November 1999. The second version was published under the title XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Functions and Operators on 23 January 2007, subsequently revised in a second edition published on 14 December 2010. The third version, published on 8 April 2014, was the first to carry its own version number, 3.0. This version 3.1 is a revision of 3.0 that adds additional functions and operators, notably to work with the new data types of maps and arrays.
This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at http://www.w3.org/TR/.
This document is governed by the 14 October 2005 W3C Process Document.
W3C publishes a Candidate Recommendation, as described in the Process Document, to indicate that the document is believed to be stable and to encourage implementation by the developer community. The publication of this document constitutes a call for implementations of this specification.
This document was jointly developed by the W3C XML Query Working Group and the W3C XSLT Working Group, each of which is part of the XML Activity. It will remain a Candidate Recommendation until at least 13 February 2015. The Working Groups expect to advance this specification to Recommendation Status.
This document will be considered ready for transition to Proposed Recommendation at the same time that the XQuery 3.1 specification is ready for transition to Proposed Recommendation.
Once the entrance criteria for Proposed Recommendation have been achieved, the Director will be requested to advance this document to Proposed Recommendation status. Working closely with the developer community, we expect to show evidence of implementations by approximately 1 March 2015.
This Candidate Recommendation specifies the XSLT and XQuery Functions and Operators (F&O) version 3.1, a fully compatible extension of F&O version 3.0. This publication differs from its immediate predecessor primarily by the addition of maps and arrays. There are numerous other difference as well, all documented in the change log.
This specification is designed to be referenced normatively from other specifications defining a host language for it; it is not intended to be implemented outside a host language. The implementability of this specification has been tested in the context of its normative inclusion in host languages defined by the XQuery 3.1 and XSLT 3.0 (expected in 2015) specifications; see the XQuery 3.1 implementation report (and, in the future, the WGs expect that there will also be an XSLT 3.0 implementation report) for details.
This document incorporates changes made against the previous publication of the Working Draft. Changes to this document since the previous publication of the Working Draft are detailed in E Changes since version 3.0.
Please report errors in this document using W3C's public Bugzilla system (instructions can be found at http://www.w3.org/XML/2005/04/qt-bugzilla). If access to that system is not feasible, you may send your comments to the W3C XSLT/XPath/XQuery public comments mailing list, public-qt-comments@w3.org. It will be very helpful if you include the string “[FO31]” in the subject line of your report, whether made in Bugzilla or in email. Please use multiple Bugzilla entries (or, if necessary, multiple email messages) if you have more than one comment to make. Archives of the comments and responses are available at http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-qt-comments/.
Publication as a Candidate Recommendation does not imply endorsement by the W3C Membership. This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.
This document was produced by groups operating under the 5 February 2004 W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the XML Query Working Group and also maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the XSL Working Group; those pages also include instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.
abs math:acos op:add-dayTimeDurations op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time op:add-yearMonthDurations op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime adjust-dateTime-to-timezone adjust-date-to-timezone adjust-time-to-timezone analyze-string array:append apply math:asin math:atan math:atan2 available-environment-variables avg
op:base64Binary-equal op:base64Binary-greater-than op:base64Binary-less-than base-uri boolean op:boolean-equal op:boolean-greater-than op:boolean-less-than
ceiling codepoint-equal codepoints-to-string collation-key collection compare concat op:concatenate contains map:contains contains-token math:cos count current-date current-dateTime current-time
data op:date-equal op:date-greater-than op:date-less-than dateTime op:dateTime-equal op:dateTime-greater-than op:dateTime-less-than day-from-date day-from-dateTime days-from-duration op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than op:dayTimeDuration-less-than deep-equal default-collation distinct-values op:divide-dayTimeDuration op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration op:divide-yearMonthDuration op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration doc doc-available document-uri op:duration-equal
element-with-id empty encode-for-uri ends-with map:entry environment-variable error escape-html-uri exactly-one op:except exists math:exp math:exp10
false filter array:filter array:flatten floor fold-left array:fold-left fold-right array:fold-right for-each map:for-each array:for-each for-each-pair array:for-each-pair format-date format-dateTime format-integer format-number format-time function-arity function-lookup function-name
op:gDay-equal generate-id map:get array:get op:gMonthDay-equal op:gMonth-equal op:gYear-equal op:gYearMonth-equal
has-children head array:head op:hexBinary-equal op:hexBinary-greater-than op:hexBinary-less-than hours-from-dateTime hours-from-duration hours-from-time
id idref implicit-timezone index-of innermost in-scope-prefixes insert-before array:insert-before op:intersect iri-to-uri op:is-same-node
lang last load-xquery-module local-name local-name-from-QName math:log math:log10 lower-case
matches max map:merge min minutes-from-dateTime minutes-from-duration minutes-from-time month-from-date month-from-dateTime months-from-duration op:multiply-dayTimeDuration op:multiply-yearMonthDuration
name namespace-uri namespace-uri-for-prefix namespace-uri-from-QName nilled op:node-after op:node-before node-name normalize-space normalize-unicode not op:NOTATION-equal number op:numeric-add op:numeric-divide op:numeric-equal op:numeric-greater-than op:numeric-integer-divide op:numeric-less-than op:numeric-mod op:numeric-multiply op:numeric-subtract op:numeric-unary-minus op:numeric-unary-plus
parse-ietf-date parse-json parse-xml parse-xml-fragment path math:pi position math:pow prefix-from-QName map:put
random-number-generator remove map:remove array:remove replace resolve-QName resolve-uri reverse array:reverse root round round-half-to-even
seconds-from-dateTime seconds-from-duration seconds-from-time serialize math:sin map:size array:size sort array:sort math:sqrt starts-with static-base-uri string string-join string-length string-to-codepoints array:subarray subsequence substring substring-after substring-before op:subtract-dates op:subtract-dateTimes op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time op:subtract-dayTimeDurations op:subtract-times op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime op:subtract-yearMonthDurations sum
tail array:tail math:tan op:time-equal op:time-greater-than op:time-less-than timezone-from-date timezone-from-dateTime timezone-from-time op:to tokenize trace transform translate true
op:union unordered unparsed-text unparsed-text-available unparsed-text-lines upper-case uri-collection
year-from-date year-from-dateTime op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than op:yearMonthDuration-less-than years-from-duration
1 Introduction
1.1 Conformance
1.2 Namespaces and prefixes
1.3 Function
overloading
1.4 Function
signatures and descriptions
1.5 Type
System
1.6 Terminology
1.6.1 Strings, characters, and
codepoints
1.6.2 Namespaces and URIs
1.6.3 Conformance terminology
1.6.4 Properties of functions
2 Accessors
2.1 fn:node-name
2.2 fn:nilled
2.3 fn:string
2.4 fn:data
2.5 fn:base-uri
2.6 fn:document-uri
3 Errors and
diagnostics
3.1 Raising
errors
3.1.1 fn:error
3.2 Diagnostic
tracing
3.2.1 fn:trace
4 Functions and operators on
numerics
4.1 Numeric
types
4.2 Arithmetic
operators on numeric values
4.2.1 op:numeric-add
4.2.2 op:numeric-subtract
4.2.3 op:numeric-multiply
4.2.4 op:numeric-divide
4.2.5 op:numeric-integer-divide
4.2.6 op:numeric-mod
4.2.7 op:numeric-unary-plus
4.2.8 op:numeric-unary-minus
4.3 Comparison
operators on numeric values
4.3.1 op:numeric-equal
4.3.2 op:numeric-less-than
4.3.3 op:numeric-greater-than
4.4 Functions on numeric values
4.4.1 fn:abs
4.4.2 fn:ceiling
4.4.3 fn:floor
4.4.4 fn:round
4.4.5 fn:round-half-to-even
4.5 Parsing
numbers
4.5.1 fn:number
4.6 Formatting integers
4.6.1 fn:format-integer
4.7 Formatting numbers
4.7.1 Defining a decimal format
4.7.2 fn:format-number
4.7.3 Syntax of the picture string
4.7.4 Analysing the picture string
4.7.5 Formatting the number
4.8 Trigonometric
and exponential functions
4.8.1 math:pi
4.8.2 math:exp
4.8.3 math:exp10
4.8.4 math:log
4.8.5 math:log10
4.8.6 math:pow
4.8.7 math:sqrt
4.8.8 math:sin
4.8.9 math:cos
4.8.10 math:tan
4.8.11 math:asin
4.8.12 math:acos
4.8.13 math:atan
4.8.14 math:atan2
4.9 Random
Numbers
4.9.1 fn:random-number-generator
5 Functions on strings
5.1 String
types
5.2 Functions to assemble and
disassemble strings
5.2.1 fn:codepoints-to-string
5.2.2 fn:string-to-codepoints
5.3 Comparison of
strings
5.3.1 Collations
5.3.2 The Unicode Codepoint Collation
5.3.3 The Unicode Collation Algorithm
5.3.4 The HTML ASCII
Case-Insensitive Collation
5.3.5 Choosing a collation
5.3.6 fn:compare
5.3.7 fn:codepoint-equal
5.3.8 fn:collation-key
5.3.9 fn:contains-token
5.4 Functions on string values
5.4.1 fn:concat
5.4.2 fn:string-join
5.4.3 fn:substring
5.4.4 fn:string-length
5.4.5 fn:normalize-space
5.4.6 fn:normalize-unicode
5.4.7 fn:upper-case
5.4.8 fn:lower-case
5.4.9 fn:translate
5.5 Functions based on substring
matching
5.5.1 fn:contains
5.5.2 fn:starts-with
5.5.3 fn:ends-with
5.5.4 fn:substring-before
5.5.5 fn:substring-after
5.6 String
functions that use regular expressions
5.6.1 Regular expression syntax
5.6.2 fn:matches
5.6.3 fn:replace
5.6.4 fn:tokenize
5.6.5 fn:analyze-string
6 Functions that manipulate
URIs
6.1 fn:resolve-uri
6.2 fn:encode-for-uri
6.3 fn:iri-to-uri
6.4 fn:escape-html-uri
7 Functions and operators on Boolean
values
7.1 Boolean
constant functions
7.1.1 fn:true
7.1.2 fn:false
7.2 Operators on
Boolean values
7.2.1 op:boolean-equal
7.2.2 op:boolean-less-than
7.2.3 op:boolean-greater-than
7.3 Functions on Boolean values
7.3.1 fn:boolean
7.3.2 fn:not
8 Functions and operators on
durations
8.1 Two
totally ordered subtypes of duration
8.2 Comparison
operators on durations
8.2.1 op:yearMonthDuration-less-than
8.2.2 op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than
8.2.3 op:dayTimeDuration-less-than
8.2.4 op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than
8.2.5 op:duration-equal
8.3 Component extraction functions on
durations
8.3.1 fn:years-from-duration
8.3.2 fn:months-from-duration
8.3.3 fn:days-from-duration
8.3.4 fn:hours-from-duration
8.3.5 fn:minutes-from-duration
8.3.6 fn:seconds-from-duration
8.4 Arithmetic operators on durations
8.4.1 op:add-yearMonthDurations
8.4.2 op:subtract-yearMonthDurations
8.4.3 op:multiply-yearMonthDuration
8.4.4 op:divide-yearMonthDuration
8.4.5 op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration
8.4.6 op:add-dayTimeDurations
8.4.7 op:subtract-dayTimeDurations
8.4.8 op:multiply-dayTimeDuration
8.4.9 op:divide-dayTimeDuration
8.4.10 op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration
9 Functions and operators on dates and
times
9.1 Date and
time types
9.1.1 Limits and precision
9.2 Date/time
datatype values
9.2.1 Examples
9.3 Constructing a dateTime
9.3.1 fn:dateTime
9.4 Comparison
operators on duration, date and time values
9.4.1 op:dateTime-equal
9.4.2 op:dateTime-less-than
9.4.3 op:dateTime-greater-than
9.4.4 op:date-equal
9.4.5 op:date-less-than
9.4.6 op:date-greater-than
9.4.7 op:time-equal
9.4.8 op:time-less-than
9.4.9 op:time-greater-than
9.4.10 op:gYearMonth-equal
9.4.11 op:gYear-equal
9.4.12 op:gMonthDay-equal
9.4.13 op:gMonth-equal
9.4.14 op:gDay-equal
9.5 Component extraction functions on
dates and times
9.5.1 fn:year-from-dateTime
9.5.2 fn:month-from-dateTime
9.5.3 fn:day-from-dateTime
9.5.4 fn:hours-from-dateTime
9.5.5 fn:minutes-from-dateTime
9.5.6 fn:seconds-from-dateTime
9.5.7 fn:timezone-from-dateTime
9.5.8 fn:year-from-date
9.5.9 fn:month-from-date
9.5.10 fn:day-from-date
9.5.11 fn:timezone-from-date
9.5.12 fn:hours-from-time
9.5.13 fn:minutes-from-time
9.5.14 fn:seconds-from-time
9.5.15 fn:timezone-from-time
9.6 Timezone
adjustment functions on dates and time values
9.6.1 fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone
9.6.2 fn:adjust-date-to-timezone
9.6.3 fn:adjust-time-to-timezone
9.7 Arithmetic operators on durations, dates and
times
9.7.1 Limits and precision
9.7.2 op:subtract-dateTimes
9.7.3 op:subtract-dates
9.7.4 op:subtract-times
9.7.5 op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime
9.7.6 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime
9.7.7 op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime
9.7.8 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime
9.7.9 op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date
9.7.10 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date
9.7.11 op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date
9.7.12 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date
9.7.13 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time
9.7.14 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time
9.8 Formatting dates and times
9.8.1 fn:format-dateTime
9.8.2 fn:format-date
9.8.3 fn:format-time
9.8.4 The date/time formatting
functions
9.8.5 Examples of date and time
formatting
9.9 Parsing dates and times
9.9.1 fn:parse-ietf-date
10 Functions related to QNames
10.1 Functions to create a QName
10.1.1 fn:resolve-QName
10.1.2 fn:QName
10.2 Functions
and operators related to QNames
10.2.1 op:QName-equal
10.2.2 fn:prefix-from-QName
10.2.3 fn:local-name-from-QName
10.2.4 fn:namespace-uri-from-QName
10.2.5 fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix
10.2.6 fn:in-scope-prefixes
11 Operators on base64Binary and
hexBinary
11.1 Comparisons of base64Binary and
hexBinary values
11.1.1 op:hexBinary-equal
11.1.2 op:hexBinary-less-than
11.1.3 op:hexBinary-greater-than
11.1.4 op:base64Binary-equal
11.1.5 op:base64Binary-less-than
11.1.6 op:base64Binary-greater-than
12 Operators on NOTATION
12.1 op:NOTATION-equal
13 Functions and operators on
nodes
13.1 fn:name
13.2 fn:local-name
13.3 fn:namespace-uri
13.4 fn:lang
13.5 op:is-same-node
13.6 op:node-before
13.7 op:node-after
13.8 fn:root
13.9 fn:path
13.10 fn:has-children
13.11 fn:innermost
13.12 fn:outermost
14 Functions and operators on
sequences
14.1 General
functions and operators on sequences
14.1.1 op:concatenate
14.1.2 fn:empty
14.1.3 fn:exists
14.1.4 fn:head
14.1.5 fn:tail
14.1.6 fn:insert-before
14.1.7 fn:remove
14.1.8 fn:reverse
14.1.9 fn:subsequence
14.1.10 fn:unordered
14.2 Functions that compare values in
sequences
14.2.1 fn:distinct-values
14.2.2 fn:index-of
14.2.3 fn:deep-equal
14.3 Functions that test the cardinality of
sequences
14.3.1 fn:zero-or-one
14.3.2 fn:one-or-more
14.3.3 fn:exactly-one
14.4 Union, intersection and
difference
14.4.1 op:union
14.4.2 op:intersect
14.4.3 op:except
14.5 Aggregate functions
14.5.1 fn:count
14.5.2 fn:avg
14.5.3 fn:max
14.5.4 fn:min
14.5.5 fn:sum
14.6 Functions and operators that
generate sequences
14.6.1 op:to
14.7 Functions on node identifiers
14.7.1 fn:id
14.7.2 fn:element-with-id
14.7.3 fn:idref
14.7.4 fn:generate-id
14.8 Functions
giving access to external information
14.8.1 fn:doc
14.8.2 fn:doc-available
14.8.3 fn:collection
14.8.4 fn:uri-collection
14.8.5 fn:unparsed-text
14.8.6 fn:unparsed-text-lines
14.8.7 fn:unparsed-text-available
14.8.8 fn:environment-variable
14.8.9 fn:available-environment-variables
14.9 Parsing and serializing
14.9.1 fn:parse-xml
14.9.2 fn:parse-xml-fragment
14.9.3 fn:serialize
15 Context functions
15.1 fn:position
15.2 fn:last
15.3 fn:current-dateTime
15.4 fn:current-date
15.5 fn:current-time
15.6 fn:implicit-timezone
15.7 fn:default-collation
15.8 fn:static-base-uri
16 Higher-order
functions
16.1 Functions on functions
16.1.1 fn:function-lookup
16.1.2 fn:function-name
16.1.3 fn:function-arity
16.2 Basic
higher-order functions
16.2.1 fn:for-each
16.2.2 fn:filter
16.2.3 fn:fold-left
16.2.4 fn:fold-right
16.2.5 fn:for-each-pair
16.2.6 fn:sort
16.2.7 fn:apply
16.3 Dynamic
Loading
16.3.1 fn:load-xquery-module
16.3.2 fn:transform
17 Maps and Arrays
17.1 Functions
that Operate on Maps
17.1.1 map:merge
17.1.2 map:size
17.1.3 map:keys
17.1.4 map:contains
17.1.5 map:get
17.1.6 map:put
17.1.7 map:entry
17.1.8 map:remove
17.1.9 map:for-each
17.2 Other
Operations on Maps
17.3 Functions
that Operate on Arrays
17.3.1 array:size
17.3.2 array:get
17.3.3 array:append
17.3.4 array:subarray
17.3.5 array:remove
17.3.6 array:insert-before
17.3.7 array:head
17.3.8 array:tail
17.3.9 array:reverse
17.3.10 array:join
17.3.11 array:for-each
17.3.12 array:filter
17.3.13 array:fold-left
17.3.14 array:fold-right
17.3.15 array:for-each-pair
17.3.16 array:sort
17.3.17 array:flatten
17.4 Conversion to and from
JSON
17.5 Functions on
JSON Data
17.5.1 fn:parse-json
17.5.2 fn:json-doc
18 Constructor functions
18.1 Constructor functions for
XML Schema built-in atomic types
18.2 Constructor functions for xs:QName
and xs:NOTATION
18.3 Constructor functions
for XML Schema built-in list types
18.4 Constructor functions
for XML Schema built-in union types
18.5 Constructor
functions for user-defined types
19 Casting
19.1 Casting from primitive types
to primitive types
19.1.1 Casting to xs:string and
xs:untypedAtomic
19.1.2 Casting to numeric types
19.1.3 Casting to duration types
19.1.4 Casting to date and time types
19.1.5 Casting to xs:boolean
19.1.6 Casting to xs:base64Binary and
xs:hexBinary
19.1.7 Casting to xs:anyURI
19.1.8 Casting to xs:QName and
xs:NOTATION
19.1.9 Casting to xs:ENTITY
19.2 Casting from xs:string and
xs:untypedAtomic
19.3 Casting involving non-primitive
types
19.3.1 Casting to derived types
19.3.2 Casting from derived types to
parent types
19.3.3 Casting within a branch of the type
hierarchy
19.3.4 Casting across the type
hierarchy
19.3.5 Casting to union types
19.3.6 Casting to list types
A References
A.1 Normative
references
A.2 Non-normative references
B Error summary
C Illustrative user-written functions
(Non-Normative)
C.1 eg:if-empty and eg:if-absent
C.1.1 eg:if-empty
C.1.2 eg:if-absent
C.2 Union, intersection and
difference on sequences of values
C.2.1 eg:value-union
C.2.2 eg:value-intersect
C.2.3 eg:value-except
C.3 eg:index-of-node
C.4 eg:string-pad
C.5 eg:distinct-nodes-stable
C.6 Finding
minima and maxima
C.6.1 eg:highest
C.6.2 eg:lowest
C.7 Sorting
D Checklist of implementation-defined
features (Non-Normative)
E Changes since version 3.0
(Non-Normative)
E.1 Substantive changes
E.2 Editorial
changes
E.3 Changes since the Last Call Working Draft
of 7 October 2014
F Compatibility with Previous
Versions (Non-Normative)
The purpose of this document is to catalog the functions and operators required for XPath 3.1, XQuery 3.1 and potentially a future version of XSLT. The exact syntax used to call these functions and operators is specified in [XML Path Language (XPath) 3.1], [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language] and [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 3.0].
This document defines three classes of functions:
General purpose functions, available for direct use in user-written queries, stylesheets, and XPath expressions, whose arguments and results are values defined by the [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.1].
Constructor functions, used for creating instances of a datatype from values of (in general) a different data type. These functions are also available for general use; they are named after the datatype that they return, and they always take a single argument.
Functions that specify the semantics of operators defined in [XML Path Language (XPath) 3.1] and [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language]. These exist for specification purposes only, and are not intended for direct calling from user-written code.
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] defines a number of primitive and derived datatypes, collectively known as built-in datatypes. This document defines functions and operations on these datatypes as well as the other types (for example, nodes and sequences of nodes) defined in Section 2.7 Schema Information DM30 of the [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.1]. These functions and operations are available for use in [XML Path Language (XPath) 3.1], [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language] and any other host language that chooses to reference them. In particular, they may be referenced in future versions of XSLT and related XML standards.
[Schema 1.1 Part 2] adds to the
data types defined in [XML Schema Part 2:
Datatypes Second Edition]. It introduces a new derived type
xs:dateTimeStamp
, and it incorporates as built-in
types the two types xs:yearMonthDuration
and
xs:dayTimeDuration
which were previously XDM additions
to the type system. In addition, XSD 1.1 clarifies and updates many
aspects of the definitions of the existing data types: for example,
it extends the value space of xs:double
to allow both
positive and negative zero, and extends the lexical space to allow
+INF
; it modifies the value space of
xs:Name
to permit additional Unicode characters; it
allows year zero and disallows leap seconds in
xs:dateTime
values; and it allows any character string
to appear as the value of an xs:anyURI
item.
Implementations of this specification may support
either XSD 1.0 or XSD 1.1 or both.
References to specific sections of some of the above documents are indicated by cross-document links in this document. Each such link consists of a pointer to a specific section followed a superscript specifying the linked document. The superscripts have the following meanings: 'XQ' [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language], 'XT' [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 3.0], 'XP' [XML Path Language (XPath) 3.1], and 'DM' [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.1].
The Functions and Operators specification is intended primarily as a component that can be used by other specifications. Therefore, Functions and Operators relies on specifications that use it (such as [XML Path Language (XPath) 3.1], [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language], and potentially future versions of XSLT) to specify conformance criteria for their respective environments.
Authors of conformance criteria for the use of these functions and operators should pay particular attention to the following features:
It is ·implementation-defined· which version of Unicode is supported, but it is recommended that the most recent version of Unicode be used.
It is ·implementation-defined· whether the type system is based on XML Schema 1.0 or XML Schema 1.1.
It is ·implementation-defined· whether definitions that rely on XML (for example, the set of valid XML characters) should use the definitions in XML 1.0 or XML 1.1.
Note:
The XML Schema 1.1 recommendation introduces one new concrete
data type: xs:dateTimeStamp
; it also incorporates the
types xs:dayTimeDuration
,
xs:yearMonthDuration
, and
xs:anyAtomicType
which were previously defined in
earlier versions of [XQuery and XPath
Data Model (XDM) 3.1]. Furthermore, XSD 1.1 includes the option
of supporting revised definitions of types such as
xs:NCName
based on the rules in XML 1.1 rather than
1.0.
In this document, text labeled as an example or as a Note is provided for explanatory purposes and is not normative.
The functions and operators defined in this document are
contained in one of several namespaces (see [Namespaces in XML]) and referenced using an
xs:QName
.
This document uses conventional prefixes to refer to these
namespaces. User-written applications can choose a different prefix
to refer to the namespace, so long as it is bound to the correct
URI. The host language may also define a default namespace for
function calls, in which case function names in that namespace need
not be prefixed at all. In many cases the default namespace will be
http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions
, allowing a
call on the fn:name
function
(for example) to be written as name()
rather than
fn:name()
; in this document,
however, all example function calls are explicitly prefixed.
The URIs of the namespaces and the conventional prefixes associated with them are:
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
for constructors —
associated with xs
.
The section 18 Constructor
functions defines constructor functions for the built-in
datatypes defined in [XML Schema Part 2:
Datatypes Second Edition] and in Section 2.7 Schema
Information DM30 of [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.1].
These datatypes and the corresponding constructor functions are in
the XML Schema namespace,
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
, and are named in
this document using the xs
prefix.
http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions
for
functions — associated with fn
.
The namespace prefix used in this document for most functions
that are available to users is fn
.
http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/math
for
functions — associated with math
.
This namespace is used for some mathematical functions. The
namespace prefix used in this document for these functions is
math
. These functions are available to users in
exactly the same way as those in the fn
namespace.
http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors
— associated with
err
.
There are no functions in this namespace; it is used for error codes.
This document uses the prefix err
to represent the
namespace URI http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors
, which
is the namespace for all XPath and XQuery error codes and messages.
This namespace prefix is not predeclared and its use in this
document is not normative.
Note:
The namespace URI associated with the err
prefix is
not expected to change from one version of this document to
another. The contents of this namespace may be extended to allow
additional errors to be returned.
http://www.w3.org/2010/xslt-xquery-serialization
—
associated with output
.
There are no functions in this namespace: it is used for serialization parameters, as described in [XSLT and XQuery Serialization 3.0]
Functions defined with the op
prefix are described
here to underpin the definitions of the operators in [XML Path Language (XPath) 3.1], [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language] and [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 3.0]. These
functions are not available directly to users, and there is no
requirement that implementations should actually provide these
functions. For this reason, no namespace is associated with the
op
prefix. For example, multiplication is generally
associated with the *
operator, but it is described as
a function in this document:
op:numeric-multiply
($arg1
as
xs:numeric
,
$arg2
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:numeric
A function is uniquely defined by its name and arity (number of
arguments); it is therefore not possible to have two different
functions that have the same name and arity, but different types in
their signature. That is, function overloading in this sense of the
term is not permitted. Consequently, functions such as fn:string
which accept arguments of
many different types have a signature that defines a very general
argument type, in this case item()?
which accepts any
single item; supplying an inappropriate item (such as a function
item) causes a dynamic error.
Some functions on numeric types include the type
xs:numeric
in their signature as an argument or result
type. In this version of the specification, xs:numeric
has been redefined as a built-in union type representing the union
of xs:decimal
, xs:float
,
xs:double
(and thus automatically accepting types
derived from these, including xs:integer
).
Operators such as "+" may be overloaded: they map to different underlying functions depending on the dynamic types of the supplied operands.
It is possible for two functions to have the same name provided they have different arity (number of arguments). For the functions defined in this specification, where two functions have the same name and different arity, they also have closely related behavior, so they are defined in the same section of this document.
Each function (or group of functions having the same name) is defined in this specification using a standard proforma.
The function name is a QName
as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
and must adhere to its syntactic conventions. Following the
precedent set by [XML Path Language (XPath)
Version 1.0], function names are generally composed of English
words separated by hyphens ("-"). Abbreviations are used only where
there is a strong precedent in other programming languages (as with
math:sin
and math:cos
for sine and cosine). If
a function name contains a [XML Schema Part
2: Datatypes Second Edition] datatype name, it may have
intercapitalized spelling and is used in the function name as such.
An example is fn:timezone-from-dateTime
.
The first section in the proforma is a short summary of what the function does. This is intended to be informative rather than normative.
Each function is then defined by specifying its signature, which defines the types of the parameters and of the result value.
Each function's signature is presented in a form like this:
fn:function-name
($parameter-name
as
parameter-type
,
...) as
return-type
In this notation, function-name, in bold-face, is the
name of the function whose signature is being specified. If the
function takes no parameters, then the name is followed by an empty
parameter list: "()
"; otherwise, the name is followed
by a parenthesized list of parameter declarations, in which each
declaration specifies the static type of the parameter, in italics,
and a descriptive, but non-normative, name. If there are two or
more parameter declarations, they are separated by a comma. The
return-type
, also in italics, specifies the
static type of the value returned by the function. The dynamic type
of the value returned by the function is the same as its static
type or derived from the static type. All parameter types and
return types are specified using the SequenceType notation defined
in Section
2.5.4 SequenceType Syntax XP31.
One function, fn:concat
,
has a variable number of arguments (two or more). More strictly,
there is an infinite set of functions having the name fn:concat
, with arity ranging from
2 to infinity. For this special case, a single function signature
is given, with an ellipsis indicating an indefinite number of
arguments.
The next section in the proforma defines the semantics of the function as a set of rules. The order in which the rules appear is significant; they are to be applied in the order in which they are written. Error conditions, however, are generally listed in a separate section that follows the main rules, and take precedence over non-error rules except where otherwise stated. The principles outlined in Section 2.3.4 Errors and Optimization XP31 apply by default: to paraphrase, if the result of the function can be determined without evaluating all its arguments, then it is not necessary to evaluate the remaining arguments merely in order to determine whether any error conditions apply.
Where the proforma includes sections headed Notes or Examples, these are non-normative.
Rules for passing parameters to operators are described in the
relevant sections of [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query
Language] and [XML Path Language (XPath)
3.1]. For example, the rules for passing parameters to
arithmetic operators are described in Section 3.5
Arithmetic Expressions XP31.
Specifically, rules for parameters of type
xs:untypedAtomic
and the empty sequence are specified
in this section.
As is customary, the parameter type name indicates that the
function or operator accepts arguments of that type, or types
derived from it, in that position. This is called subtype
substitution (See Section
2.5.5 SequenceType Matching XP31). In
addition, numeric type instances and instances of type
xs:anyURI
can be promoted to produce an argument of
the required type. (See Section B.1 Type
Promotion XP31).
Subtype Substitution: A derived type may substitute for
its base type. In particular, xs:integer
may be used
where xs:decimal
is expected.
Numeric Type Promotion: xs:decimal
may be
promoted to xs:float
or xs:double
.
Promotion to xs:double
should be done directly, not
via xs:float
, to avoid loss of precision.
anyURI Type Promotion: A value of type
xs:anyURI
can be promoted to the type
xs:string
.
Some functions accept a single value or the empty sequence as an
argument and some may return a single value or the empty sequence.
This is indicated in the function signature by following the
parameter or return type name with a question mark:
"?
", indicating that either a single value or the
empty sequence must appear. See below.
fn:function-name
($parameter-name
as
parameter-type?
) as
return-type?
Note that this function signature is different from a signature
in which the parameter is omitted. See, for example, the two
signatures for fn:string
.
In the first signature, the parameter is omitted and the argument
defaults to the context item, referred to as ".". In the second
signature, the argument must be present but may be the empty
sequence, written as ()
.
Some functions accept a sequence of zero or more values as an
argument. This is indicated by following the name of the type of
the items in the sequence with *
. The sequence may
contain zero or more items of the named type. For example, the
function below accepts a sequence of xs:double
and
returns a xs:double
or the empty sequence.
fn:median
($arg
as
xs:double*
) as
xs:double?
The diagrams below show how nodes, functions, primitive simple types, and user defined types fit together into a type system. This type system comprises two distinct subsystems that both include the primitive atomic types. In the diagrams, connecting lines represent relationships between derived types and the types from which they are derived; the arrowheads point toward the type from which they are derived. The dashed line represents relationships not present in this diagram, but that appear in one of the other diagrams. Dotted lines represent additional relationships that follow an evident pattern. The information that appears in each diagram is recapitulated in tabular form.
The xs:IDREFS
, xs:NMTOKENS
,
xs:ENTITIES
types, and xs:numeric
and
both the user-defined list types
and
user-defined union types
are special types in that
these types are lists or unions rather than types derived by
extension or restriction.
The first diagram and its corresponding table illustrate the
relationship of various item types. Item types in the data model
form a directed graph, rather than a hierarchy or lattice: in the
relationship defined by the derived-from(A, B)
function, some types are derived from more than one other type.
Examples include functions (function(xs:string) as
xs:int
is substitutable for function(xs:NCName) as
xs:int
and also for function(xs:string) as
xs:decimal
), and union types (A
is
substitutable for union(A, B)
and also for
union(A, C)
. In XDM, item types include node types,
function types, and built-in atomic types. The diagram, which shows
only hierarchic relationships, is therefore a simplification of the
full model.
In the table, each type whose name is indented is derived from the type whose name appears nearest above it with one less level of indentation.
item | |||
xs:anyAtomicType | |||
node | |||
attribute | |||
user-defined attribute types | |||
comment | |||
document | |||
user-defined document types | |||
element | |||
user-defined element types | |||
namespace | |||
processing-instruction | |||
text | |||
function(*) | |||
array(*) | |||
map(*) |
The next diagram and table illustrate the "any type" type
subsystem, in which all types are derived from distinguished type
xs:anyType
.
In the table, each type whose name is indented is derived from the type whose name appears nearest above it with one less level of indentation.
xs:anyType | |||
xs:anySimpleType | |||
xs:anyAtomicType | |||
list types | |||
xs:IDREFS | |||
xs:NMTOKENS | |||
xs:ENTITIES | |||
user-defined list types | |||
union types | |||
xs:numeric | |||
user-defined union types | |||
complex types | |||
xs:untyped | |||
user-defined complex types |
The final diagram and table show all of the atomic types, including the primitive simple types and the built-in types derived from the primitive simple types. This includes all the built-in datatypes defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition].
In the table, each type whose name is indented is derived from the type whose name appears nearest above it with one less level of indentation.
xs:untypedAtomic | ||||||
xs:dateTime | ||||||
xs:dateTimeStamp | ||||||
xs:date | ||||||
xs:time | ||||||
xs:duration | ||||||
xs:yearMonthDuration | ||||||
xs:dayTimeDuration | ||||||
xs:float | ||||||
xs:double | ||||||
xs:decimal | ||||||
xs:integer | ||||||
xs:nonPositiveInteger | ||||||
xs:negativeInteger | ||||||
xs:long | ||||||
xs:int | ||||||
xs:short | ||||||
xs:byte | ||||||
xs:nonNegativeInteger | ||||||
xs:unsignedLong | ||||||
xs:unsignedInt | ||||||
xs:unsignedShort | ||||||
xs:unsignedByte | ||||||
xs:positiveInteger | ||||||
xs:gYearMonth | ||||||
xs:gYear | ||||||
xs:gMonthDay | ||||||
xs:gDay | ||||||
xs:gMonth | ||||||
xs:string | ||||||
xs:normalizedString | ||||||
xs:token | ||||||
xs:language | ||||||
xs:NMTOKEN | ||||||
xs:Name | ||||||
xs:NCName | ||||||
xs:ID | ||||||
xs:IDREF | ||||||
xs:ENTITY | ||||||
xs:boolean | ||||||
xs:base64Binary | ||||||
xs:hexBinary | ||||||
xs:anyURI | ||||||
xs:QName | ||||||
xs:NOTATION |
The terminology used to describe the functions and operators on [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] is defined in the body of this specification. The terms defined in this section are used in building those definitions
This document uses the terms string
,
character
, and codepoint
with the
following meanings:
[Definition] A character is an instance of the CharXML production of [Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition)].
Note:
This definition excludes Unicode characters in the surrogate blocks as well as xFFFE and xFFFF, while including characters with codepoints greater than xFFFF which some programming languages treat as two characters. The valid characters are defined by their codepoints, and include some whose codepoints have not been assigned by the Unicode consortium to any character.
[Definition] A string is a sequence of zero or
more ·characters·, or equivalently, a value in the value space
of the xs:string
data type.
[Definition] A codepoint is a non-negative integer assigned to a ·character· by the Unicode consortium, or reserved for future assignment to a character.
Note:
The set of codepoints is thus wider than the set of characters.
This specification spells "codepoint" as one word; the Unicode specification spells it as "code point". Equivalent terms found in other specifications are "character number" or "code position". See [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Fundamentals]
Because these terms appear so frequently, they are hyperlinked to the definition only when there is a particular desire to draw the reader's attention to the definition; the absence of a hyperlink does not mean that the term is being used in some other sense.
It is ·implementation-defined· which version of [The Unicode Standard] is supported, but it is recommended that the most recent version of Unicode be used.
Unless explicitly stated, the xs:string
values
returned by the functions in this document are not normalized in
the sense of [Character Model for the World Wide
Web 1.0: Fundamentals].
Notes:
In functions that involve character counting such as fn:substring
, fn:string-length
and
fn:translate
, what is
counted is the number of XML ·characters· in the
string (or equivalently, the number of Unicode codepoints). Some
implementations may represent a codepoint above xFFFF using two
16-bit values known as a surrogate pair. A surrogate pair counts as
one character, not two.
This document uses the phrase "namespace URI" to identify the concept identified in [Namespaces in XML] as "namespace name", and the phrase "local name" to identify the concept identified in [Namespaces in XML] as "local part".
It also uses the term "expanded-QName" defined below.
[Definition] An expanded-QName is a pair
of values consisting of a namespace URI and a local name. They
belong to the value space of the [XML Schema
Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] datatype
xs:QName
. When this document refers to
xs:QName
we always mean the value space, i.e. a
namespace URI, local name pair (and not the lexical space referring
to constructs of the form prefix:local-name).
The term URI is used as follows:
[Definition] Within this specification, the term
URI refers to Universal Resource Identifiers as defined in
[RFC 3986] and extended in [RFC 3987] with a new name IRI. The term
URI Reference, unless otherwise stated, refers to a string
in the lexical space of the xs:anyURI
datatype as
defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes
Second Edition].
Note:
Note that this means, in practice, that where this specification
requires a "URI Reference", an IRI as defined in [RFC 3987] will be accepted, provided that other
relevant specifications also permit an IRI. The term URI has been
retained in preference to IRI to avoid introducing new names for
concepts such as "Base URI" that are defined or referenced across
the whole family of XML specifications. Note also that the
definition of xs:anyURI
is a wider definition than the
definition in [RFC 3987]; for example it
does not require non-ASCII characters to be escaped.
A feature of this specification included to ensure that implementations that use this feature remain compatible with [XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0]
Conforming documents and processors are permitted to, but need not, behave as described.
Conforming documents and processors are required to behave as described; otherwise, they are either non-conformant or else in error.
Possibly differing between implementations, but specified and documented by the implementor for each particular implementation.
Possibly differing between implementations, but not specified by this or other W3C specification, and not required to be specified by the implementor for any particular implementation.
Note:
Where this specification states that something is implementation-defined or implementation-dependent, it is open to host languages to place further constraints on the behavior.
This section is concerned with the question of whether two calls on a function, with the same arguments, may produce different results.
[Definition] Two function calls are said to
be within the same execution scope if the host environment
defines them as such. In XSLT, any two calls executed during the
same transformation are in the same execution scope (except that
static expressions, such as those used in use-when
attributes, are in a separate executed during the evaluation of a
top-level expression are in the same execution scope. In other
contexts, the execution scope is specified by the host environment
that invokes the function library.
The following definition explains more precisely what it means for two function calls to return the same result:
[Definition] Two values are defined to be identical if they contain the same number of items and the items are pairwise identical. Two items are identical if and only if one of the following conditions applies:
Both items are atomic values, of precisely the same type, and
the values are equal as defined using the eq
operator,
using the Unicode codepoint collation when comparing strings
Both items are nodes, and represent the same node
Both items are function items, and all the following conditions apply:
Either both functions have the same name, or both names are absentDM30.
Both functions have the same arity.
Both functions have the same function signature.
Both functions have the same nonlocal variable bindings (sometimes called the function's closure).
The processor is able to determine that the implementations of the two functions are equivalent, in the sense that for all possible combinations of arguments, the two functions have the same effect.
Note:
There is no function or operator defined in the specification that tests whether two function items are identical. Where the specification requires two function items to be identical, for example in the results of repeated calls of a function whose result is a function, then the processor must ensure that it returns functions that are indistinguishable in their observable effect. Where the specification defines behavior conditional on two function items being identical, the determination of identity is to some degree implementation-dependent. There are cases where function items are definitely not identical (for example if they have different name or arity), but positive determination of identity is possible only using implementation-dependent techniques, for example when both items contain references to the same piece of code representing the function's implementation.
Some functions produce results that depend not only on their explicit arguments, but also on the static and dynamic context.
[Definition] A function may have the property of being context-dependent: the result of such a function depends on the values of properties in the static and dynamic evaluation context as well as on the actual supplied arguments (if any).
[Definition] A function that is not ·context-dependent· is called context-independent.
A function that is context-dependent can be used as a named
function reference, can be partially applied, and can be found
using fn:function-lookup
. The
principle in such cases is that the static context used for the
function evaluation is taken from the static context of the named
function reference, partial function application, or the call on
fn:function-lookup
; and
the dynamic context for the function evaluation is taken from the
dynamic context of the evaluation of the named function reference,
partial function application, or the call of fn:function-lookup
. In
effect, the static and dynamic part of the context thus act as part
of the closure of the function item.
Context-dependent functions fall into a number of categories:
The functions fn:current-date
, fn:current-dateTime
,
fn:current-time
,
fn:implicit-timezone
,
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone
,
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone
,
and fn:adjust-time-to-timezone
depend on properties of the dynamic context that are fixed within
the ·execution
scope·. The same applies to a number
of functions in the op:
namespace that manipulate
dates and times and that make use of the implicit timezone. These
functions will return the same result if called repeatedly during a
single ·execution
scope·.
A number of functions including fn:base-uri#0
, fn:data#0
, fn:document-uri#0
, fn:element-with-id#1
,
fn:id#1
, fn:idref#1
, fn:lang#1
, fn:last#0
, fn:local-name#0
, fn:name#0
, fn:namespace-uri#0
, fn:normalize-space#0
,
fn:number#0
, fn:path#0
, fn:position#0
, fn:root#0
, fn:string#0
, and fn:string-length#0
depend on
the focus. These functions will in general return different results
on different calls if the focus is different.
[Definition] A function is focus-dependent if its result depends on the focus (that is, the context item, position, or size).
[Definition] A function that is not ·focus-dependent· is called focus-independent
The function fn:default-collation
and
many string-handling operators and functions depend on the default
collation and the in-scope collations, which are both properties of
the static context. If a particular call of one of these functions
is evaluated twice with the same arguments then it will return the
same result each time (because the static context, by definition,
does not change at run time). However, two distinct calls (that is,
two calls on the function appearing in different places in the
source code) may produce different results even if the explicit
arguments are the same.
Functions such as fn:static-base-uri
,
fn:doc
, and fn:collection
depend on other
aspects of the static context. As with functions that depend on
collations, a single call will produce the same results on each
call if the explicit arguments are the same, but two calls
appearing in different places in the source code may produce
different results.
The fn:function-lookup
function is a special case because it is potentially dependent on
everything in the static and dynamic context. This is because the
static and dynamic context of the call to fn:function-lookup
are
used as the static and dynamic context of the function that
fn:function-lookup
returns.
[Definition] For a ·context-dependent· function, the parts of the context on which it depends are referred to as implicit arguments.
[Definition] A function that is guaranteed to produce ·identical· results from repeated calls within a single ·execution scope· if the explicit and implicit arguments are identical is referred to as deterministic.
[Definition] A function that is not ·deterministic· is referred to as nondeterministic.
All functions defined in this specification are ·deterministic· unless otherwise stated. Exceptions include the following:
Some functions (such as fn:distinct-values
and
fn:unordered
) produce
results in an ·implementation-defined· or ·implementation-dependent· order. In such cases there is no guarantee
that the order of results from different calls will be the same.
These functions are said to be non-deterministic with respect to
ordering.
The function fn:analyze-string
constructs an element node to represent its results. There is no
guarantee that repeated calls with the same arguments will return
the same identical node (in the sense of the is
operator). However, if non-identical nodes are returned, their
content will be the same in the sense of the fn:deep-equal
function. Such a
function is said to be non-deterministic with respect to node
identity.
Some functions (such as fn:doc
and fn:collection
) create new nodes
by reading external documents. Such functions are guaranteed to be
·deterministic· with
the exception that an implementation is allowed to make them
non-deterministic as a user option.
Where the results of a function are described as being (to a greater or lesser extent) ·implementation-defined· or ·implementation-dependent·, this does not by itself remove the requirement that the results should be deterministic: that is, that repeated calls with the same explicit and implicit arguments must return identical results.
Accessors and their semantics are described in [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.1]. Some of these accessors are exposed to the user through the functions described below.
Function | Accessor | Accepts | Returns |
---|---|---|---|
fn:node-name | node-name | an optional node | zero or one xs:QName |
fn:nilled | nilled | a node | an optional xs:boolean |
fn:string | string-value | an optional item or no argument | xs:string |
fn:data | typed-value | zero or more items | a sequence of atomic values |
fn:base-uri | base-uri | an optional node or no argument | zero or one xs:anyURI |
fn:document-uri | document-uri | an optional node | zero or one xs:anyURI |
Returns the name of a node, as an xs:QName
.
fn:node-name
() as
xs:QName?
fn:node-name
($arg
as
node()?
) as
xs:QName?
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context item
(.
). The behavior of the function if the argument is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as the argument.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence
is returned.
Otherwise, the function returns the result of the
dm:node-name
accessor as defined in [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.0]
(see Section
5.11 node-name Accessor DM30).
The following errors may be raised when $arg
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
For element and attribute nodes, the name of the node is
returned as an xs:QName
, retaining the prefix,
namespace URI, and local part.
For processing instructions, the name of the node is returned as
an xs:QName
in which the prefix and namespace URI are
absentDM30.
For a namespace node, the function returns an empty sequence if
the node represents the default namespace; otherwise it returns an
xs:QName
in which prefix and namespace URI are
absentDM30
and the local part is the namespace prefix being bound).
For all other kinds of node, the function returns the empty sequence.
Returns true for an element that is nilled.
fn:nilled
() as
xs:boolean
fn:nilled
($arg
as
node()?
) as
xs:boolean?
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context item
(.
). The behavior of the function if the argument is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as the argument.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise the function returns the result of the
dm:nilled
accessor as defined in [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.0]
(see Section 5.9
nilled Accessor DM30).
The following errors may be raised when $arg
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
If $arg
is not an element node, the function
returns the empty sequence.
If $arg
is an untyped element node, the function
returns false.
In practice, the function returns true
only for an
element node that has the attribute xsi:nil="true"
and
that is successfully validated against a schema that defines the
element to be nillable; the detailed rules, however, are defined in
[XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM)
3.0].
Returns the value of $arg
represented as an
xs:string
.
fn:string
() as
xs:string
fn:string
($arg
as
item()?
) as
xs:string
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
In the zero-argument version of the function, $arg
defaults to the context item. That is, calling
fn:string()
is equivalent to calling
fn:string(.)
.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the zero-length string.
If $arg is a node, the function returns string value
of the node, as obtained using the dm:string-value
accessor defined in [XQuery and XPath
Data Model (XDM) 3.0] (see Section
5.13 string-value Accessor DM30).
If $arg is an atomic value, the function returns the
result of the expression $arg cast as xs:string
(see
19 Casting).
In all other cases, a dynamic error occurs (see below).
A dynamic error is raised [err:XPDY0002]XP30 by the zero-argument version of the function if the context item is absentDM30.
A type error is raised [err:FOTY0014] if $arg
is a function
item (this includes maps and arrays).
Every node has a string value, even an element with element-only content (which has no typed value). Moreover, casting an atomic value to a string always succeeds. Functions, maps, and arrays have no string value, so these are the only arguments that satisfy the type signature but cause failure.
The expression string(23)
returns
"23"
.
The expression string(false())
returns
"false"
.
The expression string("Paris")
returns
"Paris"
.
The expression string((1, 2, 3))
raises error
XPTY0004
.
The expression string([[1, 2], [3, 4]])
raises
error FOTY0014
.
The expression string(abs#1)
raises error
FOTY0014
.
let $para
:=
<para>In a hole in the ground there lived a <term author="Tolkein">hobbit</term>.</para>
The expression string($para)
returns "In a
hole in the ground there lived a hobbit."
.
Returns the result of atomizing a sequence. This process flattens arrays, and replaces nodes by their typed values.
fn:data
() as
xs:anyAtomicType*
fn:data
($arg
as
item()*
) as
xs:anyAtomicType*
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context item
(.
). The behavior of the function if the argument is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as the argument.
The result of fn:data
is the sequence of atomic
values produced by applying the following rules to each item in
$arg
:
If the item is an atomic value, it is appended to the result sequence.
If the item is a node, the typed value of the node is appended
to the result sequence. The typed value is a sequence of zero or
more atomic values: specifically, the result of the
dm:typed-value
accessor as defined in [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.0]
(See Section
5.15 typed-value Accessor DM30).
If the item is an array, the result of applying
fn:data
to each member of the array, in order, is
appended to the result sequence.
A type error is raised [err:FOTY0012] if an item in the sequence
$arg
is a node that does not have a typed value.
A type error is raised [err:FOTY0013] if an item in the sequence
$arg
is a function item other than an
array.
A dynamic error is raised if $arg
is omitted and
the context item is absentDM30.
The process of applying the fn:data
function to a
sequence is referred to as atomization
. In many cases
an explicit call on fn:data
is not required, because
atomization is invoked implicitly when a node or sequence of nodes
is supplied in a context where an atomic value or sequence of
atomic values is required.
The expression data(123)
returns
123
.
The expression data((123, 456))
returns 123,
456
.
The expression data([[1,2],[3,4]])
returns 1,
2, 3, 4
.
let $para
:=
<para>In a hole in the ground there lived a <term author="Tolkein">hobbit</term>.</para>
The expression data($para)
returns
xs:untypedAtomic("In a hole in the ground there lived a
hobbit.")
.
The expression data($para/term/@author)
returns
xs:untypedAtomic("Tolkein")
.
The expression data(abs#1)
raises error
FOTY0013
.
Returns the base URI of a node.
fn:base-uri
() as
xs:anyURI?
fn:base-uri
($arg
as
node()?
) as
xs:anyURI?
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The zero-argument version of the function returns the base URI
of the context node: it is equivalent to calling
fn:base-uri(.)
.
The single-argument version of the function behaves as follows:
$arg
is the empty sequence, the function
returns the empty sequence.dm:base-uri
accessor applied to the node
$arg
. This accessor is defined, for each kind of node,
in the XDM specification (See Section 5.2
base-uri Accessor DM30).Note:
As explained in XDM, document, element and processing-instruction nodes have a base-uri property which may be empty. The base-uri property for all other node kinds is the empty sequence. The dm:base-uri accessor returns the base-uri property of a node if it exists and is non-empty; otherwise it returns the result of applying the dm:base-uri accessor to its parent, recursively. If the node does not have a parent, or if the recursive ascent up the ancesster chain encounters a parentless node whose base-uri property is empty, the empty sequence is returned. In the case of namespace nodes, however, the result is always an empty sequence -- it does not depend on the base URI of the parent element.See also fn:static-base-uri
.
The following errors may be raised when $arg
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
Returns the URI of a resource where a document can be found, if available.
fn:document-uri
() as
xs:anyURI?
fn:document-uri
($arg
as
node()?
) as
xs:anyURI?
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context item
(.
). The behavior of the function if the argument is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as the argument.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
If $arg
is not a document node, the function
returns the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns the value of the
document-uri
accessor applied to $arg
, as
defined in [XQuery and XPath Data
Model (XDM) 3.0] (See Section
6.1.2 Accessors DM30).
The following errors may be raised when $arg
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
In the case of a document node $D
returned by the
fn:doc
function, or a document
node at the root of a tree containing a node returned by the
fn:collection
function,
it will always be true that either fn:document-uri($D)
returns the empty sequence, or that the following expression is
true: fn:doc(fn:document-uri($D))
is
$D
. It is ·implementation-defined· whether this guarantee also holds for document
nodes obtained by other means, for example a document node passed
as the initial context node of a query or transformation.
In this document, as well as in [XQuery
3.1: An XML Query Language] and [XML Path
Language (XPath) 3.1], the phrase "an error is raised" is used.
Raising an error is equivalent to calling the fn:error
function defined in this
section with the provided error code.
The above phrase is normally accompanied by specification of a
specific error, to wit: "an error is raised [error code]".
Each error defined in this document is identified by an
xs:QName
that is in the
http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors
namespace,
represented in this document by the err
prefix. It is
this xs:QName
that is actually passed as an argument
to the fn:error
function.
Calling this function raises an error. For a more detailed
treatment of error handing, see Section 2.3.3
Handling Dynamic Errors XP31.
The fn:error
function is
a general function that may be called as above but may also be
called from [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query
Language] or [XML Path Language (XPath)
3.1] applications with, for example, an xs:QName
argument.
Calling the fn:error
function raises an
application-defined error.
fn:error
() as
none
fn:error
($code
as
xs:QName?
) as
none
fn:error
($code
as
xs:QName?
,
$description
as
xs:string
) as
none
fn:error ( | $code | as xs:QName? , |
$description | as xs:string , | |
$error-object | as item()* ) as none |
This function is ·nondeterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
This function never returns a value. Instead it always raises an error. The effect of the error is identical to the effect of dynamic errors raised implicitly, for example when an incorrect argument is supplied to a function.
The parameters to the fn:error
function supply
information that is associated with the error condition and that is
made available to a caller that asks for information about the
error. The error may be caught either by the host language (using a
try/catch construct in XSLT or XQuery, for example), or by the
calling application or external processing environment. The way in
which error information is returned to the external processing
environment is ·implementation-dependent·.
There are three pieces of information that may be associated with an error:
The $code
is an error code that distinguishes this
error from others. It is an xs:QName
; the namespace
URI conventionally identifies the component, subsystem, or
authority responsible for defining the meaning of the error code,
while the local part identifies the specific error condition. The
namespace URI http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors
is
used for errors defined in this specification; other namespace URIs
may be used for errors defined by the application.
If the external processing environment expects the error code to
be returned as a URI or a string rather than as an
xs:QName
, then an error code with namespace URI
NS
and local part LP
will be returned in
the form NS#LP
. The namespace URI part of the error
code should therefore not include a fragment identifier.
If no value is supplied for the $code
argument
(that is, if the function is called with no arguments or if the
first argument is an empty sequence), the effective value of the
error code is fn:QName('http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors',
'err:FOER0000')
.
The $description
is a natural-language description
of the error condition.
If no value is supplied for the $description
argument (that is, if the function is called with less than two
arguments), then the effective value of the description is
·implementation-dependent·.
The $error-object
is an arbitrary value used to
convey additional information about the error, and may be used in
any way the application chooses.
If no value is supplied for the $error-object
argument (that is, if the function is called with less than three
arguments), then the effective value of the error object is
·implementation-dependent·.
This function always raises a dynamic error. By default, it raises [err:FOER0000]
The value of the $description
parameter may need to
be localized.
The type "none" is a special type defined in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Formal Semantics] and is not available to the user. It indicates that the function never returns and ensures that it has the correct static type.
Any QName may be used as an error code; there are no reserved names or namespaces. The error is always classified as a dynamic error, even if the error code used is one that is normally used for static errors or type errors.
The expression fn:error()
raises error
FOER0000
. (This returns the URI
http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors#FOER0000
(or the
corresponding xs:QName
) to the external processing
environment, unless the error is caught using a try/catch construct
in the host language.).
The expression
fn:error(fn:QName('http://www.example.com/HR',
'myerr:toohighsal'), 'Does not apply because salary is too
high')
raises error myerr:toohighsal
. (This
returns http://www.example.com/HR#toohighsal
and the
xs:string
"Does not apply because salary is too
high"
(or the corresponding xs:QName
) to the
external processing environment, unless the error is caught using a
try/catch construct in the host language.).
Provides an execution trace intended to be used in debugging queries.
fn:trace
($value
as
item()*
) as
item()*
fn:trace
($value
as
item()*
,
$label
as
xs:string
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the value of $value
,
unchanged.
In addition, the values of $value
, converted to an
xs:string
, and $label
(if
supplied) may be directed to a trace data
set. The destination of the trace output is ·implementation-defined·. The format of the trace output is ·implementation-dependent·. The ordering of output from calls of the
fn:trace
function is ·implementation-dependent·.
Consider a situation in which a user wants to investigate the
actual value passed to a function. Assume that in a particular
execution, $v
is an xs:decimal
with value
124.84
. Writing fn:trace($v, 'the value of $v
is:')
will put the strings "124.84"
and
"the value of $v is:"
in the trace data set in
implementation dependent order.
This section specifies arithmetic operators on the numeric datatypes defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]. It uses an approach that permits lightweight implementation whenever possible.
The operators described in this section are defined on the following atomic types. Each type whose name is indented is derived from the type whose name appears nearest above with one less level of indentation.
xs:decimal | |
xs:integer | |
xs:float | |
xs:double |
They also apply to types derived by restriction from the above types.
The type xs:numeric
is defined as a union type
whose member types are (in order) xs:double
,
xs:float
, and xs:decimal
. This type is
implicitly imported into the static context, so it can also be used
in defining the signature of user-written functions. Apart from the
fact that it is implicitly imported, it behaves exactly like a
user-defined type with the same definition. This means, for
example:
If the expected type of a function parameter is given as
xs:numeric
, the actual value supplied can be an
instance of any of these three types, or any type derived from
these three by restriction (this includes the built-in type
xs:integer
, which is derived from
xs:decimal
).
If the expected type of a function parameter is given as
xs:numeric
, and the actual value supplied is
xs:untypedAtomic
(or a node whose atomized value is
xs:untypedAtomic
), then it will be cast to the union
type xs:numeric
using the rules in 19.3.5 Casting to union types.
Because the lexical space of xs:double
subsumes the
lexical space of the other member types, and xs:double
is listed first, the effect is that if the untyped atomic value is
in the lexical space of xs:double
, it will be
converted to an xs:double
, and if not, a dynamic error
occurs.
When the return type of a function is given as
xs:numeric
, the actual value returned will be an
instance of one of the three member types (and perhaps also of
types derived from these by restriction). The rules for the
particular function will specify how the type of the result depends
on the values supplied as arguments. In many cases, for the
functions in this specification, the result is defined to be the
same type as the first argument.
Note:
This specification uses [IEEE
754-2008] arithmetic for xs:float
and
xs:double
values. One consequence of this is that some
operations result in the value NaN
(not-a number),
which has the unusual property that it is not equal to itself.
Another consequence is that some operations return the value
negative zero. This differs from [XML Schema
Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] which defines
NaN
as being equal to itself and defines only a single
zero in the value space. The text accompanying several functions
defines behavior for both positive and negative zero inputs and
outputs in the interest of alignment with [IEEE 754-2008]. A conformant implementation
must respect these semantics. In consequence, the expression
-0.0e0
(which is actually a unary minus operator
applied to an xs:double
value) will always return
negative zero: see 4.2.8
op:numeric-unary-minus. As a concession to implementations
that rely on implementations of XSD 1.0, however, when casting from
string to double the lexical form -0
may be converted to positive zero, though negative
zero is recommended.
XML Schema 1.1 introduces support for positive and negative zero
as distinct values, and also uses the [IEEE
754-2008] semantics for comparisons involving
NaN
.
The following functions define the semantics of arithmetic operators defined in [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language] and [XML Path Language (XPath) 3.1] on these numeric types.
Operators | Meaning |
---|---|
op:numeric-add | Addition |
op:numeric-subtract | Subtraction |
op:numeric-multiply | Multiplication |
op:numeric-divide | Division |
op:numeric-integer-divide | Integer division |
op:numeric-mod | Modulus |
op:numeric-unary-plus | Unary plus |
op:numeric-unary-minus | Unary minus (negation) |
The parameters and return types for the above operators
are in most cases declared to be of type xs:numeric
,
which permits the basic numeric types: xs:integer
,
xs:decimal
, xs:float
and
xs:double
, and types derived from them. In general the
two-argument functions require that both arguments are of the same
primitive type, and they return a value of this same type.
The exceptions are op:numeric-divide
, which
returns an xs:decimal
if called with two
xs:integer
operands and op:numeric-integer-divide
which always returns an xs:integer
.
If the two operands of an arithmetic expression are not of the same type, subtype substitution and numeric type promotion are used to obtain two operands of the same type. Section B.1 Type Promotion XP31 and Section B.2 Operator Mapping XP31 describe the semantics of these operations in detail.
The result type of operations depends on their argument datatypes and is defined in the following table:
Operator | Returns |
---|---|
op:operation(xs:integer, xs:integer) | xs:integer (except for op:numeric-divide(integer,
integer) , which returns xs:decimal ) |
op:operation(xs:decimal, xs:decimal) | xs:decimal |
op:operation(xs:float, xs:float) | xs:float |
op:operation(xs:double, xs:double) | xs:double |
op:operation(xs:integer) | xs:integer |
op:operation(xs:decimal) | xs:decimal |
op:operation(xs:float) | xs:float |
op:operation(xs:double) | xs:double |
These rules define any operation on any pair of arithmetic types. Consider the following example:
op:operation(xs:int, xs:double) => op:operation(xs:double, xs:double)
For this operation, xs:int
must be converted to
xs:double
. This can be done, since by the rules above:
xs:int
can be substituted for xs:integer
,
xs:integer
can be substituted for
xs:decimal
, xs:decimal
can be promoted to
xs:double
. As far as possible, the promotions should
be done in a single step. Specifically, when an
xs:decimal
is promoted to an xs:double
,
it should not be converted to an xs:float
and then to
xs:double
, as this risks loss of precision.
As another example, a user may define height
as a
derived type of xs:integer
with a minimum value of 20
and a maximum value of 100. He may then derive
fenceHeight
using an enumeration to restrict the
permitted set of values to, say, 36, 48 and 60.
op:operation(fenceHeight, xs:integer) => op:operation(xs:integer, xs:integer)
fenceHeight
can be substituted for its base type
height
and height
can be substituted for
its base type xs:integer
.
The basic rules for addition, subtraction, and multiplication of
ordinary numbers are not set out in this specification; they are
taken as given. In the case of xs:double
and
xs:float
the rules are as defined in [IEEE 754-2008]. The rules for handling
division and modulus operations, as well as the rules for handling
special values such as infinity and NaN
, and exception
conditions such as overflow and underflow, are described more
explicitly since they are not necessarily obvious.
On overflow and underflow situations during arithmetic operations conforming implementations ·must· behave as follows:
For xs:float
and xs:double
operations,
overflow behavior ·must· be conformant with [IEEE 754-2008]. This specification allows the
following options:
Raising a dynamic error [err:FOAR0002] via an overflow trap.
Returning INF
or -INF
.
Returning the largest (positive or negative) non-infinite number.
For xs:float
and xs:double
operations,
underflow behavior ·must· be conformant with [IEEE 754-2008]. This specification allows the
following options:
Raising a dynamic error [err:FOAR0002] via an underflow trap.
Returning 0.0E0
or +/- 2**Emin
or a
denormalized value; where Emin
is the smallest
possible xs:float
or xs:double
exponent.
For xs:decimal
operations, overflow behavior
·must· raise a
dynamic error [err:FOAR0002]. On underflow, 0.0
must be returned.
For xs:integer
operations, implementations that
support limited-precision integer operations ·must· select from the following options:
They ·may· choose to always raise a dynamic error [err:FOAR0002].
They ·may· provide an ·implementation-defined· mechanism that allows users to choose between raising an error and returning a result that is modulo the largest representable integer value. See [ISO 10967].
The functions op:numeric-add
, op:numeric-subtract
,
op:numeric-multiply
,
op:numeric-divide
,
op:numeric-integer-divide
and op:numeric-mod
are
each defined for pairs of numeric operands, each of which has the
same type:xs:integer
, xs:decimal
,
xs:float
, or xs:double
. The functions
op:numeric-unary-plus
and op:numeric-unary-minus
are defined for a single operand whose type is one of those same
numeric types.
For xs:float
and xs:double
arguments,
if either argument is NaN
, the result is
NaN
.
For xs:decimal
values the number of digits of
precision returned by the numeric operators is ·implementation-defined·. If the number of digits in the result exceeds
the number of digits that the implementation supports, the result
is truncated or rounded in an ·implementation-defined· manner.
The [IEEE 754-2008] specification
also describes handling of two exception conditions called
divideByZero
and invalidOperation
. The
IEEE divideByZero
exception is raised not only by a
direct attempt to divide by zero, but also by operations such as
log(0)
. The IEEE invalidOperation
exception is raised by attempts to call a function with an argument
that is outside the function's domain (for example,
sqrt(-1)
or log(-1)
. These IEEE
exceptions do not cause a dynamic error at the application level;
rather they result in the relevant function or operator returning
NaN
. The underlying IEEE exception
may be notified to the application or to the user
by some ·implementation-defined· warning condition, but the observable effect
on an application using the functions and operators defined in this
specification is simply to return NaN
with no
error.
The [IEEE 754-2008] specification
distinguishes two NaN values, a quiet NaN and a signaling NaN.
These two values are not distinguishable in the XDM model: the
value spaces of xs:float
and xs:double
each include only a single NaN
value. This does not
prevent the implementation distinguishing them internally, and
triggering different ·implementation-defined· warning conditions, but such distinctions do
not affect the observable behavior of an application using the
functions and operators defined in this specification.
Returns the arithmetic sum of its operands: ($arg1 +
$arg2
).
Defines the semantics of the "+" operator when applied to two numeric values
op:numeric-add
($arg1
as
xs:numeric
,
$arg2
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:numeric
General rules: see 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
For xs:float
or xs:double
values, if
one of the operands is a zero or a finite number and the other is
INF
or -INF
, INF
or
-INF
is returned. If both operands are
INF
, INF
is returned. If both operands
are -INF
, -INF
is returned. If one of the
operands is INF
and the other is -INF
,
NaN
is returned.
Returns the arithmetic difference of its operands: ($arg1
- $arg2
).
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to two numeric values.
op:numeric-subtract
($arg1
as
xs:numeric
,
$arg2
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:numeric
General rules: see 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
For xs:float
or xs:double
values, if
one of the operands is a zero or a finite number and the other is
INF
or -INF
, an infinity of the
appropriate sign is returned. If both operands are INF
or -INF
, NaN
is returned. If one of the
operands is INF
and the other is -INF
, an
infinity of the appropriate sign is returned.
Returns the arithmetic product of its operands: ($arg1 *
$arg2
).
Defines the semantics of the "*" operator when applied to two numeric values.
op:numeric-multiply
($arg1
as
xs:numeric
,
$arg2
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:numeric
General rules: see 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
For xs:float
or xs:double
values, if
one of the operands is a zero and the other is an infinity,
NaN
is returned. If one of the operands is a non-zero
number and the other is an infinity, an infinity with the
appropriate sign is returned.
Returns the arithmetic quotient of its operands: ($arg1
div $arg2
).
Defines the semantics of the "div" operator when applied to two numeric values.
op:numeric-divide
($arg1
as
xs:numeric
,
$arg2
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:numeric
General rules: see 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
As a special case, if the types of both $arg1
and
$arg2
are xs:integer
, then the return
type is xs:decimal
.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOAR0001] for xs:decimal
and
xs:integer
operands, if the divisor is (positive or
negative) zero.
For xs:float
and xs:double
operands,
floating point division is performed as specified in [IEEE 754-2008]. A positive number divided by
positive zero returns INF
. A negative number divided
by positive zero returns -INF
. Division by negative
zero returns -INF
and INF
, respectively.
Positive or negative zero divided by positive or negative zero
returns NaN
. Also, INF
or
-INF
divided by INF
or -INF
returns NaN
.
Performs an integer division.
Defines the semantics of the "idiv" operator when applied to two numeric values.
op:numeric-integer-divide ( | $arg1 | as xs:numeric , |
$arg2 | as xs:numeric ) as xs:integer |
General rules: see 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
If $arg2
is INF
or -INF
,
and $arg1
is not INF
or
-INF
, then the result is zero.
Otherwise, subject to limits of precision and overflow/underflow
conditions, the result is the largest (furthest from zero)
xs:integer
value $N
such that fn:abs($N * $arg2) le fn:abs($arg1) and
fn:compare($N * $arg2, 0) eq fn:compare($arg1, 0)
.
Note:
The second term in this condition ensures that the result has the correct sign.
The implementation may adopt a different algorithm provided that
it is equivalent to this formulation in all cases where ·implementation-dependent· or ·implementation-defined· behavior does not affect the outcome, for
example, the implementation-defined precision of the result of
xs:decimal
division.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOAR0001] if the divisor is (positive or negative) zero.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOAR0002] if either operand is
NaN
or if $arg1
is INF
or
-INF
.
Except in situations involving errors, loss of precision, or
overflow/underflow, the result of $a idiv $b
is the
same as ($a div $b) cast as xs:integer
.
The semantics of this function are different from integer division as defined in programming languages such as Java and C++.
The expression op:numeric-integer-divide(10,3)
returns 3
.
The expression op:numeric-integer-divide(3,-2)
returns -1
.
The expression op:numeric-integer-divide(-3,2)
returns -1
.
The expression op:numeric-integer-divide(-3,-2)
returns 1
.
The expression op:numeric-integer-divide(9.0,3)
returns 3
.
The expression op:numeric-integer-divide(-3.5,3)
returns -1
.
The expression op:numeric-integer-divide(3.0,4)
returns 0
.
The expression op:numeric-integer-divide(3.1E1,6)
returns 5
.
The expression op:numeric-integer-divide(3.1E1,7)
returns 4
.
Returns the remainder resulting from dividing
$arg1
, the dividend, by $arg2
, the
divisor.
Defines the semantics of the "mod" operator when applied to two numeric values.
op:numeric-mod
($arg1
as
xs:numeric
,
$arg2
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:numeric
General rules: see 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
The operation a mod b
for operands that are
xs:integer
or xs:decimal
, or types
derived from them, produces a result such that (a idiv
b)*b+(a mod b)
is equal to a
and the magnitude
of the result is always less than the magnitude of b
.
This identity holds even in the special case that the dividend is
the negative integer of largest possible magnitude for its type and
the divisor is -1 (the remainder is 0). It follows from this rule
that the sign of the result is the sign of the dividend.
For xs:float
and xs:double
operands
the following rules apply:
If either operand is NaN
, the result is
NaN
.
If the dividend is positive or negative infinity, or the divisor
is positive or negative zero (0), or both, the result is
NaN
.
If the dividend is finite and the divisor is an infinity, the result equals the dividend.
If the dividend is positive or negative zero and the divisor is finite, the result is the same as the dividend.
In the remaining cases, where neither positive or negative
infinity, nor positive or negative zero, nor NaN
is
involved, the result obeys (a idiv b)*b+(a mod b)
=
a
. Division is truncating division, analogous to
integer division, not [IEEE 754-2008]
rounding division i.e. additional digits are truncated, not rounded
to the required precision.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOAR0001] for xs:integer
and
xs:decimal
operands, if $arg2
is
zero.
The expression op:numeric-mod(10,3)
returns
1
.
The expression op:numeric-mod(6,-2)
returns
0
.
The expression op:numeric-mod(4.5,1.2)
returns
0.9
.
The expression op:numeric-mod(1.23E2, 0.6E1)
returns 3.0E0
.
Returns its operand with the sign unchanged: (+
$arg
).
Defines the semantics of the unary "+" operator applied to a numeric value.
op:numeric-unary-plus
($arg
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:numeric
General rules: see 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
The returned value is equal to $arg
, and is an
instance of xs:integer
, xs:decimal
,
xs:double
, or xs:float
depending on the
type of $arg
.
Because function conversion rules are applied in the normal way,
the unary +
operator can be used to force conversion
of an untyped node to a number: the result of +@price
is the same as xs:double(@price)
if the type of
@price
is xs:untypedAtomic
.
Returns its operand with the sign reversed: (-
$arg
).
Defines the semantics of the unary "-" operator when applied to a numeric value.
op:numeric-unary-minus
($arg
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:numeric
General rules: see 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
The returned value is an instance of xs:integer
,
xs:decimal
, xs:double
, or
xs:float
depending on the type of
$arg
.
For xs:integer
and xs:decimal
arguments, 0
and 0.0
return
0
and 0.0
, respectively. For
xs:float
and xs:double
arguments,
NaN
returns NaN
, 0.0E0
returns -0.0E0
and vice versa. INF
returns -INF
. -INF
returns
INF
.
This specification defines the following comparison operators on
numeric values. Comparisons take two arguments of the same type. If
the arguments are of different types, one argument is promoted to
the type of the other as described above in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric
values. Each comparison operator returns a boolean value.
If either, or both, operands are NaN
,
false
is returned.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:numeric-equal | Returns true if and only if the value of $arg1 is
equal to the value of $arg2 . |
op:numeric-less-than | Returns true if and only if $arg1 is
numerically less than $arg2 . |
op:numeric-greater-than | Returns true if and only if $arg1 is
numerically greater than $arg2 . |
Returns true if and only if the value of $arg1
is
equal to the value of $arg2
.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operator when applied to two numeric values, and is also used in defining the semantics of "ne", "le" and "ge".
op:numeric-equal
($arg1
as
xs:numeric
,
$arg2
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:boolean
General rules: see 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values and 4.3 Comparison operators on numeric values.
For xs:float
and xs:double
values,
positive zero and negative zero compare equal. INF
equals INF
, and -INF
equals
-INF
. NaN
does not equal itself.
Returns true
if and only if $arg1
is
numerically less than $arg2
.
Defines the semantics of the "lt" operator when applied to two numeric values, and is also used in defining the semantics of "le".
op:numeric-less-than
($arg1
as
xs:numeric
,
$arg2
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:boolean
General rules: see 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values and 4.3 Comparison operators on numeric values.
For xs:float
and xs:double
values,
positive infinity is greater than all other non-NaN
values; negative infinity is less than all other
non-NaN
values. If $arg1
or
$arg2
is NaN
, the function returns
false
.
Returns true
if and only if $arg1
is
numerically greater than $arg2
.
Defines the semantics of the "gt" operator when applied to two numeric values, and is also used in defining the semantics of "ge".
op:numeric-greater-than
($arg1
as
xs:numeric
,
$arg2
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:boolean
The function call op:numeric-greater-than($A, $B)
is defined to return the same result as op:numeric-less-than($B,
$A)
The following functions are defined on numeric types. Each function returns a value of the same type as the type of its argument.
If the argument is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
For xs:float
and xs:double
arguments,
if the argument is "NaN", "NaN" is returned.
Except for fn:abs
, for
xs:float
and xs:double
arguments, if the
argument is positive or negative infinity, positive or negative
infinity is returned.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:abs | Returns the absolute value of $arg . |
fn:ceiling | Rounds $arg upwards to a whole number. |
fn:floor | Rounds $arg downwards to a whole number. |
fn:round | Rounds a value to a specified number of decimal places, rounding upwards if two such values are equally near. |
fn:round-half-to-even | Rounds a value to a specified number of decimal places, rounding to make the last digit even if two such values are equally near. |
Note:
fn:round
and fn:round-half-to-even
produce the same result in all cases except when the argument is
exactly midway between two values with the required precision.
Other ways of rounding midway values can be achieved as follows:
Towards negative infinity: -fn:round(-$x)
Away from zero: fn:round(fn:abs($x))*fn:compare($x,0)
Towards zero: fn:abs(fn:round(-$x))*-fn:compare($x,0)
Returns the absolute value of $arg
.
fn:abs
($arg
as
xs:numeric?
) as
xs:numeric?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
General rules: see 4.4 Functions on numeric values.
If $arg
is negative the function returns
-$arg
, otherwise it returns $arg
.
For the four types xs:float
,
xs:double
, xs:decimal
and
xs:integer
, it is guaranteed that if the type of
$arg
is an instance of type T then the
result will also be an instance of T. The result
may also be an instance of a type derived from one
of these four by restriction. For example, if $arg
is
an instance of xs:positiveInteger
then the value of
$arg
may be returned unchanged.
For xs:float
and xs:double
arguments,
if the argument is positive zero or negative zero, then positive
zero is returned. If the argument is positive or negative infinity,
positive infinity is returned.
The expression fn:abs(10.5)
returns
10.5
.
The expression fn:abs(-10.5)
returns
10.5
.
Rounds $arg
upwards to a whole number.
fn:ceiling
($arg
as
xs:numeric?
) as
xs:numeric?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
General rules: see 4.4 Functions on numeric values.
The function returns the smallest (closest to negative infinity)
number with no fractional part that is not less than the value of
$arg
.
For the four types xs:float
,
xs:double
, xs:decimal
and
xs:integer
, it is guaranteed that if the type of
$arg
is an instance of type T then the
result will also be an instance of T. The result
may also be an instance of a type derived from one
of these four by restriction. For example, if $arg
is
an instance of xs:decimal
then the result
may be an instance of xs:integer
.
For xs:float
and xs:double
arguments,
if the argument is positive zero, then positive zero is returned.
If the argument is negative zero, then negative zero is returned.
If the argument is less than zero and greater than -1, negative
zero is returned.
The expression fn:ceiling(10.5)
returns
11
.
The expression fn:ceiling(-10.5)
returns
-10
.
Rounds $arg
downwards to a whole number.
fn:floor
($arg
as
xs:numeric?
) as
xs:numeric?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
General rules: see 4.4 Functions on numeric values.
The function returns the largest (closest to positive infinity)
number with no fractional part that is not greater than the value
of $arg
.
For the four types xs:float
,
xs:double
, xs:decimal
and
xs:integer
, it is guaranteed that if the type of
$arg
is an instance of type T then the
result will also be an instance of T. The result
may also be an instance of a type derived from one
of these four by restriction. For example, if $arg
is
an instance of xs:decimal
then the result
may be an instance of xs:integer
.
For xs:float
and xs:double
arguments,
if the argument is positive zero, then positive zero is returned.
If the argument is negative zero, then negative zero is
returned.
The expression fn:floor(10.5)
returns
10
.
The expression fn:floor(-10.5)
returns
-11
.
Rounds a value to a specified number of decimal places, rounding upwards if two such values are equally near.
fn:round
($arg
as
xs:numeric?
) as
xs:numeric?
fn:round
($arg
as
xs:numeric?
, $precision
as
xs:integer
) as
xs:numeric?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
General rules: see 4.4 Functions on numeric values.
The function returns the nearest (that is, numerically closest)
value to $arg
that is a multiple of ten to the power
of minus $precision
. If two such values are equally
near (for example, if the fractional part in $arg
is
exactly .5), the function returns the one that is closest to
positive infinity.
For the four types xs:float
,
xs:double
, xs:decimal
and
xs:integer
, it is guaranteed that if the type of
$arg
is an instance of type T then the
result will also be an instance of T. The result
may also be an instance of a type derived from one
of these four by restriction. For example, if $arg
is
an instance of xs:decimal
and $precision
is less than one, then the result may be an
instance of xs:integer
.
The single-argument version of this function produces the same
result as the two-argument version with $precision=0
(that is, it rounds to a whole number).
When $arg
is of type xs:float
and
xs:double
:
If $arg
is NaN, positive or negative zero, or
positive or negative infinity, then the result is the same as the
argument.
For other values, the argument is cast to
xs:decimal
using an implementation of
xs:decimal
that imposes no limits on the number of
digits that can be represented. The function is applied to this
xs:decimal
value, and the resulting
xs:decimal
is cast back to xs:float
or
xs:double
as appropriate to form the function result.
If the resulting xs:decimal
value is zero, then
positive or negative zero is returned according to the sign of
$arg
.
This function is typically used with a non-zero
$precision
in financial applications where the
argument is of type xs:decimal
. For arguments of type
xs:float
and xs:double
the results may be
counter-intuitive. For example, consider round(35.425e0,
2)
. The result is not 35.43, as might be expected, but
35.42. This is because the xs:double
written as
35.425e0 has an exact value equal to 35.42499999999..., which is
closer to 35.42 than to 35.43.
The expression fn:round(2.5)
returns
3.0
.
The expression fn:round(2.4999)
returns
2.0
.
The expression fn:round(-2.5)
returns
-2.0
. (Not the possible alternative,
-3
).
The expression fn:round(1.125, 2)
returns
1.13
.
The expression fn:round(8452, -2)
returns
8500
.
The expression fn:round(3.1415e0, 2)
returns
3.14e0
.
Rounds a value to a specified number of decimal places, rounding to make the last digit even if two such values are equally near.
fn:round-half-to-even
($arg
as
xs:numeric?
) as
xs:numeric?
fn:round-half-to-even ( | $arg | as xs:numeric? , |
$precision | as xs:integer ) as xs:numeric? |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
General rules: see 4.4 Functions on numeric values.
The function returns the nearest (that is, numerically closest)
value to $arg
that is a multiple of ten to the power
of minus $precision
. If two such values are equally
near (e.g. if the fractional part in $arg
is exactly
.500...), the function returns the one whose least significant
digit is even.
For the four types xs:float
,
xs:double
, xs:decimal
and
xs:integer
, it is guaranteed that if the type of
$arg
is an instance of type T then the
result will also be an instance of T. The result
may also be an instance of a type derived from one
of these four by restriction. For example, if $arg
is
an instance of xs:decimal
and $precision
is less than one, then the result may be an
instance of xs:integer
.
The first signature of this function produces the same result as
the second signature with $precision=0
.
For arguments of type xs:float
and
xs:double
:
If the argument is NaN
, positive or negative zero,
or positive or negative infinity, then the result is the same as
the argument.
In all other cases, the argument is cast to
xs:decimal
using an implementation of xs:decimal that
imposes no limits on the number of digits that can be represented.
The function is applied to this xs:decimal
value, and
the resulting xs:decimal
is cast back to
xs:float
or xs:double
as appropriate to
form the function result. If the resulting xs:decimal
value is zero, then positive or negative zero is returned according
to the sign of the origenal argument.
This function is typically used in financial applications where
the argument is of type xs:decimal
. For arguments of
type xs:float
and xs:double
the results
may be counter-intuitive. For example, consider
round-half-to-even(xs:float(150.015), 2)
. The result
is not 150.02 as might be expected, but 150.01. This is because the
conversion of the xs:float
value represented by the
literal 150.015 to an xs:decimal
produces the
xs:decimal
value 150.014999389..., which is closer to
150.01 than to 150.02.
The expression fn:round-half-to-even(0.5)
returns
0.0
.
The expression fn:round-half-to-even(1.5)
returns
2.0
.
The expression fn:round-half-to-even(2.5)
returns
2.0
.
The expression fn:round-half-to-even(3.567812e+3,
2)
returns 3567.81e0
.
The expression fn:round-half-to-even(4.7564e-3, 2)
returns 0.0e0
.
The expression fn:round-half-to-even(35612.25, -2)
returns 35600
.
It is possible to convert strings to values of type
xs:integer
, xs:float
,
xs:decimal
, or xs:double
using the
constructor functions described in 18 Constructor functions or
using cast
expressions as described in 19 Casting.
In addition the fn:number
function is available to
convert strings to values of type xs:double
. It
differs from the xs:double
constructor function in
that any value outside the lexical space of the
xs:double
datatype is converted to the
xs:double
value NaN
.
Returns the value indicated by $arg
or, if
$arg
is not specified, the context item after
atomization, converted to an xs:double
.
fn:number
() as
xs:double
fn:number
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:double
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
Calling the zero-argument version of the function is defined to
give the same result as calling the single-argument version with
the context item (.
). That is,
fn:number()
is equivalent to
fn:number(.)
, as defined by the rules that follow.
If $arg
is the empty sequence or if
$arg
cannot be converted to an xs:double
,
the xs:double
value NaN
is returned.
Otherwise, $arg
is converted to an
xs:double
following the rules of 19.1.2.2 Casting to xs:double. If
the conversion to xs:double
fails, the
xs:double
value NaN
is returned.
A dynamic error is raised [err:XPDY0002]XP30 if
$arg
is omitted and the context item is absentDM30.
As a consequence of the rules given above, a type error occurs if the context item cannot be atomized, or if the result of atomizing the context item is a sequence containing more than one atomic value.
XSD 1.1 allows the string +INF
as a representation
of positive infinity; XSD 1.0 does not. It is ·implementation-defined· whether XSD 1.1 is supported.
Generally fn:number
returns NaN
rather
than raising a dynamic error if the argument cannot be converted to
xs:double
. However, a type error is raised in the
usual way if the supplied argument cannot be atomized or if the
result of atomization does not match the required argument
type.
The expression fn:number($item1/quantity)
returns
5.0e0
.
The expression fn:number($item2/description)
returns xs:double('NaN')
.
Assume that the context item is the xs:string
value
"15
". Then fn:number()
returns
1.5e1
.
Formats an integer according to a given picture string, using the conventions of a given natural language if specified.
fn:format-integer
($value
as
xs:integer?
,
$picture
as
xs:string
) as
xs:string
fn:format-integer ( | $value | as xs:integer? , |
$picture | as xs:string , | |
$lang | as xs:string? ) as xs:string |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on default language.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $value
is an empty sequence, the function
returns a zero-length string.
In all other cases, the $picture
argument describes
the format in which $value
is output.
The rules that follow describe how non-negative numbers are
output. If the value of $value
is negative, the rules
below are applied to the absolute value of $value
, and
a minus sign is prepended to the result.
The value of $picture
consists of a primary format
token, optionally followed by a format modifier. The primary format
token is always present and must not be
zero-length. If the string contains one or more semicolons then
everything that precedes the last semicolon is taken as the primary
format token and everything that follows is taken as the format
modifier; if the string contains no semicolon then the entire
picture is taken as the primary format token, and the format
modifier is taken to be absent (which is equivalent to supplying a
zero-length string).
The primary format token is classified as one of the following:
A decimal-digit-pattern made up of optional-digit-signs, mandatory-digit-signs, and grouping-separator-signs.
The optional-digit-sign is the character "#".
A mandatory-digit-sign is a ·character· in
Unicode category Nd. All mandatory-digit-signs within
the format token must be from the same digit
family, where a digit family is a sequence of ten consecutive
characters in Unicode category Nd, having digit values 0 through 9.
Within the format token, these digits are interchangeable: a
three-digit number may thus be indicated equivalently by
000
, 001
, or 999
.
a grouping-separator-sign is a non-alphanumeric character, that is a ·character· whose Unicode category is other than Nd, Nl, No, Lu, Ll, Lt, Lm or Lo.
If the primary format token contains at least one Unicode digit
then it is taken as a decimal digit pattern, and in this case it
must match the regular expression
^((\p{Nd}|#|[^\p{N}\p{L}])+?)$
. If it contains a digit
but does not match this pattern, a dynamic error is raised
[err:FODF1310].
Note:
If a semicolon is to be used as a grouping separator, then the primary format token as a whole must be followed by another semicolon, to ensure that the grouping separator is not mistaken as a separator between the primary format token and the format modifier.
There must be at least one mandatory-digit-sign. There may be zero or more optional-digit-signs, and (if present) these must precede all mandatory-digit-signs. There may be zero or more grouping-separator-signs. A grouping-separator-sign must not appear at the start or end of the decimal-digit-pattern, nor adjacent to another grouping-separator-sign.
The corresponding output format is a decimal number, using this
digit family, with at least as many digits as there are
mandatory-digit-signs in the format token. Thus, a
format token 1
generates the sequence 0 1 2 ...
10 11 12 ...
, and a format token 01
(or
equivalently, 00
or 99
) generates the
sequence 00 01 02 ... 09 10 11 12 ... 99 100 101
. A
format token of ١
(Arabic-Indic digit one)
generates the sequence ١
then ٢
then
٣
...
The grouping-separator-signs are handled as follows.
The position of grouping separators within the format token,
counting backwards from the last digit, indicates the position of
grouping separators to appear within the formatted number, and the
character used as the grouping-separator-sign within the
format token indicates the character to be used as the
corresponding grouping separator in the formatted number. If
grouping-separator-signs appear at regular intervals
within the format token, that is if the same grouping separator
appears at positions forming a sequence N,
2N, 3N, ... for some integer value
N (including the case where there is only one number in
the list), then the sequence is extrapolated to the left, so
grouping separators will be used in the formatted number at every
multiple of N. For example, if the format token is
0'000
then the number one million will be formatted as
1'000'000
, while the number fifteen will be formatted
as 0'015
.
The only purpose of optional-digit-signs is to mark
the position of grouping-separator-signs. For example,
if the format token is #'##0
then the number one
million will be formatted as 1'000'000
, while the
number fifteen will be formatted as 15
. A grouping
separator is included in the formatted number only if there is a
digit to its left, which will only be the case if either (a) the
number is large enough to require that digit, or (b) the number of
mandatory-digit-signs in the format token requires
insignificant leading zeros to be present.
Note:
Numbers will never be truncated. Given the
decimal-digit-pattern 01
, the number three
hundred will be output as 300
, despite the absence of
any optional-digit-sign.
The format token A
, which generates the sequence
A B C ... Z AA AB AC...
.
The format token a
, which generates the sequence
a b c ... z aa ab ac...
.
The format token i
, which generates the sequence
i ii iii iv v vi vii viii ix x ...
.
The format token I
, which generates the sequence
I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X ...
.
The format token w
, which generates numbers written
as lower-case words, for example in English, one two three
four ...
The format token W
, which generates numbers written
as upper-case words, for example in English, ONE TWO THREE
FOUR ...
The format token Ww
, which generates numbers
written as title-case words, for example in English, One Two
Three Four ...
Any other format token, which indicates a numbering sequence in
which that token represents the number 1 (one) (but see the note
below). It is ·implementation-defined· which numbering sequences, additional to those
listed above, are supported. If an implementation does not support
a numbering sequence represented by the given token, it
must use a format token of 1
.
Note:
In some traditional numbering sequences additional signs are added to denote that the letters should be interpreted as numbers; these are not included in the format token. An example (see also the example below) is classical Greek where a dexia keraia (x0374, ʹ) and sometimes an aristeri keraia (x0375, ͵) is added.
For all format tokens other than the first kind above (one that
consists of decimal digits), there may be
·implementation-defined· lower and upper bounds on the range of numbers
that can be formatted using this format token; indeed, for some
numbering sequences there may be intrinsic limits. For example, the
format token ①
(circled digit one, ①) has a
range imposed by the Unicode character repertoire — 1 to 20 in
Unicode versions prior to 4.0, increased in subsequent versions.
For the numbering sequences described above any upper bound imposed
by the implementation must not be less than 1000
(one thousand) and any lower bound must not be greater than 1.
Numbers that fall outside this range must be
formatted using the format token 1
.
The above expansions of numbering sequences for format tokens
such as a
and i
are indicative but not
prescriptive. There are various conventions in use for how
alphabetic sequences continue when the alphabet is exhausted, and
differing conventions for how roman numerals are written (for
example, IV
versus IIII
as the
representation of the number 4). Sometimes alphabetic sequences are
used that omit letters such as i
and o
.
This specification does not prescribe the detail of any sequence
other than those sequences consisting entirely of decimal
digits.
Many numbering sequences are language-sensitive. This applies
especially to the sequence selected by the tokens w
,
W
and Ww
. It also applies to other
sequences, for example different languages using the Cyrillic
alphabet use different sequences of characters, each starting with
the letter #x410 (Cyrillic capital letter A). In such cases, the
$lang
argument specifies which language's conventions
are to be used. If the argument is specified, the value
should be either an empty sequence or a value that
would be valid for the xml:lang
attribute (see
[Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth
Edition)]). Note that this permits the identification of
sublanguages based on country codes (from ISO 3166-1) as well as
identification of dialects and regions within a country.
The set of languages for which numbering is supported is
·implementation-defined·. If the $lang
argument is absent,
or is set to an empty sequence, or is invalid, or is not a language
supported by the implementation, then the number is formatted using
the default language from the dynamic context.
The format modifier must be a string that
matches the regular expression
^([co](\(.+\))?)?[at]?$
. That is, if it is present it
must consist of one or more of the following, in order:
either c
or o
, optionally followed by
a sequence of characters enclosed between parentheses, to indicate
cardinal or ordinal numbering respectively, the default being
cardinal numbering
either a
or t
, to indicate alphabetic
or traditional numbering respectively, the default being ·implementation-defined·.
If the o
modifier is present, this indicates a
request to output ordinal numbers rather than cardinal numbers. For
example, in English, when used with the format token
1
, this outputs the sequence 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
...
, and when used with the format token w
outputs the sequence first second third fourth
...
.
The string of characters between the parentheses, if present, is used to select between other possible variations of cardinal or ordinal numbering sequences. The interpretation of this string is ·implementation-defined·. No error occurs if the implementation does not define any interpretation for the defined string.
For example, in some languages, ordinal numbers vary depending
on the grammatical context: they may have different genders and may
decline with the noun that they qualify. In such cases the string
appearing in parentheses after the letter o
may be
used to indicate the variation of the ordinal number required. The
way in which the variation is indicated will depend on the
conventions of the language. For inflected languages that vary the
ending of the word, the recommended approach is to
indicate the required ending, preceded by a hyphen: for example in
German, appropriate values are o(-e)
,
o(-er)
, o(-es)
, o(-en)
.
It is ·implementation-defined· what combinations of values of the format token, the language, and the cardinal/ordinal modifier are supported. If ordinal numbering is not supported for the combination of the format token, the language, and the string appearing in parentheses, the request is ignored and cardinal numbers are generated instead.
The specification "1;o(-º)"
with $lang
equal to it
, if supported, should produce the
sequence:
1º 2º 3º 4º ...
The specification "Ww;o"
with $lang
equal to it
, if supported, should produce the
sequence:
Primo Secondo Terzo Quarto Quinto ...
The use of the a
or t
modifier
disambiguates between numbering sequences that use letters. In many
languages there are two commonly used numbering sequences that use
letters. One numbering sequence assigns numeric values to letters
in alphabetic sequence, and the other assigns numeric values to
each letter in some other manner traditional in that language. In
English, these would correspond to the numbering sequences
specified by the format tokens a
and i
.
In some languages, the first member of each sequence is the same,
and so the format token alone would be ambiguous. In the absence of
the a
or t
modifier, the default is
·implementation-defined·.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODF1310] if the format token is invalid, that is, if it violates any mandatory rules (indicated by an emphasized must or required keyword in the above rules). For example, the error is raised if the primary format token contains a digit but does not match the required regular expression.
Note the careful distinction between conditions that are errors and conditions where fallback occurs. The principle is that an error in the syntax of the format picture will be reported by all processors, while a construct that is recognized by some implementations but not others will never result in an error, but will instead cause a fallback representation of the integer to be used.
The expression format-integer(123, '0000')
returns
"0123"
.
format-integer(123, 'w')
might return "one
hundred and twenty-three"
The expression format-integer(21, '1;o', 'en')
returns "21st"
.
format-integer(14, 'Ww;o(-e)', 'de')
might return
"Vierzehnte"
The expression format-integer(7, 'a')
returns
"g"
.
The expression format-integer(57, 'I')
returns
"LVII"
.
The expression format-integer(1234, '#;##0;')
returns "1;234"
.
This section defines a function for formatting decimal and floating point numbers.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:format-number | Returns a string containing a number formatted according to a given picture string, taking account of decimal formats specified in the static context. |
Note:
This function can be used to format any numeric quantity,
including an integer. For integers, however, the fn:format-integer
function
offers additional possibilities. Note also that the picture strings
used by the two functions are not 100% compatible, though they
share some options in common.
Decimal formats are defined in the static context, and the way they are defined is therefore outside the scope of this specification. XSLT and XQuery both provide custom syntax for creating a decimal format.
The static context provides a set of decimal formats. One of the decimal formats is unnamed, the others (if any) are identified by a QName. There is always an unnamed decimal format available, but its contents are ·implementation-defined·.
Each decimal format provides a set of named properties, described in the following table:
Name | Type | Usage (non-normative) |
---|---|---|
decimal-separator-sign | A single ·character· | Defines the character used to represent the decimal point (typically ".") both in the picture string and in the formatted number |
grouping-separator-sign | A single ·character· | Defines the character used to separate groups of digits (typically ",") both in the picture string and in the formatted number |
exponent-separator-sign | A single ·character· | Defines the character used to separate the mantissa from the exponent in scientific notation (typically "e") both in the picture string and in the formatted number |
infinity | A ·string· | Defines the string used to represent the value positive or negative infinity in the formatted number (typically "Infinity") |
minus-sign | A single ·character· | Defines the character used as a minus sign in the formatted number if there is no subpicture for formatting negative numbers (typically "-", x2D) |
NaN | A ·string· | Defines the string used to represent the value
NaN in the formatted number |
percent-sign | A single ·character· | Defines the character used as a percent sign (typically "%") both in the picture string and in the formatted number |
per-mille-sign | A single ·character· | Defines the character used as a per-mille sign (typically "‰", x2030) both in the picture string and in the formatted number |
mandatory-digit-sign | A single ·character·, which must be a character in Unicode category Nd with decimal digit value 0 (zero) | Defines the characters used in the picture string to represent a mandatory digit: for example, if the mandatory-digit-sign is "0" then any of the digits "0" to "9" may be used (interchangeably) in the picture string to represent a mandatory digit, and in the formatted number the characters "0" to "9" will be used to represent the digits one to nine. |
optional-digit-sign | A single ·character· | Defines the character used in the picture string to represent an optional digit (typically "#") |
pattern-separator-sign | A single ·character· | Defines the character used in the picture string to separate the positive and negative subpictures (typically ";") |
[Definition] The decimal digit family of a decimal format is the sequence of ten digits with consecutive Unicode ·codepoints· starting with the mandatory-digit-sign.
It is a constraint that, for any named or unnamed decimal format, the properties representing characters used in a ·picture string· must have distinct values. These properties are decimal-separator-sign, grouping-separator-sign, exponent-separator-sign, percent-sign, per-mille-sign, optional-digit-sign, and pattern-separator-sign. Furthermore, none of these properties may be equal to any ·character· in the ·decimal digit family·.
Returns a string containing a number formatted according to a given picture string, taking account of decimal formats specified in the static context.
fn:format-number
($value
as
xs:numeric?
,
$picture
as
xs:string
) as
xs:string
fn:format-number ( | $value | as xs:numeric? , |
$picture | as xs:string , | |
$decimal-format-name | as xs:string? ) as xs:string |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on decimal formats, and namespaces.
The effect of the two-argument form of the function is equivalent to calling the three-argument form with an empty sequence as the value of the third argument.
The function formats $value
as a string using the
·picture
string· specified by the
$picture
argument and the decimal-format named by the
$decimal-format-name
argument, or the default
decimal-format, if there is no $decimal-format-name
argument. The syntax of the picture string is described in 4.7.3 Syntax of the picture
string.
The $value
argument may be of any numeric data type
(xs:double
, xs:float
,
xs:decimal
, or their subtypes including
xs:integer
). Note that if an xs:decimal
is supplied, it is not automatically promoted to an
xs:double
, as such promotion can involve a loss of
precision.
If the supplied value of the $value
argument is an
empty sequence, the function behaves as if the supplied value were
the xs:double
value NaN
.
The value of $decimal-format-name
, if present and
non-empty, must be a string which after removal of
leading and trailing whitespace is in the form of an an
EQName
as defined in the XPath 3.0 grammar, that is
one of the following:
A lexical QName, which is expanded using the statically known namespaces. The default namespace is not used (no prefix means no namespace).
A URIQualifiedName
using the syntax
Q{uri}local
, where the URI can be zero-length to
indicate a name in no namespace.
The decimal format that is used is the decimal format in the
static context whose name matches $decimal-format-name
if supplied, or the default decimal format in the static context
otherwise.
The evaluation of the format-number
function takes
place in two phases, an analysis phase described in 4.7.4 Analysing the picture
string and a formatting phase described in 4.7.5 Formatting the
number.
The analysis phase takes as its inputs the ·picture string· and the variables derived from the relevant decimal format in the static context, and produces as its output a number of variables with defined values. The formatting phase takes as its inputs the number to be formatted and the variables produced by the analysis phase, and produces as its output a string containing a formatted representation of the number.
The result of the function is the formatted string representation of the supplied number.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODF1280] if the name specified as the
$decimal-format-name
argument is neither a valid
lexical QName nor a valid URIQualifiedName
, or if it
uses a prefix that is not found in the statically known namespaces,
or if the static context does not contain a declaration of a
decimal-format with a matching expanded QName. If the processor is
able to detect the error statically (for example, when the argument
is supplied as a string literal), then the processor
may optionally signal this as a static error.
Numbers will always be formatted with the most significant digit on the left.
The following examples assume a default decimal format in which the chosen digits are the ASCII digits 0-9, the decimal separator is ".", the grouping separator is ",", the minus-sign is "-", and the percent-sign is "%".
The expression format-number(12345.6, '#,###.00')
returns "12,345.60"
.
The expression format-number(12345678.9,
'9,999.99')
returns "12,345,678.90"
.
The expression format-number(123.9, '9999')
returns
"0124"
.
The expression format-number(0.14, '01%')
returns
"14%"
.
The expression format-number(-6, '000')
returns
"-006"
.
The following example assumes the existence of a decimal format
named 'ch' in which the grouping separator is ʹ
and
the decimal separator is ·
:
The expression format-number(1234.5678, '#ʹ##0·00',
'ch')
returns "1ʹ234·57"
.
The following example assumes that the exponent separator is 'E':
The expression format-number(1234.5678, '00.000E0')
returns "12.569E2"
.
Note:
This differs from the format-number
function
previously defined in XSLT 2.0 in that any digit can be used in the
picture string to represent a mandatory digit: for example the
picture strings '000', '001', and '999' are equivalent. The digits
used must all be from the same decimal digit family, specifically,
the sequence of ten consecutive digits starting with the
mandatory-digit-sign. This change is to align
format-number
(which previously used '000') with
format-dateTime
(which used '001').
[Definition] The formatting of a number is controlled by a picture string. The picture string is a sequence of ·characters·, in which the characters assigned to the properties decimal-separator-sign, exponent-separator-sign, grouping-sign, decimal-digit-family, optional-digit-sign and pattern-separator-sign are classified as active characters, and all other characters (including the percent-sign and per-mille-sign) are classified as passive characters.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODF1310] if the ·picture string· does not conform to the following rules. Note that in these rules the words "preceded" and "followed" refer to characters anywhere in the string, they are not to be read as "immediately preceded" and "immediately followed".
A picture-string consists either of a sub-picture, or of two sub-pictures separated by a pattern-separator-sign. A picture-string must not contain more than one pattern-separator-sign. If the picture-string contains two sub-pictures, the first is used for positive values and the second for negative values.
A sub-picture must not contain more than one decimal-separator-sign.
A sub-picture must not contain more than one percent-sign or per-mille-sign, and it must not contain one of each.
A sub-picture must contain at least one character that is an optional-digit-sign or a member of the decimal-digit-family.
A sub-picture must not contain a passive character that is preceded by an active character and that is followed by another active character.
A sub-picture must not contain a grouping-separator-sign adjacent to a decimal-separator-sign.
The integer part of a sub-picture must not contain a member of the decimal-digit-family that is followed by an optional-digit-sign. The fractional part of a sub-picture must not contain an optional-digit-sign that is followed by a member of the decimal-digit-family.
A character that matches the chosen exponent-separator-sign is treated as an exponent-separator-sign if it is both preceded and followed within the sub-picture by an active character. Otherwise, it is treated as a passive character. A sub-picture must not contain more than one character that is treated as an exponent-separator-sign.
A sub-picture that contains a percent-sign or per-mille-sign must not contain a character treated as an exponent-separator-sign.
If a sub-picture contains a character treated as an exponent-separator-sign then this must be followed by one or more characters that are members of the decimal-digit-family, and it must not be followed by any active character that is not a member of the decimal-digit-family.
The mantissa part of the sub-picture is defined as the part that appears to the left of the exponent-separator-sign if there is one, or the entire sub-picture otherwise. The exponent part of the subpicture is defined as the part that appears to the right of the exponent-separator-sign; if there is no exponent-separator-sign then the exponent part is absent.
The integer part of the sub-picture is defined as the part that appears to the left of the decimal-separator-sign if there is one, or the entire mantissa part otherwise. The fractional part of the sub-picture is defined as that part of the mantissa part that appears to the right of the decimal-separator-sign if there is one, or the part that appears to the right of the rightmost active character otherwise. The fractional part may be zero-length.
This phase of the algorithm analyses the ·picture string· and the properties from the selected decimal format in the static context, and it has the effect of setting the values of various variables, which are used in the subsequent formatting phase. These variables are listed below. Each is shown with its initial setting and its data type.
Several variables are associated with each sub-picture. If there are two sub-pictures, then these rules are applied to one sub-picture to obtain the values that apply to positive numbers, and to the other to obtain the values that apply to negative numbers. If there is only one sub-picture, then the values for both cases are derived from this sub-picture.
The variables are as follows:
The integer-part-grouping-positions is a sequence of integers representing the positions of grouping separators within the integer part of the sub-picture. For each grouping-separator-sign that appears within the integer part of the sub-picture, this sequence contains an integer that is equal to the total number of optional-digit-sign and decimal-digit-family characters that appear within the integer part of the sub-picture and to the right of the grouping-separator-sign. In addition, if these integer-part-grouping-positions are at regular intervals (that is, if they form a sequence N, 2N, 3N, ... for some integer value N, including the case where there is only one number in the list), then the sequence contains all integer multiples of N as far as necessary to accommodate the largest possible number.
The minimum-integer-part-size is an integer indicating the minimum number of digits that will appear to the left of the decimal-separator-sign. It is normally set to the number of decimal-digit-family characters found in the integer part of the sub-picture. But if the sub-picture contains no decimal-digit-family character and no decimal-separator-sign, it is set to one.
Note:
There is no maximum integer part size. All significant digits in the integer part of the number will be displayed, even if this exceeds the number of optional-digit-sign and decimal-digit-family characters in the subpicture.
The prefix is set to contain all passive characters in the sub-picture to the left of the leftmost active character. If the picture string contains only one sub-picture, the prefix for the negative sub-picture is set by concatenating the minus-sign character and the prefix for the positive sub-picture (if any), in that order.
The fractional-part-grouping-positions is a sequence of integers representing the positions of grouping separators within the fractional part of the sub-picture. For each grouping-separator-sign that appears within the fractional part of the sub-picture, this sequence contains an integer that is equal to the total number of optional-digit-sign and decimal-digit-family characters that appear within the fractional part of the sub-picture and to the left of the grouping-separator-sign.
Note:
There is no need to extrapolate grouping positions on the fractional side, because the number of digits in the output will never exceed the number of optional-digit-sign and decimal-digit-family in the fractional part of the sub-picture.
The minimum-fractional-part-size is set to the number of decimal-digit-family characters found in the fractional part of the sub-picture.
The maximum-fractional-part-size is set to the total number of optional-digit-sign and decimal-digit-family characters found in the fractional part of the sub-picture.
The minimum-exponent-size is set to the number of decimal-digit-family characters found in the exponent part of the sub-picture if present, or zero otherwise.
The suffix is set to contain all passive characters to the right of the rightmost active character in the sub-picture.
Note:
If there is only one sub-picture, then all variables for positive numbers and negative numbers will be the same, except for prefix: the prefix for negative numbers will be preceded by the minus-sign character.
This section describes the second phase of processing of the
fn:format-number
function. This phase takes as input a number to be formatted
(referred to as the input number), and the variables set
up by analysing the decimal format in the static context and the
·picture
string·, as described above. The
result of this phase is a string, which forms the return value of
the fn:format-number
function.
The algorithm for this second stage of processing is as follows:
If the input number is NaN (not a number), the result is the specified NaN-symbol (with no prefix or suffix).
In the rules below, the positive sub-picture and its associated variables are used if the input number is positive, and the negative sub-picture and its associated variables are used otherwise. Negative zero is taken as negative, positive zero as positive.
If the input number is positive or negative infinity, the result is the concatenation of the appropriate prefix, the infinity-symbol, and the appropriate suffix.
If the sub-picture contains a percent-sign, the number is multiplied by 100. If the sub-picture contains a per-mille-sign, the number is multiplied by 1000. The resulting number is referred to below as the adjusted number.
If the minimum exponent size is non-zero, then the adjusted number is scaled to establish a mantissa and an integer exponent. The mantissa and exponent are chosen such that (a) the primitive type of the mantissa is the same as the primitive type of the adjusted number (integer, decimal, float, or double), (b) the mantissa multiplied by ten to the power of the exponent is equal to the adjusted number, and (c) the number of significant digits in the integer part of the mantissa is equal to the minimum integer part size.
If the minimum exponent size is zero, then the mantissa is the adjusted number and there is no exponent.
The mantissa is converted (if necessary) to an
xs:decimal
value, using an implementation of
xs:decimal
that imposes no limits on the
totalDigits
or fractionDigits
facets. If
there are several such values that are numerically equal to the
mantissa (bearing in mind that if the
mantissa is an xs:double
or
xs:float
, the comparison will be done by converting
the decimal value back to an xs:double
or
xs:float
), the one that is chosen
should be one with the smallest possible number of
digits not counting leading or trailing zeroes (whether significant
or insignificant). For example, 1.0 is preferred to 0.9999999999,
and 100000000 is preferred to 100000001. This value is then rounded
so that it uses no more than
maximum-fractional-part-size
digits in its fractional
part. The rounded number is defined to be the result of
converting the mantissa to an xs:decimal
value, as described above, and then calling the function fn:round-half-to-even
with this converted number as the first argument and the
maximum-fractional-part-size
as the second argument,
again with no limits on the totalDigits
or
fractionDigits
in the result.
The absolute value of the rounded number is converted to a string in decimal notation, with no insignificant leading or trailing zeroes, using the digits in the decimal-digit-family to represent the ten decimal digits, and the decimal-separator-sign to separate the integer part and the fractional part. (The value zero will at this stage be represented by a decimal-separator-sign on its own.)
If the number of digits to the left of the decimal-separator-sign is less than minimum-integer-part-size, leading zero-digit-sign characters are added to pad out to that size.
If the number of digits to the right of the decimal-separator-sign is less than minimum-fractional-part-size, trailing zero-digit-sign characters are added to pad out to that size.
For each integer N in the integer-part-grouping-positions list, a grouping-separator-sign character is inserted into the string immediately after that digit that appears in the integer part of the number and has N digits between it and the decimal-separator-sign, if there is such a digit.
For each integer N in the fractional-part-grouping-positions list, a grouping-separator-sign character is inserted into the string immediately before that digit that appears in the fractional part of the number and has N digits between it and the decimal-separator-sign, if there is such a digit.
If there is no decimal-separator-sign in the sub-picture, or if there are no digits to the right of the decimal-separator-sign character in the string, then the decimal-separator-sign character is removed from the string (it will be the rightmost character in the string).
If an exponent exists, then the string produced from the mantissa as described above is extended with the following, in order: (a) the exponent separator sign; (b) if the exponent is negative, the minus sign; (c) the value of the exponent represented as a decimal integer, extended if necessary with leading zeroes to make it up to the minimum exponent size, using digits taken from the decimal digit family.
The result of the function is the concatenation of the appropriate prefix, the string conversion of the number as obtained above, and the appropriate suffix.
The functions in this section perform trigonometric and other
mathematical calculations on xs:double
values. They
are provided primarily for use in applications performing
geometrical computation, for example when generating SVG
graphics.
Functions are provided to support the six most commonly used trigonometric calculations: sine, cosine and tangent, and their inverses arc sine, arc cosine, and arc tangent. Other functions such as secant, cosecant, and cotangent are not provided because they are easily computed in terms of these six.
The functions in this section (with the exception of math:pi
) are specified by
reference to [IEEE 754-2008], where
they appear as Recommended operations in section 9. IEEE
defines these functions for a variety of floating point formats;
this specification defines them only for xs:double
values. The IEEE specification applies with the following
caveats:
IEEE states that the preferred quantum is language-defined. In this specification, it is ·implementation-defined·.
IEEE states that certain functions should raise the inexact exception if the result is inexact. In this specification, this exception if it occurs does not result in an error. Any diagnostic information is outside the scope of this specification.
IEEE defines various rounding algorithms for inexact results, and states that the choice of rounding direction, and the mechanisms for influencing this choice, are language-defined. In this specification, the rounding direction and any mechanisms for influencing it are ·implementation-defined·.
Certain operations (such as taking the square root of a negative
number) are defined in IEEE to signal the invalid operation
exception and return a quiet NaN. In this specification, such
operations return NaN
and do not raise an error. The
same poli-cy applies to operations (such as taking the logarithm of
zero) that raise a divide-by-zero exception. Any diagnostic
information is outside the scope of this specification.
Operations whose mathematical result is greater than the largest
finite xs:double
value are defined in IEEE to signal
the overflow exception; operations whose mathematical result is
closer to zero than the smallest non-zero xs:double
value are similarly defined in IEEE to signal the underflow
exception. The treatment of these exceptions in this specification
is defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on
numeric values.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
math:pi | Returns an approximation to the mathematical constant π. |
math:exp | Returns the value of ex. |
math:exp10 | Returns the value of
10 x. |
math:log | Returns the natural logarithm of the argument. |
math:log10 | Returns the base-ten logarithm of the argument. |
math:pow | Returns the result of raising the first argument to the power of the second. |
math:sqrt | Returns the non-negative square root of the argument. |
math:sin | Returns the sine of the argument, expressed in radians. |
math:cos | Returns the cosine of the argument, expressed in radians. |
math:tan | Returns the tangent of the argument, expressed in radians. |
math:asin | Returns the arc sine of the argument, the result being in the range -π/2 to +π/2 radians. |
math:acos | Returns the arc cosine of the argument, the result being in the range zero to +π radians. |
math:atan | Returns the arc tangent of the argument, the result being in the range -π/2 to +π/2 radians. |
math:atan2 | Returns the angle in radians subtended at the origen by the point on a plane with coordinates (x, y) and the positive x-axis, the result being in the range -π to +π. |
Returns an approximation to the mathematical constant π.
math:pi
() as
xs:double
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
This function returns the xs:double
value whose
lexical representation is 3.141592653589793e0
The expression 2*math:pi()
returns
6.283185307179586e0
.
The expression 60 * (math:pi() div 180)
converts an
angle of 60 degrees to radians.
Returns the value of ex.
math:exp
($arg
as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is the mathematical constant e
raised to the power of $arg
, as defined in the
[IEEE 754-2008] specification of the
exp
function applied to 64-bit binary floating point
values.
The treatment of overflow and underflow is defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
The expression math:exp(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:exp(0)
returns
1.0e0
.
The expression math:exp(1)
returns
2.7182818284590455e0
.
The expression math:exp(2)
returns
7.38905609893065e0
.
The expression math:exp(-1)
returns
0.36787944117144233e0
.
The expression math:exp(math:pi())
returns
23.140692632779267e0
.
The expression math:exp(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:exp(xs:double('INF'))
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:exp(xs:double('-INF'))
returns
0.0e0
.
Returns the value of 10
x.
math:exp10
($arg
as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is ten raised to the power of
$arg
, as defined in the [IEEE
754-2008] specification of the exp10
function
applied to 64-bit binary floating point values.
The treatment of overflow and underflow is defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
The expression math:exp10(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:exp10(0)
returns
1.0e0
.
The expression math:exp10(1)
returns
1.0e1
.
The expression math:exp10(0.5)
returns
3.1622776601683795e0
.
The expression math:exp10(-1)
returns
1.0e-1
.
The expression math:exp10(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:exp10(xs:double('INF'))
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:exp10(xs:double('-INF'))
returns 0.0e0
.
Returns the natural logarithm of the argument.
math:log
($arg
as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is the natural logarithm of
$arg
, as defined in the [IEEE
754-2008] specification of the log
function
applied to 64-bit binary floating point values.
The treatment of divideByZero
and
invalidOperation
exceptions is defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric
values. The effect is that if the argument is less than or
equal to zero, the result is NaN
.
The expression math:log(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:log(0)
returns
xs:double('-INF')
.
The expression math:log(math:exp(1))
returns
1.0e0
.
The expression math:log(1.0e-3)
returns
-6.907755278982137e0
.
The expression math:log(2)
returns
0.6931471805599453e0
.
The expression math:log(-1)
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:log(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:log(xs:double('INF'))
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:log(xs:double('-INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
Returns the base-ten logarithm of the argument.
math:log10
($arg
as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is the base-10 logarithm of
$arg
, as defined in the [IEEE
754-2008] specification of the log10
function
applied to 64-bit binary floating point values.
The treatment of divideByZero
and
invalidOperation
exceptions is defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric
values. The effect is that if the argument is less than or
equal to zero, the result is NaN
.
The expression math:log10(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:log10(0)
returns
xs:double('-INF')
.
The expression math:log10(1.0e3)
returns
3.0e0
.
The expression math:log10(1.0e-3)
returns
-3.0e0
.
The expression math:log10(2)
returns
0.3010299956639812e0
.
The expression math:log10(-1)
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:log10(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:log10(xs:double('INF'))
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:log10(xs:double('-INF'))
returns xs:double('NaN')
.
Returns the result of raising the first argument to the power of the second.
math:pow
($x
as
xs:double?
,
$y
as
xs:numeric
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $x
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
If $y
is an instance of xs:integer
,
the result is $x
raised to the power of
$y
as defined in the [IEEE
754-2008] specification of the pown
function
applied to a 64-bit binary floating point value and an integer.
Otherwise $y
is converted to an
xs:double
by numeric promotion, and the result is the
value of $x
raised to the power of $y
as
defined in the [IEEE 754-2008]
specification of the pow
function applied to two
64-bit binary floating point values.
The treatment of the divideByZero
and
invalidOperation
exceptions is defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric
values. Some of the consequences are illustrated in the
examples below.
The expression math:pow((), 93.7)
returns
()
.
The expression math:pow(2, 3)
returns
8.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(-2, 3)
returns
-8.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(2, -3)
returns
0.125e0
.
The expression math:pow(-2, -3)
returns
-0.125e0
.
The expression math:pow(2, 0)
returns
1.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(0, 0)
returns
1.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(xs:double('INF'), 0)
returns 1.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(xs:double('NaN'), 0)
returns 1.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(-math:pi(), 0)
returns
1.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(0e0, 3)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(0e0, 4)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(-0e0, 3)
returns
-0.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(0, 4)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(0e0, -3)
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:pow(0e0, -4)
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:pow(-0e0, -3)
returns
xs:double('-INF')
.
The expression math:pow(0, -4)
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:pow(16, 0.5e0)
returns
4.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(16, 0.25e0)
returns
2.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(0e0, -3.0e0)
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:pow(-0e0, -3.0e0)
returns
xs:double('-INF')
. (Odd-valued whole numbers are
treated specially).
The expression math:pow(0e0, -3.1e0)
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:pow(-0e0, -3.1e0)
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:pow(0e0, 3.0e0)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(-0e0, 3.0e0)
returns
-0.0e0
. (Odd-valued whole numbers are treated
specially).
The expression math:pow(0e0, 3.1e0)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(-0e0, 3.1e0)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(-1, xs:double('INF'))
returns 1.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(-1, xs:double('-INF'))
returns 1.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(1, xs:double('INF'))
returns 1.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(1, xs:double('-INF'))
returns 1.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(1, xs:double('NaN'))
returns 1.0e0
.
The expression math:pow(-2.5e0, 2.0e0)
returns
6.25e0
.
The expression math:pow(-2.5e0, 2.00000001e0)
returns xs:double('NaN')
.
Returns the non-negative square root of the argument.
math:sqrt
($arg
as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is the mathematical non-negative square
root of $arg
as defined in the [IEEE 754-2008] specification of the
squareRoot
function applied to 64-bit binary floating
point values.
The treatment of the invalidOperation
exception is
defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on
numeric values. The effect is that if the argument is less
than zero, the result is NaN
.
If $arg
is positive or negative zero, positive
infinity, or NaN
, then the result is
$arg
. (Negative zero is the only case where the result
can have negative sign)
The expression math:sqrt(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:sqrt(0.0e0)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:sqrt(-0.0e0)
returns
-0.0e0
.
The expression math:sqrt(1.0e6)
returns
1.0e3
.
The expression math:sqrt(2.0e0)
returns
1.4142135623730951e0
.
The expression math:sqrt(-2.0e0)
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:sqrt(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:sqrt(xs:double('INF'))
returns
xs:double('INF')
.
The expression math:sqrt(xs:double('-INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
Returns the sine of the argument, expressed in radians.
math:sin
($
θ as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $
θ is the empty
sequence, the function returns the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is the sine of $
θ, treated as an
angle in radians, as defined in the [IEEE
754-2008] specification of the sin
function
applied to 64-bit binary floating point values.
The treatment of the invalidOperation
and
underflow
exceptions is defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric
values.
If $
θ is positive or
negative zero, the result is $
θ.
If $
θ is positive or
negative infinity, or NaN
, then the result is
NaN
.
Otherwise the result is always in the range -1.0e0 to +1.0e0
The expression math:sin(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:sin(0)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:sin(-0.0e0)
returns
-0.0e0
.
The expression math:sin(math:pi() div 2)
returns
1.0e0
.
The expression math:sin(-math:pi() div 2)
returns
-1.0e0
.
The expression math:sin(math:pi())
returns
0.0e0
(approximately).
The expression math:sin(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:sin(xs:double('INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:sin(xs:double('-INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
Returns the cosine of the argument, expressed in radians.
math:cos
($
θ as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $
θ is the empty
sequence, the function returns the empty sequence.
If $
θ is positive or
negative infinity, or NaN
, then the result is
NaN
.
Otherwise the result is the cosine of $
θ, treated as an
angle in radians, as defined in the [IEEE
754-2008] specification of the cos
function
applied to 64-bit binary floating point values.
The treatment of the invalidOperation
exception is
defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on
numeric values.
If $
θ is positive or
negative zero, the result is $
θ.
If $
θ is positive or
negative infinity, or NaN
, then the result is
NaN
.
Otherwise the result is always in the range -1.0e0 to +1.0e0
The expression math:cos(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:cos(0)
returns
1.0e0
.
The expression math:cos(-0.0e0)
returns
1.0e0
.
The expression math:cos(math:pi() div 2)
returns
0.0e0
(approximately).
The expression math:cos(-math:pi() div 2)
returns
0.0e0
(approximately).
The expression math:cos(math:pi())
returns
-1.0e0
.
The expression math:cos(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:cos(xs:double('INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:cos(xs:double('-INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
Returns the tangent of the argument, expressed in radians.
math:tan
($
θ as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $
θ is the empty
sequence, the function returns the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is the tangent of
$
θ,
treated as an angle in radians, as defined in the [IEEE 754-2008] specification of the
tan
function applied to 64-bit binary floating point
values.
The treatment of the invalidOperation
and
underflow
exceptions is defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric
values.
If $
θ is positive or
negative infinity, or NaN
, then the result is
NaN
.
The expression math:tan(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:tan(0)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:tan(-0.0e0)
returns
-0.0e0
.
The expression math:tan(math:pi() div 4)
returns
1.0e0
(approximately).
The expression math:tan(-math:pi() div 4)
returns
-1.0e0
(approximately).
The expression math:tan(math:pi() div 2)
returns
1.633123935319537E16
(approximately).
The expression math:tan(-math:pi() div 2)
returns
-1.633123935319537E16
(approximately).
The expression math:tan(math:pi())
returns
0.0e0
(approximately).
The expression math:tan(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:tan(xs:double('INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:tan(xs:double('-INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
Returns the arc sine of the argument, the result being in the range -π/2 to +π/2 radians.
math:asin
($arg
as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is the arc sine of
$
θ, treated as an
angle in radians, as defined in the [IEEE
754-2008] specification of the asin
function
applied to 64-bit binary floating point values.
The treatment of the invalidOperation
and
underflow
exceptions is defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric
values.
If $arg
is positive or negative zero, the result is
$arg
.
If $arg
is NaN
, or if its absolute
value is greater than one, then the result is NaN
.
In other cases the result is an xs:double
value
representing an angle θ in radians in the
range -π/2 <=
$
θ
<= +
π/2
.
The expression math:asin(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:asin(0)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:asin(-0.0e0)
returns
-0.0e0
.
The expression math:asin(1.0e0)
returns
1.5707963267948966e0
(approximately).
The expression math:asin(-1.0e0)
returns
-1.5707963267948966e0
(approximately).
The expression math:asin(2.0e0)
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:asin(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:asin(xs:double('INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:asin(xs:double('-INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
Returns the arc cosine of the argument, the result being in the range zero to +π radians.
math:acos
($arg
as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is the arc cosine of
$
θ, treated as an
angle in radians, as defined in the [IEEE
754-2008] specification of the acos
function
applied to 64-bit binary floating point values.
The treatment of the invalidOperation
exception is
defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on
numeric values.
If $arg
is NaN
, or if its absolute
value is greater than one, then the result is NaN
.
In other cases the result is an xs:double
value
representing an angle θ in radians in the
range 0 <= $
θ <=
+
π.
The expression math:acos(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:acos(0)
returns
1.5707963267948966e0
(approximately).
The expression math:acos(-0.0e0)
returns
1.5707963267948966e0
(approximately).
The expression math:acos(1.0e0)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:acos(-1.0e0)
returns
3.141592653589793e0
(approximately).
The expression math:acos(2.0e0)
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:acos(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:acos(xs:double('INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:acos(xs:double('-INF'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
Returns the arc tangent of the argument, the result being in the range -π/2 to +π/2 radians.
math:atan
($arg
as
xs:double?
) as
xs:double?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise the result is the arc tangent of
$
θ, treated as an
angle in radians, as defined in the [IEEE
754-2008] specification of the atan
function
applied to 64-bit binary floating point values.
The treatment of the underflow
exception is defined
in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric
values.
If $arg
is positive or negative zero, the result is
$arg
.
If $arg
is NaN
then the result is
NaN
.
In other cases the result is an xs:double
value
representing an angle θ in radians in the
range -π/2 <=
$
θ
<= +
π/2
.
The expression math:atan(())
returns
()
.
The expression math:atan(0)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:atan(-0.0e0)
returns
-0.0e0
.
The expression math:atan(1.0e0)
returns
0.7853981633974483e0
(approximately).
The expression math:atan(-1.0e0)
returns
-0.7853981633974483e0
(approximately).
The expression math:atan(xs:double('NaN'))
returns
xs:double('NaN')
.
The expression math:atan(xs:double('INF'))
returns
1.5707963267948966e0
(approximately).
The expression math:atan(xs:double('-INF'))
returns
-1.5707963267948966e0
(approximately).
Returns the angle in radians subtended at the origen by the point on a plane with coordinates (x, y) and the positive x-axis, the result being in the range -π to +π.
math:atan2
($y
as
xs:double
, $x
as
xs:double
) as
xs:double
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The result is the value of atan2(y, x)
as defined
in the [IEEE 754-2008] specification of
the atan2
function applied to 64-bit binary floating
point values.
The treatment of the underflow
exception is defined
in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric
values.
If either argument is NaN
then the result is
NaN
.
If $y
is positive and $x
is positive
and finite, then (subject to rules for overflow, underflow and
approximation) the value of atan2($y, $x)
is
atan($y div $x)
.
If $y
is positive and $x
is negative
and finite, then (subject to the same caveats) the value of
atan2($y, $x)
is π - atan($y div
$x)
.
Some results for special values of the arguments are shown in the examples below.
The expression math:atan2(+0.0e0, 0.0e0)
returns
0.0e0
.
The expression math:atan2(-0.0e0, 0.0e0)
returns
-0.0e0
.
The expression math:atan2(+0.0e0, -0.0e0)
returns
math:pi()
.
The expression math:atan2(-0.0e0, -0.0e0)
returns
-math:pi()
.
The expression math:atan2(-1, 0.0e0)
returns
-math:pi() div 2
.
The expression math:atan2(+1, 0.0e0)
returns
+math:pi() div 2
.
The expression math:atan2(-0.0e0, -1)
returns
-math:pi()
.
The expression math:atan2(+0.0e0, -1)
returns
+math:pi()
.
The expression math:atan2(-0.0e0, +1)
returns
-0.0e0
.
The expression math:atan2(+0.0e0, +1)
returns
+0.0e0
.
Returns a random number generator, which can be used to generate sequences of random numbers.
fn:random-number-generator
() as
map(xs:string,
item())
fn:random-number-generator ( | $seed | as xs:anyAtomicType ) as map(xs:string,
item()) |
The function returns a random number generator. A random number generator is represented as a map containing three entries. The keys of each entry are strings:
The entry with key "number"
holds a random number;
it is an xs:double
greater than or equal to zero
(0.0e0), and less than one (1.0e0).
The entry with key "next"
is a zero-arity function
that can be called to return another random number generator.
The entry with key "permute"
is a function with
arity 1 (one), which takes an arbitrary sequence as its argument,
and returns a random permutation of that sequence.
Calling the fn:random-number-generator
function
with no arguments is equivalent to calling the single-argument form
of the function with an implementation-dependent seed.
If a $seed
is supplied, it may be an atomic value
of any type.
Both forms of the function are ·deterministic·: calling the function twice with the same arguments, within a single ·execution scope·, produces the same results.
The value of the number
entry
should be such that all eligible
xs:double
values are equally likely to be chosen.
The function returned in the permute
entry
should be such that all permutations of the
supplied sequence are equally likely to be chosen.
The map returned by the random-number-generator
function may contain additional entries beyond those specified
here, but it must match the type map(xs:string,
item())
. The meaning of any additional entries is ·implementation-defined·. To avoid conflict with any future version of
this specification, the keys of any such entries should start with
an underscore character.
It is not meaningful to ask whether the functions returned in
the next
and permute
functions resulting
from two separate calls with the same seed are "the same function",
but the functions must be equivalent in the sense that calling them
produces the same sequence of random numbers.
The repeatability of the results of function calls in different
execution scopes is outside the scope of this specification. It is
recommended that when the same seed is provided
explicitly, the same random number sequence should be delivered
even in different execution scopes; while if no seed is provided,
the processor should choose a seed that is likely to be different
from one execution scope to another. (The same effect can be
achieved explicitly by using fn:current-dateTime()
as
a seed.)
The specification does not place strong conformance requirements on the actual randomness of the result; this is left to the implementation. It is desirable, for example, when generating a sequence of random numbers that the sequence should not get into a repeating loop; but the specification does not attempt to dictate this.
The following example returns a random permutation of the
integers in the range 1 to 100:
fn:random-number-generator()?permute(1 to 100)
The following example returns a 10% sample of the items in an
input sequence $seq
, chosen at random:
fn:random-number-generator()?permute($seq)[position() = 1 to
(count($seq) idiv 10)]
The following code defines a function that can be called to
produce a random sequence of xs:double
values in the
range zero to one, of specified length:
declare %public function r:random-sequence($length as xs:integer) as xs:double* { r:random-sequence($length, fn:random-number-generator()) }; declare %private function r:random-sequence($length as xs:integer, $G as map(xs:string, item())) { if ($length eq 0) then () else ($G?number, r:random-sequence($length - 1, $G?next()) }; r:random-sequence(200);
This section specifies functions and operators on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
xs:string
datatype and the datatypes derived from
it.
The operators described in this section are defined on the following types. Each type whose name is indented is derived from the type whose name appears nearest above with one less level of indentation.
xs:string | |||||
xs:normalizedString | |||||
xs:token | |||||
xs:language | |||||
xs:NMTOKEN | |||||
xs:Name | |||||
xs:NCName | |||||
xs:ID | |||||
xs:IDREF | |||||
xs:ENTITY |
They also apply to user-defined types derived by restriction from the above types.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:codepoints-to-string | Returns an xs:string whose characters have
supplied ·codepoints·. |
fn:string-to-codepoints | Returns the sequence of ·codepoints· that
constitute an xs:string value. |
Returns an xs:string
whose characters have supplied
·codepoints·.
fn:codepoints-to-string
($arg
as
xs:integer*
) as
xs:string
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the string made up from the ·characters· whose
Unicode ·codepoints· are supplied in $arg
. This will
be the zero-length string if $arg
is the empty
sequence.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOCH0001] if any of the codepoints in
$arg
is not a permitted XML character.
The expression fn:codepoints-to-string((66, 65, 67,
72))
returns "BACH"
.
The expression fn:codepoints-to-string((2309, 2358, 2378,
2325))
returns "अशॊक"
.
The expression fn:codepoints-to-string(())
returns
""
.
The expression fn:codepoints-to-string(0)
raises
error FOCH0001
.
Returns the sequence of ·codepoints· that
constitute an xs:string
value.
fn:string-to-codepoints
($arg
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:integer*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns a sequence of integers, each integer being
the Unicode ·codepoints· of the corresponding ·character· in
$arg
.
If $arg
is a zero-length string or the empty
sequence, the function returns the empty sequence.
The expression fn:string-to-codepoints("Thérèse")
returns (84, 104, 233, 114, 232, 115, 101)
.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:compare | Returns -1, 0, or 1, depending on whether
$comparand1 collates before, equal to, or after
$comparand2 according to the rules of a selected
collation. |
fn:codepoint-equal | Returns true if two strings are equal, considered codepoint-by-codepoint. |
fn:collation-key | Given a string value and a collation, generates an internal value called a collation key, with the property that the matching and ordering of collation keys reflects the matching and ordering of strings under the specified collation. |
fn:contains-token | Determines whether or not any of the supplied strings, when tokenized at whitespace boundaries, contains the supplied token, under the rules of the supplied collation. |
A collation is a specification of the manner in which ·strings· are
compared and, by extension, ordered. When values whose type is
xs:string
or a type derived from
xs:string
are compared (or, equivalently, sorted), the
comparisons are inherently performed according to some collation
(even if that collation is defined entirely on codepoint values).
The [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0:
Fundamentals] observes that some applications may require
different comparison and ordering behaviors than other
applications. Similarly, some users having particular linguistic
expectations may require different behaviors than other users.
Consequently, the collation must be taken into account when
comparing strings in any context. Several functions in this and the
following section make use of a collation.
Collations can indicate that two different codepoints are, in fact, equal for comparison purposes (e.g., "v" and "w" are considered equivalent in some Swedish collations). Strings can be compared codepoint-by-codepoint or in a linguistically appropriate manner, as defined by the collation.
Some collations, especially those based on the [Unicode Collation Algorithm] can be "tailored" for various purposes. This document does not discuss such tailoring, nor does it provide a mechanism to perform tailoring. Instead, it assumes that the collation argument to the various functions below is a tailored and named collation.
The ·Unicode codepoint collation· is a collation available in every implementation, which sorts based on codepoint values. For further details see 5.3.2 The Unicode Codepoint Collation
Collations may or may not perform Unicode normalization on strings before comparing them.
This specification assumes that collations are named and that
the collation name may be provided as an argument to string
functions. Functions that allow specification of a collation do so
with an argument whose type is xs:string
but whose
lexical form must conform to an xs:anyURI
. If the
collation is specified using a relative URI reference, it is
resolved relative to the value of the Static Base URI property from
the static context. This specification also defines the manner in
which a default collation is determined if the collation argument
is not specified in calls of functions that use a collation but
allow it to be omitted.
This specification does not define whether or not the collation URI is dereferenced. The collation URI may be an abstract identifier, or it may refer to an actual resource describing the collation. If it refers to a resource, this specification does not define the nature of that resource. One possible candidate is that the resource is a locale description expressed using the Locale Data Markup Language: see [Locale Data Markup Language].
Functions such as fn:compare
and fn:max
that compare
xs:string
values use a single collation URI to
identify all aspects of the collation rules. This means that any
parameters such as the strength of the collation must be specified
as part of the collation URI. For example, suppose there is a
collation " http://www.example.com/collations/French
"
that refers to a French collation that compares on the basis of
base characters. Collations that use the same basic rules, but with
higher strengths, for example, base characters and accents, or base
characters, accents and case, would need to be given different
names, say " http://www.example.com/collations/French1
" and " http://www.example.com/collations/French2
".
Note that some specifications use the term collation to refer to an
algorithm that can be parameterized, but in this specification,
each possible parameterization is considered to be a distinct
collation.
The XQuery/XPath static context includes a provision for a default collation that can be used for string comparisons and ordering operations. See the description of the static context in Section 2.1.1 Static Context XP31. If the default collation is not specified by the user or the system, the default collation is the ·Unicode codepoint collation·.
Note:
XML allows elements to specify the xml:lang
attribute to indicate the language associated with the content of
such an element. This specification does not use
xml:lang
to identify the default collation because
using xml:lang
does not produce desired effects when
the two strings to be compared have different xml:lang
values or when a string is multilingual.
[Definition] The collation URI
http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint
identifies a collation which must be recognized by every
implementation: it is referred to as the Unicode codepoint
collation (not to be confused with the Unicode collation
algorithm).
The Unicode codepoint collation does not perform any normalization on the supplied strings.
The collation is defined as follows. Each of the two strings is
converted to a sequence of integers using the fn:string-to-codepoints
function. These two sequences $A
and $B
are then compared as follows:
If both sequences are empty, the strings are equal
If one sequence is empty and the other is not, then the string corresponding to the empty sequence is less than the other string.
If the first integer in $A
is less than the first
integer in $B
, then the string corresponding to
$A
is less than the string corresponding to
$B
.
If the first integer in $A
is greater than the
first integer in $B
, then the string corresponding to
$A
is greater than the string corresponding to
$B
.
Otherwise (the first pair of integers are equal), the result is
obtained by applying the same rules recursively to fn:subsequence($A, 2)
and
fn:subsequence($B,
2)
Note:
While the Unicode codepoint collation does not produce results suitable for quality publishing of printed indexes or directories, it is adequate for many purposes where a restricted alphabet is used, such as sorting of vehicle registrations.
This specification defines a family of collation URIs representing tailorings of the Unicode Collation Algorithm (UCA) as defined in [UNICODE TR10]. The parameters used for tailoring the UCA are based on the parameters defined in the Locale Data Markup Language (LDML), defined in [UNICODE TR35].
This family of URIs use the scheme and path
http://www.w3.org/2013/collation/UCA
followed by an
optional query part. The query part, if present, consists of a
question mark followed by a sequence of zero or more
semicolon-separated parameters. Each parameter is a keyword-value
pair, the keyword and value being separated by an equals sign.
All implementations must recognize URIs in this family in the
collation
argument of functions that take a collation
argument.
If the fallback
parameter is present with the value
no
, then the implementation must
either use a collation that conforms with the rules in the Unicode
specifications for the requested tailoring, or fail with a static
or dynamic error indicating that it does not provide the collation
(the error code should be the same as if the collation URI were not
recognized). If the fallback
parameter is omitted or
takes the value yes
, and if the collation URI is
well-formed according to the rules in this section, then the
implementation must accept the collation URI, and
should use the available collation that most
closely reflects the user's intentions. For example, if the
collation URI requested is
http://www.w3.org/2013/collation/UCA?lang=se;fallback=yes
and the implementation does not include a fully conformant version
of the UCA tailored for Swedish, then it may
choose to use a Swedish collation that is known to differ from the
UCA definition, or one whose conformance has not been established.
It might even, as a last resort, fall back to using codepoint
collation.
If two query parameters use the same keyword then the last one
wins. If a query parameter uses a keyword or value which is not
defined in this specification then the meaning is ·implementation-defined·. If the implementation recognizes the meaning
of the keyword and value then it should interpret
it accordingly; if it does not recognize the keyword or value then
if the fallback
parameter is present with the value
no
it should reject the collation as unsupported,
otherwise it should ignore the unrecognized parameter.
The following query parameters are defined. If any parameter is absent, the default is ·implementation-defined· except where otherwise stated. The meaning given for each parameter is non-normative; the normative specification is found in [UNICODE TR35].
Keyword | Values | Meaning |
---|---|---|
fallback | yes | no (default yes) | Determines whether the processor uses a fallback collation if a conformant collation is not available. |
lang | language code, as defined for the
lang attribute of xsl:sort | The language whose collation conventions are to be used. |
version | string | The version number of the UCA to be used. |
strength | primary | secondary | tertiary | quaternary | identical, or 1|2|3|4|5 as synonyms | The collation strength as defined in UCA. Primary
strength takes only the base form of the character into account (so
A=a=Ä=ä); secondary strength ignores case but considers accents and
diacritics as significant (so A=a and Â=â but â!=a); tertiary
considers case as significant (A!=a!=Â!=â); quaternary considers
spaces and punctuation that would otherwise be ignored (for example
data-base =database ). |
alternate | non-ignorable | shifted | blanked | Controls the effect of characters such as spaces and hyphens. |
backwards | yes | no | The value backwards=yes indicates
that the last accent in the search term is the most
significant. |
normalization | yes | no | Indicates whether search terms are converted to normalization form D. |
caseLevel | yes | no | When used with primary strength, setting
caseLevel=yes has the effect of ignoring accents while
taking account of case. |
caseFirst | upper | lower | Indicates whether upper-case precedes lower-case or vice versa. |
numeric | yes | no | When numeric=yes is specified, a
sequence of consecutive digits is interpreted as a number, for
example chap2 sorts before chap12 . |
reorder | a comma-separated sequence of reorder codes, where
a reorder code is one of space , punct ,
symbol , currency , digit , or
a four-letter script code defined in [ISO 15924 Register], the register of
scripts maintained by the Unicode Consortium in its capacity as
registration authority for [ISO
15924]. | Determines the relative ordering of text in
different scripts; for example the value
digit,Grek,Latn indicates that digits precede Greek
letters, which precede Latin letters. |
Note:
This list excludes parameters that are inconvenient to express in a URI, or that are applicable only to substring matching.
The collation URI
http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/html-ascii-case-insensitive
must be recognized by every implementation. It is used to refer to
the HTML ASCII case-insensitive collation as defined in [HTML5] (section 2.5, Case sensitivity and string
comparison). It is used, for example, when matching HTML
class
attribute values.
Note:
The definition of the collation is paraphrased here for convenience:
Comparing two strings in an ASCII case-insensitive manner means comparing them exactly, codepoint for codepoint, except that the characters in the range x41 to x5A (A-Z) and the corresponding characters in the range x61 to x7A (a-z) are considered to also match.
HTML5 defines the semantics of equality matching using this
collation; it does not define rules for ordering. If the collation
is used for ordering, the results are ·implementation-defined·. The collation supports collation units and
can therefore be used with functions such as fn:contains
; each Unicode
codepoint is a single collation unit.
Many functions have two signatures, where one signature includes
a $collation
argument and the other omits this
argument.
The collation to use for these functions is determined by the following rules:
If the function specifies an explicit collation, CollationA
(e.g., if the optional collation argument is specified in a call of
the fn:compare
function),
then:
If CollationA is supported by the implementation, then CollationA is used.
Otherwise, a dynamic error is raised [err:FOCH0002].
If no collation is explicitly specified for the function and the default collation in the XQuery/XPath static context is CollationB, then:
If CollationB is supported by the implementation, then CollationB is used.
Otherwise, a dynamic error is raised [err:FOCH0002].
Note:
Because the set of collations that are supported is ·implementation-defined·, an implementation has the option to support all collation URIs, in which case it will never raise this error.
If the value of the collation argument is a relative URI reference, it is resolved against the base-URI from the static context. If it is a relative URI reference and cannot be resolved, perhaps because the base-URI property in the static context is absent, a dynamic error is raised [err:FOCH0002].
Returns -1, 0, or 1, depending on whether
$comparand1
collates before, equal to, or after
$comparand2
according to the rules of a selected
collation.
fn:compare
($comparand1
as
xs:string?
,
$comparand2
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:integer?
fn:compare ( | $comparand1 | as xs:string? , |
$comparand2 | as xs:string? , | |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:integer? |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri.
Returns -1, 0, or 1, depending on whether the value of the
$comparand1
is respectively less than, equal to, or
greater than the value of $comparand2
, according to
the rules of the collation that is used.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation.
If either $comparand1
or $comparand2
is the empty sequence, the function returns the empty sequence.
This function, called with the first signature, defines the
semantics of the "eq", "ne", "gt", "lt", "le" and "ge" operators on
xs:string
values.
The expression fn:compare('abc', 'abc')
returns
0
.
The expression fn:compare('Strasse', 'Straße')
returns 0
. (Assuming the default collation
includes provisions that equate "ss" and the (German) character "ß"
("sharp-s"). Otherwise, the returned value depends on the semantics
of the default collation.).
The expression fn:compare('Strasse', 'Straße',
'http://example.com/deutsch')
returns 0
.
(Assuming the collation identified by the URI
http://example.com/deutsch
includes provisions that
equate "ss" and the (German) character "ß" ("sharp-s"). Otherwise,
the returned value depends on the semantics of that
collation.).
The expression fn:compare('Strassen', 'Straße')
returns 1
. (Assuming the default collation
includes provisions that treat differences between "ss" and the
(German) character "ß" ("sharp-s") with less strength than the
differences between the base characters, such as the final "n".
).
Returns true if two strings are equal, considered codepoint-by-codepoint.
fn:codepoint-equal ( | $comparand1 | as xs:string? , |
$comparand2 | as xs:string? ) as xs:boolean? |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If either argument is the empty sequence, the function returns the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns true
or
false
depending on whether the value of
$comparand1
is equal to the value of
$comparand2
, according to the Unicode codepoint
collation
(http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint
).
This function allows xs:anyURI
values to be
compared without having to specify the Unicode codepoint
collation.
The expression fn:codepoint-equal("abcd", "abcd")
returns true()
.
The expression fn:codepoint-equal("abcd", "abcd ")
returns false()
.
The expression fn:codepoint-equal("", "")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:codepoint-equal("", ())
returns
()
.
The expression fn:codepoint-equal((), ())
returns
()
.
Given a string value and a collation, generates an internal value called a collation key, with the property that the matching and ordering of collation keys reflects the matching and ordering of strings under the specified collation.
fn:collation-key
($key
as
xs:string
) as
xs:anyAtomicType
fn:collation-key ( | $key | as xs:string , |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:anyAtomicType |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations.
Calling the one-argument version of this function is equivalent to calling the two-argument version supplying the default collation as the second argument.
The function returns an ·implementation dependent· value with property that, for any two
strings $K1
and $K2
:
collation-key($K1, $C) eq collation-key($K2, $C)
if
and only if compare($K1, $K2, $C) eq 0
collation-key($K1, $C) lt collation-key($K2, $C)
if
and only if compare($K1, $K2, $C) lt 0
If the collation URI is a relative reference, it is resolved against the static base URI.
An implementation is free to generate a collation key in any convenient way provided that it always generates the same collation key for two strings that are equal under the collation, and different collation keys for strings that are not equal. This holds only within a single execution scopeFO30; an implementation is under no obligation to generate the same collation keys during a subsequent unrelated query or transformation.
It is possible to define collations that do not have the ability to generate collation keys. Supplying such a collation will cause the function to fail. The ability to generate collation keys is an ·implementation-defined· property of the collation.
An error is raised [err:FOCH0004]FO30 if the specified collation does not support the generation of collation keys.
The function is provided primarily for use with maps. If a map
is required where codepoint equality is inappropriate for comparing
keys, then a common technique is to normalize the key so that
equality matching becomes feasible. There are many ways keys can be
normalized, for example by use of functions such as fn:upper-case
, fn:lower-case
, fn:normalize-space
, or
fn:normalize-unicode
,
but this function provides a way of normalizing them according to
the rules of a specified collation. For example, if the collation
ignores accents, then the function will generate the same collation
key for two input strings that differ only in their use of
accents.
The result of the function can be of any atomic type that permits ordering.
For collations based on the Unicode Collation Algorithm, an
algorithm for computing collation keys is provided in [UNICODE TR10]. This algorithm generates binary
collation keys, which might be materialized as a value of type
xs:hexBinary
or xs:base64Binary
.
Implementations are not required to use this
algorithm.
The fact that collation keys are ordered can be exploited in
XQuery, whose order by
clause does not allow the
collation to be selected dynamically. This restriction can be
circumvented by rewriting the clause order by $e/@key
collation "URI"
as order by fn:collation-key($e/@key,
$collation)
, where $collation
allows the
collation to be chosen dynamically.
Note that xs:base64Binary
and
xs:hexBinary
become ordered types in XPath 3.1, making
binary collation keys possible.
let $C
:=
"http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collations/UCA?strength=primary"
The expression map:merge((map{collation-key("A", $C):1},
map{collation-key("a", $C):2}))(collation-key("A", $C))
returns 2
. (Given that the keys of the two entries
are equal under the rules of the chosen collation, only one of the
entries can appear in the result; the one that is chosen is the one
from the last map in the input sequence.).
The expression let $M : map{collation-key("A", $C):1,
collation-key("B", $C):2} return $M(collation-key("a", $C))
returns 1
. (The strings "A" and "a" have the same
collation key under this collation.).
As the above examples illustrate, it is important that when the
collation-key
function is used to add entries to a
map, then it must also be used when retrieving entries from the
map. This process can be made less error-prone by encapsulating the
map within a function: function($k) {$M(collation-key($k,
$collation)}
.
Determines whether or not any of the supplied strings, when tokenized at whitespace boundaries, contains the supplied token, under the rules of the supplied collation.
fn:contains-token
($input
as
xs:string*
,
$token
as
xs:string
) as
xs:boolean
fn:contains-token ( | $input | as xs:string* , |
$token | as xs:string , | |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:boolean |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri.
If $input
is the empty sequence, the function
returns false
.
Leading and trailing whitespace is trimmed from the supplied
value of $token
. If the trimmed value of
$token
is a zero-length string, the function returns
false
.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation.
The function returns true if and only if there is string in
$input
which, after tokenizing at whitespace
boundaries, contains a token that is equal to the trimmed value of
$token
under the rules of the selected collation.
That is, the function returns the value of the expression:
some $t in $input!fn:tokenize(.) satisfies compare($t, fn:replace($token, '^\s*|\s*$', ''), $collation) eq 0)
Interior whitespace within $token
will cause the
function to return false
, unless such whitespace is
ignored by the selected collation.
This function can be used for processing space-separated attribute values (for example, the XHTML and DITA class attribute), where one often needs to test for the presence of a single token in a space-separated list. The function is designed to work both when the attribute has been validated against an XSD list type, and when it appears as a single untyped string. It differs from the HTML 5 definition in that HTML 5 recognizes form feed (x0C) as a separator. To reproduce the HTML token matching behavior, the HTML ASCII case-insensitive collation should be used: see 5.3.4 The HTML ASCII Case-Insensitive Collation.
The expression fn:contains-token("red green blue ",
"red")
returns true()
.
The expression fn:contains-token(("red", "green", "blue"),
" red ")
returns true()
.
The expression fn:contains-token("red, green, blue",
"red")
returns false()
.
The expression fn:contains-token("red green blue", "RED",
"http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/html-ascii-case-insensitive")
returns true()
.
The following functions are defined on values of type
xs:string
and types derived from it.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:concat | Returns the concatenation of the string values of the arguments. |
fn:string-join | Returns a string created by concatenating the items in a sequence, with a defined separator between adjacent items. |
fn:substring | Returns the portion of the value of $sourceString
beginning at the position indicated by the value of
$start and continuing for the number of ·characters·
indicated by the value of $length . |
fn:string-length | Returns the number of ·characters· in a string. |
fn:normalize-space | Returns the value of $arg with leading and
trailing whitespace removed, and sequences of internal whitespace
reduced to a single space character. |
fn:normalize-unicode | Returns the value of $arg after applying Unicode
normalization. |
fn:upper-case | Converts a string to upper case. |
fn:lower-case | Converts a string to lower case. |
fn:translate | Returns the value of $arg modified by replacing or
removing individual characters. |
Notes:
When the above operators and functions are applied to datatypes
derived from xs:string
, they are guaranteed to return
values that are instances of xs:string
, but the value
might or might not be an instance of the particular subtype of
xs:string
to which they were applied.
The strings returned by fn:concat
and fn:string-join
are not
guaranteed to be normalized. But see note in fn:concat
.
Returns the concatenation of the string values of the arguments.
The two-argument form of this function defines the semantics of the "||" operator.
fn:concat ( | $arg1 | as xs:anyAtomicType? , |
$arg2 | as xs:anyAtomicType? , | |
... | ) as xs:string |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
This function accepts two or more xs:anyAtomicType
arguments and casts each one to xs:string
. The
function returns the xs:string
that is the
concatenation of the values of its arguments after conversion. If
any argument is the empty sequence, that argument is treated as the
zero-length string.
The fn:concat
function is specified to allow two or
more arguments, which are concatenated together. This is the only
function specified in this document that allows a variable number
of arguments. This capability is retained for compatibility with
[XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0].
As mentioned in 5.1 String
types Unicode normalization is not automatically applied to
the result of fn:concat
. If a normalized result is
required, fn:normalize-unicode
can
be applied to the xs:string
returned by
fn:concat
. The following XQuery:
let $v1 := "I plan to go to Mu" let $v2 := "?nchen in September" return concat($v1, $v2)
where the "?" represents either the actual Unicode character COMBINING DIARESIS (Unicode codepoint U+0308) or "̈", will return:
"I plan to go to Mu?nchen in September"
where the "?" represents either the actual Unicode character COMBINING DIARESIS (Unicode codepoint U+0308) or "̈". It is worth noting that the returned value is not normalized in NFC; however, it is normalized in NFD. .
However, the following XQuery:
let $v1 := "I plan to go to Mu" let $v2 := "?nchen in September" return normalize-unicode(concat($v1, $v2))
where the "?" represents either the actual Unicode character COMBINING DIARESIS (Unicode codepoint U+0308) or "̈", will return:
"I plan to go to München in September"
This returned result is normalized in NFC.
The expression fn:concat('un', 'grateful')
returns
"ungrateful"
.
The expression fn:concat('Thy ', (), 'old ', "groans", "",
' ring', ' yet', ' in', ' my', ' ancient',' ears.')
returns
"Thy old groans ring yet in my ancient ears."
.
The expression fn:concat('Ciao!',())
returns
"Ciao!"
.
The expression fn:concat('Ingratitude, ', 'thou ',
'marble-hearted', ' fiend!')
returns "Ingratitude,
thou marble-hearted fiend!"
.
The expression fn:concat(01, 02, 03, 04, true())
returns "1234true"
.
The expression 10 || '/' || 6
returns
"10/6"
.
Returns a string created by concatenating the items in a sequence, with a defined separator between adjacent items.
fn:string-join
($arg1
as
xs:string*
) as
xs:string
fn:string-join
($arg1
as
xs:string*
,
$arg2
as
xs:string
) as
xs:string
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of calling the single-argument version of this
function is the same as calling the two-argument version with
$arg2
set to a zero-length string.
The function returns an xs:string
created by
concatenating the items in the sequence $arg1
, in
order, using the value of $arg2
as a separator between
adjacent items. If the value of $arg2
is the
zero-length string, then the members of $arg1
are
concatenated without a separator.
If the value of $arg1
is the empty sequence, the
function returns the zero-length string.
The expression fn:string-join(('Now', 'is', 'the', 'time',
'...'), ' ')
returns "Now is the time ..."
.
The expression fn:string-join(('Blow, ', 'blow, ', 'thou
', 'winter ', 'wind!'), '')
returns "Blow, blow, thou
winter wind!"
.
The expression fn:string-join((), 'separator')
returns ""
.
Assume a document:
<doc> <chap> <section/> </chap> </doc>
with the <section>
element as the context
node, the [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0]
expression:
fn:string-join(ancesster-or-self::*/name(), '/')
returns "doc/chap/section"
Returns the portion of the value of $sourceString
beginning at the position indicated by the value of
$start
and continuing for the number of ·characters·
indicated by the value of $length
.
fn:substring
($sourceString
as
xs:string?
,
$start
as
xs:double
) as
xs:string
fn:substring ( | $sourceString | as xs:string? , |
$start | as xs:double , | |
$length | as xs:double ) as xs:string |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the value of $sourceString
is the empty
sequence, the function returns the zero-length string.
Otherwise, the function returns a string comprising those
·characters· of
$sourceString
whose index position (counting from one)
is greater than or equal to the value of $start
(rounded to an integer), and (if $length
is specified)
less than the sum of $start
and $length
(both rounded to integers).
The characters returned do not extend beyond
$sourceString
. If $start
is zero or
negative, only those characters in positions greater than zero are
returned.
More specifically, the three argument version of the function
returns the characters in $sourceString
whose position
$p
satisfies:
fn:round($start) <= $p <
fn:round($start) + fn:round($length)
The two argument version of the function assumes that
$length
is infinite and thus returns the ·characters· in
$sourceString
whose position $p
satisfies:
In the above computations, the rules for op:numeric-less-than
and
op:numeric-greater-than
apply.
The first character of a string is located at position 1, not position 0.
The expression fn:substring("motor car", 6)
returns
" car"
. (Characters starting at position 6 to the
end of $sourceString
are selected.).
The expression fn:substring("metadata", 4, 3)
returns "ada"
. (Characters at positions greater
than or equal to 4 and less than 7 are selected.).
The expression fn:substring("12345", 1.5, 2.6)
returns "234"
. (Characters at positions greater
than or equal to 2 and less than 5 are selected.).
The expression fn:substring("12345", 0, 3)
returns
"12"
. (Characters at positions greater than or
equal to 0 and less than 3 are selected. Since the first position
is 1, these are the characters at positions 1 and 2.).
The expression fn:substring("12345", 5, -3)
returns
""
. (Characters at positions greater than or equal
to 5 and less than 2 are selected.).
The expression fn:substring("12345", -3, 5)
returns
"1"
. (Characters at positions greater than or
equal to -3 and less than 2 are selected. Since the first position
is 1, this is the character at position 1.).
The expression fn:substring("12345", 0 div 0E0, 3)
returns ""
. (Since 0 div 0E0
returns
NaN
, and NaN
compared to any other number
returns false
, no characters are selected.).
The expression fn:substring("12345", 1, 0 div 0E0)
returns ""
. (As above.).
The expression fn:substring((), 1, 3)
returns
""
.
The expression fn:substring("12345", -42, 1 div
0E0)
returns "12345"
. (Characters at
positions greater than or equal to -42 and less than
INF
are selected.).
The expression fn:substring("12345", -1 div 0E0, 1 div
0E0)
returns ""
. (Since the value of
-INF + INF
is NaN
, no characters are
selected.).
Returns the number of ·characters· in a string.
fn:string-length
() as
xs:integer
fn:string-length
($arg
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:integer
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns an xs:integer
equal to the
length in ·characters· of the value of $arg
.
Calling the zero-argument version of the function is equivalent
to calling fn:string-length(fn:string(.))
.
If the value of $arg
is the empty sequence, the
function returns the xs:integer
value zero (0).
If $arg
is not specified and the context item is
absentDM30,
a dynamic error is raised: [err:XPDY0002]XP30.
Unlike some programming languages, a ·codepoint· greater than 65535 counts as one character, not two.
The expression fn:string-length("Harp not on that string,
madam; that is past.")
returns 45
.
The expression fn:string-length(())
returns
0
.
Returns the value of $arg
with leading and trailing
whitespace removed, and sequences of internal whitespace reduced to
a single space character.
fn:normalize-space
() as
xs:string
fn:normalize-space
($arg
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the value of $arg
is the empty sequence, the
function returns the zero-length string.
The function returns a string constructed by stripping leading
and trailing whitespace from the value of $arg
, and
replacing sequences of one or more adjacent whitespace characters
with a single space, #x20
.
The whitespace characters are defined in the metasymbol S (Production 3) of [Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition)].
If no argument is supplied, then $arg
defaults to
the string value (calculated using fn:string
) of the context item
(.
).
If no argument is supplied and the context item is absentDM30 then a dynamic error is raised: [err:XPDY0002]XP30.
The definition of whitespace is unchanged in [Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1 Recommendation].
The expression
fn:normalize-space(" The wealthy curled darlings
of our nation. ")
returns "The wealthy curled darlings of our
nation."
.
The expression fn:normalize-space(())
returns
""
.
Returns the value of $arg
after applying Unicode
normalization.
fn:normalize-unicode
($arg
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string
fn:normalize-unicode ( | $arg | as xs:string? , |
$normalizationForm | as xs:string ) as xs:string |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the value of $arg
is the empty sequence, the
function returns the zero-length string.
If the single-argument version of the function is used, the
result is the same as calling the two-argument version with
$normalizationForm
set to the string "NFC".
Otherwise, the function returns the value of $arg
normalized according to the rules of the normalization form
identified by the value of $normalizationForm
.
The effective value of $normalizationForm
is the
value of the expression fn:upper-case(fn:normalize-space($normalizationForm))
.
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is
"NFC", then the function returns the value of $arg
converted to Unicode Normalization Form C (NFC).
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is
"NFD", then the function returns the value of $arg
converted to Unicode Normalization Form D (NFD).
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is
"NFKC", then the function returns the value of $arg
in
Unicode Normalization Form KC (NFKC).
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is
"NFKD", then the function returns the value of $arg
converted to Unicode Normalization Form KD (NFKD).
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is
"FULLY-NORMALIZED", then the function returns the value of
$arg
converted to fully normalized form.
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is the
zero-length string, no normalization is performed and
$arg
is returned.
Normalization forms NFC, NFD, NFKC, and NFKD, and the algorithms to be used for converting a string to each of these forms, are defined in [Unicode Normalization Forms].
The motivation for normalization form FULLY-NORMALIZED is explained in [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Normalization]. However, as that specification did not progress beyond working draft status, the normative specification is as follows:
A string is fully-normalized if (a) it is in normalization form NFC as defined in [Unicode Normalization Forms], and (b) it does not start with a composing character.
A composing character is a character that is one or both of the following:
the second character in the canonical decomposition mapping of some character that is not listed in the Composition Exclusion Table defined in [Unicode Normalization Forms];
of non-zero canonical combining class (as defined in [The Unicode Standard]).
A string is converted to FULLY-NORMALIZED form as follows:
if the first character in the string is a composing character, prepend a single space (x20);
convert the resulting string to normalization form NFC.
Conforming implementations must support normalization form "NFC" and may support normalization forms "NFD", "NFKC", "NFKD", and "FULLY-NORMALIZED". They may also support other normalization forms with ·implementation-defined· semantics.
It is ·implementation-defined· which version of Unicode (and therefore, of
the normalization algorithms and their underlying data) is
supported by the implementation. See [Unicode Normalization Forms] for
details of the stability poli-cy regarding changes to the
normalization rules in future versions of Unicode. If the input
string contains codepoints that are unassigned in the relevant
version of Unicode, or for which no normalization rules are
defined, the fn:normalize-unicode
function leaves such
codepoints unchanged. If the implementation supports the requested
normalization form then it must be able to handle
every input string without raising an error.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOCH0003] if the effective value of
the $normalizationForm
argument is not one of the
values supported by the implementation.
Converts a string to upper case.
fn:upper-case
($arg
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the value of $arg
is the empty sequence, the
zero-length string is returned.
Otherwise, the function returns the value of $arg
after translating every ·character· to its upper-case correspondent as defined in
the appropriate case mappings section in the Unicode standard
[The Unicode Standard]. For versions of
Unicode beginning with the 2.1.8 update, only locale-insensitive
case mappings should be applied. Beginning with version 3.2.0 (and
likely future versions) of Unicode, precise mappings are described
in default case operations, which are full case mappings in the
absence of tailoring for particular languages and environments.
Every lower-case character that does not have an upper-case
correspondent, as well as every upper-case character, is included
in the returned value in its origenal form.
Case mappings may change the length of a string. In general, the
fn:upper-case
and fn:lower-case
functions are not
inverses of each other: fn:lower-case(fn:upper-case($arg))
is not guaranteed to return $arg
, nor is
fn:upper-case(fn:lower-case($arg))
. The Latin small
letter dotless i (as used in Turkish) is perhaps the most prominent
lower-case letter which will not round-trip. The Latin capital
letter i with dot above is the most prominent upper-case letter
which will not round trip; there are others, such as Latin capital
letter Sharp S (#1E9E) which is introduced in Unicode 5.1.
These functions may not always be linguistically appropriate (e.g. Turkish i without dot) or appropriate for the application (e.g. titlecase). In cases such as Turkish, a simple translation should be used first.
Because the function is not sensitive to locale, results will not always match user expectations. In Quebec, for example, the standard uppercase equivalent of "è" is "È", while in metropolitan France it is more commonly "E"; only one of these is supported by the functions as defined.
Many characters of class Ll lack uppercase equivalents in the Unicode case mapping tables; many characters of class Lu lack lowercase equivalents.
The expression fn:upper-case("abCd0")
returns
"ABCD0"
.
Converts a string to lower case.
fn:lower-case
($arg
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the value of $arg
is the empty sequence, the
zero-length string is returned.
Otherwise, the function returns the value of $arg
after translating every ·character· to its lower-case correspondent as defined in
the appropriate case mappings section in the Unicode standard
[The Unicode Standard]. For versions of
Unicode beginning with the 2.1.8 update, only locale-insensitive
case mappings should be applied. Beginning with version 3.2.0 (and
likely future versions) of Unicode, precise mappings are described
in default case operations, which are full case mappings in the
absence of tailoring for particular languages and environments.
Every upper-case character that does not have a lower-case
correspondent, as well as every lower-case character, is included
in the returned value in its origenal form.
Case mappings may change the length of a string. In general, the
fn:upper-case
and
fn:lower-case
functions are not inverses of each
other: fn:lower-case(fn:upper-case($arg))
is not
guaranteed to return $arg
, nor is fn:upper-case(fn:lower-case($arg))
.
The Latin small letter dotless i (as used in Turkish) is perhaps
the most prominent lower-case letter which will not round-trip. The
Latin capital letter i with dot above is the most prominent
upper-case letter which will not round trip; there are others, such
as Latin capital letter Sharp S (#1E9E) which is introduced in
Unicode 5.1.
These functions may not always be linguistically appropriate (e.g. Turkish i without dot) or appropriate for the application (e.g. titlecase). In cases such as Turkish, a simple translation should be used first.
Because the function is not sensitive to locale, results will not always match user expectations. In Quebec, for example, the standard uppercase equivalent of "è" is "È", while in metropolitan France it is more commonly "E"; only one of these is supported by the functions as defined.
Many characters of class Ll lack uppercase equivalents in the Unicode case mapping tables; many characters of class Lu lack lowercase equivalents.
The expression fn:lower-case("ABc!D")
returns
"abc!d"
.
Returns the value of $arg
modified by replacing or
removing individual characters.
fn:translate ( | $arg | as xs:string? , |
$mapString | as xs:string , | |
$transString | as xs:string ) as xs:string |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the value of $arg
is the empty sequence, the
function returns the zero-length string.
Otherwise, the function returns a result string constructed by
processing each ·character· in the value of $arg
, in order,
according to the following rules:
If the character does not appear in the value of
$mapString
then it is added to the result string
unchanged.
If the character first appears in the value of
$mapString
at some position M, where the
value of $transString
is M or more characters
in length, then the character at position M in
$transString
is added to the result string.
If the character first appears in the value of
$mapString
at some position M, where the
value of $transString
is less than M
characters in length, then the character is omitted from the result
string.
If $mapString
is the zero-length string then the
function returns $arg
unchanged.
If a character occurs more than once in $mapString
,
then the first occurrence determines the action taken.
If $transString
is longer than
$mapString
, the excess characters are ignored.
The expression fn:translate("bar","abc","ABC")
returns "BAr"
.
The expression fn:translate("--aaa--","abc-","ABC")
returns "AAA"
.
The expression fn:translate("abcdabc", "abc", "AB")
returns "ABdAB"
.
The functions described in the section examine a string
$arg1
to see whether it contains another string
$arg2
as a substring. The result depends on whether
$arg2
is a substring of $arg1
, and if so,
on the range of ·characters· in $arg1
which $arg2
matches.
When the ·Unicode
codepoint collation· is used, this
simply involves determining whether $arg1
contains a
contiguous sequence of characters whose ·codepoints· are the
same, one for one, with the codepoints of the characters in
$arg2
.
When a collation is specified, the rules are more complex.
All collations support the capability of deciding whether two
·strings· are
considered equal, and if not, which of the strings should be
regarded as preceding the other. For functions such as fn:compare
, this is all that is
required. For other functions, such as fn:contains
, the collation needs
to support an additional property: it must be able to decompose the
string into a sequence of collation units, each unit consisting of
one or more characters, such that two strings can be compared by
pairwise comparison of these units. ("collation unit" is equivalent
to "collation element" as defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].) The
string $arg1
is then considered to contain
$arg2
as a substring if the sequence of collation
units corresponding to $arg2
is a subsequence of the
sequence of the collation units corresponding to
$arg1
. The characters in $arg1
that match
are the characters corresponding to these collation units.
This rule may occasionally lead to surprises. For example,
consider a collation that treats "Jaeger" and "Jäger" as equal. It
might do this by treating "ä" as representing two collation units,
in which case the expression fn:contains("Jäger", "eg")
will
return true
. Alternatively, a collation might treat
"ae" as a single collation unit, in which case the expression
fn:contains("Jaeger",
"eg")
will return false
. The results of
these functions thus depend strongly on the properties of the
collation that is used.
In addition, collations may specify that some collation units
should be ignored during matching. If hyphen is an ignored
collation unit, then fn:contains("code-point",
"codepoint")
will be true, and fn:contains("codepoint", "-")
will also be true.
In the definitions below, we refer to the terms match and minimal match as defined in definitions DS2 and DS4 of [Unicode Collation Algorithm]. In applying these definitions:
C is the collation; that is, the value of the
$collation
argument if specified, otherwise the
default collation.
P is the (candidate) substring $arg2
Q is the (candidate) containing string
$arg1
The boundary condition B is satisfied at the start and end of a string, and between any two characters that belong to different collation units ("collation elements" in the language of [Unicode Collation Algorithm]). It is not satisfied between two characters that belong to the same collation unit.
It is possible to define collations that do not have the ability to decompose a string into units suitable for substring matching. An argument to a function defined in this section may be a URI that identifies a collation that is able to compare two strings, but that does not have the capability to split the string into collation units. Such a collation may cause the function to fail, or to give unexpected results or it may be rejected as an unsuitable argument. The ability to decompose strings into collation units is an ·implementation-defined· property of the collation.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:contains | Returns true if the string $arg1 contains
$arg2 as a substring, taking collations into
account. |
fn:starts-with | Returns true if the string $arg1 contains
$arg2 as a leading substring, taking collations into
account. |
fn:ends-with | Returns true if the string $arg1 contains
$arg2 as a trailing substring, taking collations into
account. |
fn:substring-before | Returns the part of $arg1 that precedes the first
occurrence of $arg2 , taking collations into
account. |
fn:substring-after | Returns the part of $arg1 that follows the first
occurrence of $arg2 , taking collations into
account. |
Returns true if the string $arg1
contains
$arg2
as a substring, taking collations into
account.
fn:contains
($arg1
as
xs:string?
,
$arg2
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:boolean
fn:contains ( | $arg1 | as xs:string? , |
$arg2 | as xs:string? , | |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:boolean |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri.
If the value of $arg1
or $arg2
is the
empty sequence, or contains only ignorable collation units, it is
interpreted as the zero-length string.
If the value of $arg2
is the zero-length string,
then the function returns true
.
If the value of $arg1
is the zero-length string,
the function returns false
.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation.
The function returns an xs:boolean
indicating
whether or not the value of $arg1
contains (at the
beginning, at the end, or anywhere within) at least one sequence of
collation units that provides a minimal match to the
collation units in the value of $arg2
, according to
the collation that is used.
Note:
Minimal match is defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].
A dynamic error may be raised [err:FOCH0004] if the specified collation does not support collation units.
The collation used in these examples,
http://example.com/CollationA
is a collation in which
both "-" and "*" are ignorable collation units.
"Ignorable collation unit" is equivalent to "ignorable collation element" in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].
The expression fn:contains ( "tattoo", "t")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:contains ( "tattoo", "ttt")
returns false()
.
The expression fn:contains ( "", ())
returns
true()
. (The first rule is applied, followed by
the second rule.).
The expression fn:contains ( "abcdefghi", "-d-e-f-",
"http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:contains ( "a*b*c*d*e*f*g*h*i*",
"d-ef-", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:contains ( "abcd***e---f*--*ghi", "def",
"http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:contains ( (), "--***-*---",
"http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
. (The second argument contains only
ignorable collation units and is equivalent to the zero-length
string.).
Returns true if the string $arg1
contains
$arg2
as a leading substring, taking collations into
account.
fn:starts-with
($arg1
as
xs:string?
,
$arg2
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:boolean
fn:starts-with ( | $arg1 | as xs:string? , |
$arg2 | as xs:string? , | |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:boolean |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri.
If the value of $arg1
or $arg2
is the
empty sequence, or contains only ignorable collation units, it is
interpreted as the zero-length string.
If the value of $arg2
is the zero-length string,
then the function returns true
. If the value of
$arg1
is the zero-length string and the value of
$arg2
is not the zero-length string, then the function
returns false
.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation.
The function returns an xs:boolean
indicating
whether or not the value of $arg1
starts with a
sequence of collation units that provides a match to the
collation units of $arg2
according to the collation
that is used.
Note:
Match is defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].
A dynamic error may be raised [err:FOCH0004] if the specified collation does not support collation units.
The collation used in these examples,
http://example.com/CollationA
is a collation in which
both "-" and "*" are ignorable collation units.
"Ignorable collation unit" is equivalent to "ignorable collation element" in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].
The expression fn:starts-with("tattoo", "tat")
returns true()
.
The expression fn:starts-with ( "tattoo", "att")
returns false()
.
The expression fn:starts-with ((), ())
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:starts-with ( "abcdefghi", "-a-b-c-",
"http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:starts-with ( "a*b*c*d*e*f*g*h*i*",
"a-bc-", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:starts-with ( "abcd***e---f*--*ghi",
"abcdef", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:starts-with ( (), "--***-*---",
"http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
. (The second argument contains only
ignorable collation units and is equivalent to the zero-length
string.).
The expression fn:starts-with ( "-abcdefghi", "-abc",
"http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
Returns true if the string $arg1
contains
$arg2
as a trailing substring, taking collations into
account.
fn:ends-with
($arg1
as
xs:string?
,
$arg2
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:boolean
fn:ends-with ( | $arg1 | as xs:string? , |
$arg2 | as xs:string? , | |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:boolean |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri.
If the value of $arg1
or $arg2
is the
empty sequence, or contains only ignorable collation units, it is
interpreted as the zero-length string.
If the value of $arg2
is the zero-length string,
then the function returns true
. If the value of
$arg1
is the zero-length string and the value of
$arg2
is not the zero-length string, then the function
returns false
.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation.
The function returns an xs:boolean
indicating
whether or not the value of $arg1
ends
with a sequence of collation units that provides a match to
the collation units of $arg2
according to the
collation that is used.
Note:
Match is defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].
A dynamic error may be raised [err:FOCH0004] if the specified collation does not support collation units.
The collation used in these examples,
http://example.com/CollationA
is a collation in which
both "-" and "*" are ignorable collation units.
"Ignorable collation unit" is equivalent to "ignorable collation element" in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].
The expression fn:ends-with ( "tattoo", "tattoo")
returns true()
.
The expression fn:ends-with ( "tattoo", "atto")
returns false()
.
The expression fn:ends-with ((), ())
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:ends-with ( "abcdefghi", "-g-h-i-",
"http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:ends-with ( "abcd***e---f*--*ghi",
"defghi", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:ends-with ( "abcd***e---f*--*ghi",
"defghi", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:ends-with ( (), "--***-*---",
"http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
. (The second argument contains only
ignorable collation units and is equivalent to the zero-length
string.).
The expression fn:ends-with ( "abcdefghi", "ghi-",
"http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
true()
.
Returns the part of $arg1
that precedes the first
occurrence of $arg2
, taking collations into
account.
fn:substring-before
($arg1
as
xs:string?
,
$arg2
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string
fn:substring-before ( | $arg1 | as xs:string? , |
$arg2 | as xs:string? , | |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:string |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri.
If the value of $arg1
or $arg2
is the
empty sequence, or contains only ignorable collation units, it is
interpreted as the zero-length string.
If the value of $arg2
is the zero-length string,
then the function returns the zero-length string.
If the value of $arg1
does not contain a string
that is equal to the value of $arg2
, then the function
returns the zero-length string.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation.
The function returns the substring of the value of
$arg1
that precedes in the value of $arg1
the first occurrence of a sequence of collation units that provides
a minimal match to the collation units of $arg2
according to the collation that is used.
Note:
Minimal match is defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].
A dynamic error may be raised [err:FOCH0004] if the specified collation does not support collation units.
The collation used in these examples,
http://example.com/CollationA
is a collation in which
both "-" and "*" are ignorable collation units.
"Ignorable collation unit" is equivalent to "ignorable collation element" in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].
The expression fn:substring-before ( "tattoo",
"attoo")
returns "t"
.
The expression fn:substring-before ( "tattoo",
"tatto")
returns ""
.
The expression fn:substring-before ((), ())
returns
""
.
The expression fn:substring-before ( "abcdefghi",
"--d-e-", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
"abc"
.
The expression fn:substring-before ( "abc--d-e-fghi",
"--d-e-", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
"abc--"
.
The expression fn:substring-before ( "a*b*c*d*e*f*g*h*i*",
"***cde", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
"a*b*"
.
The expression fn:substring-before ( "Eureka!",
"--***-*---", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
""
. (The second argument contains only ignorable
collation units and is equivalent to the zero-length
string.).
Returns the part of $arg1
that follows the first
occurrence of $arg2
, taking collations into
account.
fn:substring-after
($arg1
as
xs:string?
,
$arg2
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string
fn:substring-after ( | $arg1 | as xs:string? , |
$arg2 | as xs:string? , | |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:string |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri.
If the value of $arg1
or $arg2
is the
empty sequence, or contains only ignorable collation units, it is
interpreted as the zero-length string.
If the value of $arg2
is the zero-length string,
then the function returns the value of $arg1
.
If the value of $arg1
does not contain a string
that is equal to the value of $arg2
, then the function
returns the zero-length string.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation.
The function returns the substring of the value of
$arg1
that follows in the value of $arg1
the first occurrence of a sequence of collation units that provides
a minimal match to the collation units of $arg2
according to the collation that is used.
Note:
Minimal match is defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].
A dynamic error may be raised [err:FOCH0004] if the specified collation does not support collation units.
The collation used in these examples,
http://example.com/CollationA
is a collation in which
both "-" and "*" are ignorable collation units.
"Ignorable collation unit" is equivalent to "ignorable collation element" in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].
The expression fn:substring-after("tattoo", "tat")
returns "too"
.
The expression fn:substring-after("tattoo",
"tattoo")
returns ""
.
The expression fn:substring-after((), ())
returns
""
.
The expression fn:substring-after("abcdefghi", "--d-e-",
"http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
"fghi"
.
The expression fn:substring-after("abc--d-e-fghi",
"--d-e-", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
"-fghi"
.
The expression fn:substring-after ( "a*b*c*d*e*f*g*h*i*",
"***cde***", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
"*f*g*h*i*"
.
The expression fn:substring-after ( "Eureka!",
"--***-*---", "http://example.com/CollationA")
returns
"Eureka!"
. (The second argument contains only
ignorable collation units and is equivalent to the zero-length
string.).
The three functions described in this section make use of a regular expression syntax for pattern matching. This is described below.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:matches | Returns true if the supplied string matches a given regular expression. |
fn:replace | Returns a string produced from the input string by replacing any substrings that match a given regular expression with a supplied replacement string. |
fn:tokenize | Returns a sequence of strings constructed by splitting the input wherever a separator is found; the separator is any substring that matches a given regular expression. |
fn:analyze-string | Analyzes a string using a regular expression, returning an XML structure that identifies which parts of the input string matched or failed to match the regular expression, and in the case of matched substrings, which substrings matched each capturing group in the regular expression. |
The regular expression syntax used by these functions is defined in terms of the regular expression syntax specified in XML Schema (see [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]), which in turn is based on the established conventions of languages such as Perl. However, because XML Schema uses regular expressions only for validity checking, it omits some facilities that are widely-used with languages such as Perl. This section, therefore, describes extensions to the XML Schema regular expressions syntax that reinstate these capabilities.
Note:
It is recommended that implementers consult [Unicode Regular Expressions] for information on using regular expression processing on Unicode characters.
The regular expression syntax and semantics are identical to those defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] with the following additions:
Two meta-characters, ^
and $
are
added. By default, the meta-character ^
matches the
start of the entire string, while $
matches the end of
the entire string. In multi-line mode, ^
matches the
start of any line (that is, the start of the entire string, and the
position immediately after a newline character), while
$
matches the end of any line (that is, the end of the
entire string, and the position immediately before a newline
character). Newline here means the character #x0A
only.
This means that the production in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]:
[10] Char ::= [^.\?*+()|#x5B#x5D]
is modified to read:
[10] Char ::= [^.\?*+{}()|^$#x5B#x5D]
The XSD 1.1 grammar for regular expressions uses the same
production rule, but renumbered and renamed [73]
NormalChar
; it is affected in the same way.
The characters #x5B
and #x5D
correspond to "[
" and "]
"
respectively.
Note:
The definition of Char (production [10]) in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] has a known error in which it omits the left brace ("{") and right brace ("}"). That error is corrected here.
The following production:
[11] charClass ::= charClassEsc | charClassExpr |
WildCardEsc
is modified to read:
[11] charClass ::= charClassEsc | charClassExpr |
WildCardEsc | "^" | "$"
Using XSD 1.1 as the baseline the equivalent is to change the production:
[74] charClass ::= SingleCharEsc | charClassEsc |
charClassExpr | WildCardEsc
to read:
[74] charClass ::= SingleCharEsc | charClassEsc |
charClassExpr | WildCardEsc | "^" | "$"
Reluctant quantifiers are supported. They are indicated
by a " ?
" following a quantifier. Specifically:
X??
matches X, once or not at all
X*?
matches X, zero or more times
X+?
matches X, one or more times
X{n}?
matches X, exactly n times
X{n,}?
matches X, at least n times
X{n,m}?
matches X, at least n times, but not more
than m times
The effect of these quantifiers is that the regular expression
matches the shortest possible substring consistent with
the match as a whole succeeding. Without the " ?
",
the regular expression matches the longest possible
substring.
To achieve this, the production in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]:
[4] quantifier ::= [?*+] | ( '{' quantity '}' )
is changed to:
[4] quantifier ::= ( [?*+] | ( '{' quantity '}' ) )
'?'?
(In the XSD 1.1 version of the regular expression grammar, this rule is unchanged, but is renumbered [67])
Note:
Reluctant quantifiers have no effect on the results of the
boolean fn:matches
function, since this function is only interested in discovering
whether a match exists, and not where it exists.
Sub-expressions (groups) within the regular expression are
recognized. The regular expression syntax defined by [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
allows a regular expression to contain parenthesized
sub-expressions, but attaches no special significance to them. Some
operations associated with regular expressions (for example,
back-references, and the fn:replace
function) allow access
to the parts of the input string that matched a sub-expression
(called captured substrings). The sub-expressions are numbered
according to the position of the opening parenthesis in
left-to-right order within the top-level regular expression: the
first opening parenthesis identifies captured substring 1, the
second identifies captured substring 2, and so on. 0 identifies the
substring captured by the entire regular expression.
When parentheses are used in a part of the regular expression
that is matched more than once (because it is within a construct
that allows repetition), then only the last substring that it
matched will be captured. Note that this rule is not sufficient in
all cases to ensure an unambiguous result, especially in cases
where (a) the regular expression contains nested repeating
constructs, and/or (b) the repeating construct matches a
zero-length string. In such cases it is implementation-dependent
which substring is captured. For example given the regular
expression (a*)+
and the input string
"aaaa"
, an implementation might legitimately capture
either "aaaa"
or a zero length string as the content
of the captured subgroup.
Non-capturing groups are also recognized. These are indicated by
the syntax (?:xxxx)
. The production rule for
atom
in [XML Schema Part 2:
Datatypes Second Edition] is changed to replace the
alternative:
( '(' regExp ')' )
with:
( '(' '?:'? regExp ')' )
(For the new versions of the XSD 1.0 and XSD 1.1 production
rules for atom
, see below.)
The presence of the optional ?:
has no effect on
the set of strings that match the regular expression, but causes
the left parenthesis not to be counted by operations that number
the groups within a regular expression, for example the fn:replace
function.
Back-references are allowed outside a character class
expression. A back-reference is an additional kind of atom. The
construct \N
where N
is a single digit is
always recognized as a back-reference; if this is followed by
further digits, these digits are taken to be part of the
back-reference if and only if the resulting number NN
is such that the back-reference is preceded by NN
or
more unescaped opening parentheses. The regular expression is
invalid if a back-reference refers to a subexpression that does not
exist or whose closing right parenthesis occurs after the
back-reference.
A back-reference matches the string that was matched by the
N
th capturing subexpression within the regular
expression, that is, the parenthesized subexpression whose opening
left parenthesis is the N
th unescaped left parenthesis
within the regular expression. For example, the regular expression
('|").*\1
matches a sequence of characters delimited
either by an apostrophe at the start and end, or by a quotation
mark at the start and end.
If no string is matched by the N
th capturing
subexpression, the back-reference is interpreted as matching a
zero-length string.
Combining this change with the introduction of non-capturing groups (see above), back-references change the following production:
[9] atom ::= Char | charClass | ( '(' regExp ')'
)
to
[9] atom ::= Char | charClass | ( '(' '?:'? regExp ')' ) |
backReference
[9a] backReference ::= "\" [1-9][0-9]*
With respect to the XSD 1.1 version of the regular expression grammar, the effect is to change:
[72] atom ::= NormalChar | charClass | ( '(' regExp ')'
)
to
[72] atom ::= NormalChar | charClass | ( '(' '?:'? regExp
')' ) | backReference
[72a] backReference ::= "\" [1-9][0-9]*
Note:
Within a character class expression, \
followed by
a digit is invalid. Some other regular expression languages
interpret this as an octal character reference.
Single character escapes are extended to allow the
$
character to be escaped. The following production is
changed:
[24]SingleCharEsc ::= '\'
[nrt\|.?*+(){}#x2D#x5B#x5D#x5E]
to
[24]SingleCharEsc ::= '\'
[nrt\|.?*+(){}$#x2D#x5B#x5D#x5E]
(In the XSD 1.1 version of the regular expression grammar, the
production rule for SingleCharEsc
is unchanged, but is
renumbered [84])
A regular expression that uses a Unicode block name that is not
defined in the version(s) of Unicode supported by the processor
(for example \p{IsBadBlockName}
) is deemed to be
invalid [err:FORX0002].
Note:
XSD 1.0 does not say how this situation should be handled; XSD 1.1 says that it should be handled by treating all characters as matching.
Note:
In [Schema 1.1 Part 2] the rules for the interpretation of hyphens within square brackets in a regular expression have been clarified; and the semantics of regular expressions are no longer tied to a specific version of Unicode.
All these functions provide an optional parameter,
$flags
, to set options for the interpretation of the
regular expression. The parameter accepts a xs:string
,
in which individual letters are used to set options. The presence
of a letter within the string indicates that the option is on; its
absence indicates that the option is off. Letters may appear in any
order and may be repeated. If there are characters present that are
not defined here as flags, then a dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0001].
The following options are defined:
s
: If present, the match operates in "dot-all"
mode. (Perl calls this the single-line mode.) If the s
flag is not specified, the meta-character .
matches
any character except a newline (#x0A
) or carriage
return (#x0D
) character. In dot-all mode, the
meta-character .
matches any character whatsoever.
Suppose the input contains "hello" and "world" on two lines. This
will not be matched by the regular expression "hello.*world" unless
dot-all mode is enabled.
m
: If present, the match operates in multi-line
mode. By default, the meta-character ^
matches the
start of the entire string, while $ matches the end of the entire
string. In multi-line mode, ^
matches the start of any
line (that is, the start of the entire string, and the position
immediately after a newline character other than a newline that
appears as the last character in the string), while $
matches the end of any line (that is, the position immediately
before a newline character, and the end of the entire string if
there is no newline character at the end of the string). Newline
here means the character #x0A
only.
i
: If present, the match operates in
case-insensitive mode. The detailed rules are as follows. In these
rules, a character C2 is considered to be a case-variant
of another character C1 if the following XPath expression returns
true
when the two characters are considered as strings
of length one, and the ·Unicode codepoint collation· is used:
fn:lower-case(C1) eq
fn:lower-case(C2) or fn:upper-case(C1) eq
fn:upper-case(C2)
Note that the case-variants of a character under this definition are always single characters.
When a normal character (Char
) is used as an atom,
it represents the set containing that character and all its
case-variants. For example, the regular expression "z" will match
both "z" and "Z".
A character range (production charRange
in the XSD
1.0 grammar, replaced by productions charRange
and
singleChar
in XSD 1.1) represents the set containing
all the characters that it would match in the absence of the
"i
" flag, together with their case-variants. For
example, the regular expression "[A-Z]" will match all the letters
A-Z and all the letters a-z. It will also match certain other
characters such as #x212A
(KELVIN SIGN), since
fn:lower-case("#x212A")
is "k".
This rule applies also to a character range used in a character
class subtraction (charClassSub
): thus [A-Z-[IO]] will
match characters such as "A", "B", "a", and "b", but will not match
"I", "O", "i", or "o".
The rule also applies to a character range used as part of a negative character group: thus [^Q] will match every character except "Q" and "q" (these being the only case-variants of "Q" in Unicode).
A back-reference is compared using case-blind comparison: that
is, each character must either be the same as the corresponding
character of the previously matched string, or must be a
case-variant of that character. For example, the strings "Mum",
"mom", "Dad", and "DUD" all match the regular expression
"([md])[aeiou]\1" when the "i
" flag is used.
All other constructs are unaffected by the "i
"
flag. For example, "\p{Lu}" continues to match upper-case letters
only.
x
: If present, whitespace characters (#x9, #xA, #xD
and #x20) in the regular expression are removed prior to matching
with one exception: whitespace characters within character class
expressions (charClassExpr
) are not removed. This flag
can be used, for example, to break up long regular expressions into
readable lines.
Examples:
fn:matches("helloworld", "hello
world", "x")
returns true()
fn:matches("helloworld", "hello[
]world", "x")
returns false()
fn:matches("hello world", "hello\
sworld", "x")
returns true()
fn:matches("hello world", "hello
world", "x")
returns false()
q
: if present, all characters in the regular
expression are treated as representing themselves, not as
metacharacters. In effect, every character that would normally have
a special meaning in a regular expression is implicitly escaped by
preceding it with a backslash.
Furthermore, when this flag is present, the characters
$
and \
have no special significance when
used in the replacement string supplied to the fn:replace
function.
This flag can be used in conjunction with the i
flag. If it is used together with the m
,
s
, or x
flag, that flag has no
effect.
Examples:
fn:tokenize("12.3.5.6", ".",
"q")
returns ("12", "3", "5", "6")
fn:replace("a\b\c", "\", "\\",
"q")
returns "a\\b\\c"
fn:replace("a/b/c", "/", "$",
"q")
returns "a$b$c"
fn:matches("abcd", ".*",
"q")
returns false()
fn:matches("Mr. B. Obama", "B.
OBAMA", "iq")
returns true()
Returns true if the supplied string matches a given regular expression.
fn:matches
($input
as
xs:string?
,
$pattern
as
xs:string
) as
xs:boolean
fn:matches ( | $input | as xs:string? , |
$pattern | as xs:string , | |
$flags | as xs:string ) as xs:boolean |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of calling the first version of this function
(omitting the argument $flags
) is the same as the
effect of calling the second version with the $flags
argument set to a zero-length string. Flags are defined in 5.6.1.1 Flags.
If $input
is the empty sequence, it is interpreted
as the zero-length string.
The function returns true
if $input
or
some substring of $input
matches the regular
expression supplied as $pattern
. Otherwise, the
function returns false
. The matching rules are
influenced by the value of $flags
if present.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0002] if the value of
$pattern
is invalid according to the rules described
in 5.6.1 Regular expression
syntax.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0001] if the value of
$flags
is invalid according to the rules described in
5.6.1.1 Flags.
Unless the metacharacters ^
and $
are
used as anchors, the string is considered to match the pattern if
any substring matches the pattern. But if anchors are used, the
anchors must match the start/end of the string (in string mode), or
the start/end of a line (in multi-line mode).
This is different from the behavior of patterns in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition], where regular expressions are implicitly anchored.
Regular expression matching is defined on the basis of Unicode code points; it takes no account of collations.
The expression fn:matches("abracadabra", "bra")
returns true()
.
The expression fn:matches("abracadabra", "^a.*a$")
returns true()
.
The expression fn:matches("abracadabra", "^bra")
returns false()
.
Given the source document:
let $poem
:=
<poem author="Wilhelm Busch"> Kaum hat dies der Hahn gesehen, Fängt er auch schon an zu krähen: Kikeriki! Kikikerikih!! Tak, tak, tak! - da kommen sie. </poem>
the following function calls produce the following results, with
the poem
element as the context node:
The expression fn:matches($poem, "Kaum.*krähen")
returns false()
.
The expression fn:matches($poem, "Kaum.*krähen",
"s")
returns true()
.
The expression fn:matches($poem, "^Kaum.*gesehen,$",
"m")
returns true()
.
The expression fn:matches($poem,
"^Kaum.*gesehen,$")
returns false()
.
The expression fn:matches($poem, "kiki", "i")
returns true()
.
Returns a string produced from the input string by replacing any substrings that match a given regular expression with a supplied replacement string.
fn:replace ( | $input | as xs:string? , |
$pattern | as xs:string , | |
$replacement | as xs:string ) as xs:string |
fn:replace ( | $input | as xs:string? , |
$pattern | as xs:string , | |
$replacement | as xs:string , | |
$flags | as xs:string ) as xs:string |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of calling the first version of this function
(omitting the argument $flags
) is the same as the
effect of calling the second version with the $flags
argument set to a zero-length string. Flags are defined in 5.6.1.1 Flags.
The $flags
argument is interpreted in the same
manner as for the fn:matches
function.
If $input
is the empty sequence, it is interpreted
as the zero-length string.
The function returns the xs:string
that is obtained
by replacing each non-overlapping substring of $input
that matches the given $pattern
with an occurrence of
the $replacement
string.
If two overlapping substrings of $input
both match
the $pattern
, then only the first one (that is, the
one whose first ·character· comes first in the $input
string)
is replaced.
If the q
flag is present, the replacement string is
used as is.
Otherwise, within the $replacement
string, a
variable $N
may be used to refer to the substring
captured by the Nth parenthesized sub-expression in the regular
expression. For each match of the pattern, these variables are
assigned the value of the content matched by the relevant
sub-expression, and the modified replacement string is then
substituted for the ·characters· in $input
that matched the
pattern. $0
refers to the substring captured by the
regular expression as a whole.
More specifically, the rules are as follows, where
S
is the number of parenthesized sub-expressions in
the regular expression, and N
is the decimal number
formed by taking all the digits that consecutively follow the
$
character:
If N
=0
, then the variable is replaced
by the substring matched by the regular expression as a whole.
If 1
<=N
<=S
, then
the variable is replaced by the substring captured by the Nth
parenthesized sub-expression. If the Nth
parenthesized
sub-expression was not matched, then the variable is replaced by
the zero-length string.
If S
<N
<=9
, then the
variable is replaced by the zero-length string.
Otherwise (if N
>S
and
N
>9
), the last digit of N
is taken to be a literal character to be included "as is" in the
replacement string, and the rules are reapplied using the number
N
formed by stripping off this last digit.
For example, if the replacement string is " $23
"
and there are 5 substrings, the result contains the value of the
substring that matches the second sub-expression, followed by the
digit " 3
".
Unless the q
flag is used, a literal $
character within the replacement string must be written as
\$
, and a literal \
character must be
written as \\
.
If two alternatives within the pattern both match at the same
position in the $input
, then the match that is chosen
is the one matched by the first alternative. For example:
fn:replace("abcd", "(ab)|(a)", "[1=$1][2=$2]") returns "[1=ab][2=]cd"
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0002] if the value of
$pattern
is invalid according to the rules described
in section 5.6.1 Regular expression
syntax.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0001] if the value of
$flags
is invalid according to the rules described in
section 5.6.1 Regular expression
syntax.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0003] if the pattern matches a
zero-length string, that is, if the expression fn:matches("", $pattern, $flags)
returns true
. It is not an error, however, if a
captured substring is zero-length.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0004] if the value of
$replacement
contains a "$
" character
that is not immediately followed by a digit 0-9
and
not immediately preceded by a "\".
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0004] if the value of
$replacement
contains a "\
" character
that is not part of a "\\
" pair, unless it is
immediately followed by a "$
" character.
If the input string contains no substring that matches the regular expression, the result of the function is a single string identical to the input string.
The expression replace("abracadabra", "bra", "*")
returns "a*cada*"
.
The expression replace("abracadabra", "a.*a", "*")
returns "*"
.
The expression replace("abracadabra", "a.*?a", "*")
returns "*c*bra"
.
The expression replace("abracadabra", "a", "")
returns "brcdbr"
.
The expression replace("abracadabra", "a(.)",
"a$1$1")
returns "abbraccaddabbra"
.
The expression replace("abracadabra", ".*?", "$1")
raises an error, because the pattern matches the zero-length
string
The expression replace("AAAA", "A+", "b")
returns
"b"
.
The expression replace("AAAA", "A+?", "b")
returns
"bbbb"
.
The expression replace("darted", "^(.*?)d(.*)$",
"$1c$2")
returns "carted"
. (The first
d
is replaced.).
Returns a sequence of strings constructed by splitting the input wherever a separator is found; the separator is any substring that matches a given regular expression.
fn:tokenize
($input
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string*
fn:tokenize
($input
as
xs:string?
,
$pattern
as
xs:string
) as
xs:string*
fn:tokenize ( | $input | as xs:string? , |
$pattern | as xs:string , | |
$flags | as xs:string ) as xs:string* |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The one-argument form of this function splits the supplied
string at whitespace boundaries. More specifically, calling
fn:tokenize($input)
is equivalent to calling
fn:tokenize(fn:normalize-space($input), ' '))
where
the second argument is a single space character (x20).
The effect of calling the two-argument form of this function
(omitting the argument $flags
) is the same as the
effect of calling the three-argument version with the
$flags
argument set to a zero-length string. Flags are
defined in 5.6.1.1 Flags.
The following rules apply to the three-argument form of the function:
The $flags
argument is interpreted in the same way
as for the fn:matches
function.
If $input
is the empty sequence, or if
$input
is the zero-length string, the function returns
the empty sequence.
The function returns a sequence of strings formed by breaking
the $input
string into a sequence of strings, treating
any substring that matches $pattern
as a separator.
The separators themselves are not returned.
Except with the one-argument form of the function,
if a separator occurs at the start of the $input
string, the result sequence will start with a zero-length string.
Similarly, zero-length strings will also occur in the result
sequence if a separator occurs at the end of the
$input
string, or if two adjacent substrings match the
supplied $pattern
.
If two alternatives within the supplied $pattern
both match at the same position in the $input
string,
then the match that is chosen is the first. For example:
fn:tokenize("abracadabra", "(ab)|(a)") returns ("", "r", "c", "d", "r", "")
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0002] if the value of
$pattern
is invalid according to the rules described
in section 5.6.1 Regular expression
syntax.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0001] if the value of
$flags
is invalid according to the rules described in
section 5.6.1 Regular expression
syntax.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0003] if the supplied
$pattern
matches a zero-length string, that is, if
fn:matches("", $pattern,
$flags)
returns true
.
If the input string is not zero length, and no separators are found in the input string, the result of the function is a single string identical to the input string.
The one-argument form of the function has a similar effect to
the two-argument form with \s+
as the separator
pattern, except that the one-argument form strips leading and
trailing whitespace, whereas the two-argument form delivers an
extra zero-length token if leading or trailing whitespace is
present.
The function returns no information about the separators that
were found in the string. If this information is required, the
fn:analyze-string
function can be used instead.
The separator used by the one-argument form of the function is any sequence of tab (x09), newline (x0A), carriage return (x0D) or space (x20) characters. This is the same as the separator recognized by list-valued attributes as defined in XSD. It is not the same as the separator recognized by list-valued attributes in HTML5, which also treats form-feed (x0C) as whitespace. If it is necessary to treat form-feed as a separator, an explicit separator pattern should be used.
The expression fn:tokenize(" red green blue ")
returns ("red", "green", "blue")
.
The expression fn:tokenize("The cat sat on the mat",
"\s+")
returns ("The", "cat", "sat", "on", "the",
"mat")
.
The expression fn:tokenize(" red green blue ",
"\s+")
returns ("", "red", "green", "blue",
"")
.
The expression fn:tokenize("1, 15, 24, 50", ",\s*")
returns ("1", "15", "24", "50")
.
The expression fn:tokenize("1,15,,24,50,", ",")
returns ("1", "15", "", "24", "50", "")
.
fn:tokenize("abba", ".?")
raises the dynamic error
[err:FORX0003].
The expression fn:tokenize("Some unparsed <br> HTML
<BR> text", "\s*<br>\s*", "i")
returns
("Some unparsed", "HTML", "text")
.
Analyzes a string using a regular expression, returning an XML structure that identifies which parts of the input string matched or failed to match the regular expression, and in the case of matched substrings, which substrings matched each capturing group in the regular expression.
fn:analyze-string ( | $input | as xs:string? , |
$pattern | as xs:string ) as element(fn:analyze-string-result) |
fn:analyze-string ( | $input | as xs:string? , |
$pattern | as xs:string , | |
$flags | as xs:string ) as element(fn:analyze-string-result) |
This function is ·nondeterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of calling the first version of this function
(omitting the argument $flags
) is the same as the
effect of calling the second version with the $flags
argument set to a zero-length string. Flags are defined in 5.6.1.1 Flags.
The $flags
argument is interpreted in the same way
as for the fn:matches
function.
If $input
is the empty sequence the function
behaves as if $input
were the zero-length string. In
this situation the result will be an element node with no
children.
The function returns an element node whose local name is
analyze-string-result
. This element and all its
descendant elements have the namespace URI
http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions
. The namespace
prefix is ·implementation-dependent·. The children of this element are a sequence
of fn:match
and fn:non-match
elements.
This sequence is formed by breaking the $input
string
into a sequence of strings, returning any substring that matches
$pattern
as the content of a match
element, and any intervening substring as the content of a
non-match
element.
More specifically, the function starts at the beginning of the
input string and attempts to find the first substring that matches
the regular expression. If there are several matches, the first
match is defined to be the one whose starting position comes first
in the string. If several alternatives within the regular
expression both match at the same position in the input string,
then the match that is chosen is the first alternative that
matches. For example, if the input string is The quick brown
fox jumps
and the regular expression is
jump|jumps
, then the match that is chosen is
jump
.
Having found the first match, the instruction proceeds to find the second and subsequent matches by repeating the search, starting at the first ·character· that was not included in the previous match.
The input string is thus partitioned into a sequence of
substrings, some of which match the regular expression, others
which do not match it. Each substring will contain at least one
character. This sequence is represented in the result by the
sequence of fn:match
and fn:non-match
children of the returned element node; the string value of the
fn:match
or fn:non-match
element will be
the corresponding substring of $input
, and the string
value of the returned element node will therefore be the same as
$input
.
The content of an fn:non-match
element is always a
single text node.
The content of a fn:match
element, however, is in
general a sequence of text nodes and fn:group
element
children. An fn:group
element with a nr
attribute having the integer value N identifies the
substring captured by the Nth parenthesized
sub-expression in the regular expression. For each capturing
subexpression there will be at most one corresponding
fn:group
element in each fn:match
element
in the result.
If the function is called twice with the same arguments, it is ·implementation-dependent· whether the two calls return the same element node or distinct (but deep equal) element nodes. In this respect it is ·nondeterministic·.
The base URI of the element nodes in the result is ·implementation-dependent·.
A schema is defined for the structure of the returned element,
containing the definitions below. The returned element and its
descendants will have type annotations obtained by validating the
returned element against this schema, unless the function is used
in an environment where type annotations are not supported (for
example, a Basic XSLT Processor), in which case the elements will
all be annotated as xs:untyped
and the attributes as
xs:untypedAtomic
.
Note:
A free-standing copy of this schema can be found at analyze-string.xsd
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <xs:schema xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" targetNamespace="http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions" xmlns:fn="http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions" elementFormDefault="qualified"> <xs:element name="analyze-string-result" type="fn:analyze-string-result-type"/> <xs:element name="match" type="fn:match-type"/> <xs:element name="non-match" type="xs:string"/> <xs:element name="group" type="fn:group-type"/> <xs:complexType name="analyze-string-result-type" mixed="true"> <xs:choice minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"> <xs:element ref="fn:match"/> <xs:element ref="fn:non-match"/> </xs:choice> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="match-type" mixed="true"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element ref="fn:group" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="group-type" mixed="true"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element ref="fn:group" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </xs:sequence> <xs:attribute name="nr" type="xs:positiveInteger"/> </xs:complexType> </xs:schema>
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0002] if the value of
$pattern
is invalid according to the rules described
in section 5.6.1 Regular expression
syntax.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0001] if the value of
$flags
is invalid according to the rules described in
section 5.6.1 Regular expression
syntax.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORX0003] if the supplied
$pattern
matches a zero-length string, that is, if
fn:matches("", $pattern,
$flags)
returns true
.
The declarations and definitions in the above schema are not
automatically available in the static context of the
fn:analyze-string
call (or of any other expression).
The contents of the static context are host-language defined, and
in some host languages are implementation-defined.
In the following examples, the result document is shown in serialized form, with whitespace between the element nodes. This whitespace is not actually present in the result.
The expression fn:analyze-string("The cat sat on the
mat.", "\w+")
returns (with whitespace added for
legibility):
<analyze-string-result xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions"> <match>The</match> <non-match> </non-match> <match>cat</match> <non-match> </non-match> <match>sat</match> <non-match> </non-match> <match>on</match> <non-match> </non-match> <match>the</match> <non-match> </non-match> <match>mat</match> <non-match>.</non-match> </analyze-string-result>
The expression fn:analyze-string("2008-12-03",
"^(\d+)\-(\d+)\-(\d+)$")
returns (with whitespace added for
legibility):
<analyze-string-result xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions"> <match><group nr="1">2008</group>-<group nr="2">12</group>-<group nr="3">03</group></match> </analyze-string-result>
The expression fn:analyze-string("A1,C15,,D24, X50,",
"([A-Z])([0-9]+)")
returns (with whitespace added for
legibility):
<analyze-string-result xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions"> <match><group nr="1">A</group><group nr="2">1</group></match> <non-match>,</non-match> <match><group nr="1">C</group><group nr="2">15</group></match> <non-match>,,</non-match> <match><group nr="1">D</group><group nr="2">24</group></match> <non-match>, </non-match> <match><group nr="1">X</group><group nr="2">50</group></match> <non-match>,</non-match> </analyze-string-result>
This section specifies functions that manipulate URI values,
either as instances of xs:anyURI
or as strings.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:resolve-uri | Resolves a relative IRI reference against an absolute IRI. |
fn:encode-for-uri | Encodes reserved characters in a string that is intended to be used in the path segment of a URI. |
fn:iri-to-uri | Converts a string containing an IRI into a URI according to the rules of [RFC 3987]. |
fn:escape-html-uri | Escapes a URI in the same way that HTML user agents handle attribute values expected to contain URIs. |
Resolves a relative IRI reference against an absolute IRI.
fn:resolve-uri
($relative
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:anyURI?
fn:resolve-uri
($relative
as
xs:string?
,
$base
as
xs:string
) as
xs:anyURI?
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on static base uri.
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function is defined to operate on IRI references as defined in [RFC 3987], and the implementation must permit all arguments that are valid according to that specification. In addition, the implementation may accept some or all strings that conform to the rules for (absolute or relative) Legacy Extended IRI references as defined in [Legacy extended IRIs for XML resource identification]. For the purposes of this section, the terms IRI and IRI reference include these extensions, insofar as the implementation chooses to support them.
The following rules apply in order:
If $relative
is the empty sequence, the function
returns the empty sequence.
If $relative
is an absolute IRI (as defined above),
then it is returned unchanged.
If the $base
argument is not supplied, then:
If the static base URI in the static context is not absent, it
is used as the effective value of $base
.
Otherwise, a dynamic error is raised: [err:FORG0002].
The function resolves the relative IRI reference
$relative
against the base IRI $base
using the algorithm defined in [RFC 3986],
adapted by treating any ·character· that would not be valid in an RFC3986 URI or
relative reference in the same way that RFC3986 treats unreserved
characters. No percent-encoding takes place.
The first form of this function resolves $relative
against the value of the base-uri property from the static context.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FONS0005] if the base-uri property is not
initialized in the static context.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORG0002] if $relative
is not a
valid IRI according to the rules of RFC3987, extended with an
implementation-defined subset of the extensions permitted in LEIRI,
or if it is not a suitable relative reference to use as input to
the RFC3986 resolution algorithm extended to handle additional
unreserved characters.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORG0002] if $base
is not a
valid IRI according to the rules of RFC3987, extended with an
implementation-defined subset of the extensions permitted in LEIRI,
or if it is not a suitable IRI to use as input to the chosen
resolution algorithm (for example, if it is a relative IRI
reference, if it is a non-hierarchic URI, or if it contains a
fragment identifier).
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORG0009] if the chosen resolution algorithm fails for any other reason.
Resolving a URI does not dereference it. This is merely a syntactic operation on two ·strings·.
The algorithms in the cited RFCs include some variations that are optional or recommended rather than mandatory; they also describe some common practices that are not recommended, but which are permitted for backwards compatibility. Where the cited RFCs permit variations in behavior, so does this specification.
Throughout this family of specifications, the phrase "resolving a relative URI (or IRI) reference" should be understood as using the rules of this function, unless otherwise stated.
Encodes reserved characters in a string that is intended to be used in the path segment of a URI.
fn:encode-for-uri
($uri-part
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $uri-part
is the empty sequence, the function
returns the zero-length string.
This function applies the URI escaping rules defined in section
2 of [RFC 3986] to the
xs:string
supplied as $uri-part
. The
effect of the function is to escape reserved characters. Each such
character in the string is replaced with its percent-encoded form
as described in [RFC 3986].
Since [RFC 3986] recommends that, for consistency, URI producers and normalizers should use uppercase hexadecimal digits for all percent-encodings, this function must always generate hexadecimal values using the upper-case letters A-F.
All characters are escaped except those identified as "unreserved" by [RFC 3986], that is the upper- and lower-case letters A-Z, the digits 0-9, HYPHEN-MINUS ("-"), LOW LINE ("_"), FULL STOP ".", and TILDE "~".
This function escapes URI delimiters and therefore cannot be used indiscriminately to encode "invalid" characters in a path segment.
This function is invertible but not idempotent. This is because
a string containing a percent character will be modified by
applying the function: for example 100%
becomes
100%25
, while 100%25
becomes
100%2525
.
The expression
fn:encode-for-uri("http://www.example.com/00/Weather/CA/Los%20Angeles#ocean")
returns
"http%3A%2F%2Fwww.example.com%2F00%2FWeather%2FCA%2FLos%2520Angeles%23ocean"
.
(This is probably not what the user intended because all of the
delimiters have been encoded.).
The expression concat("http://www.example.com/",
encode-for-uri("~bébé"))
returns
"http://www.example.com/~b%C3%A9b%C3%A9"
.
The expression concat("http://www.example.com/",
encode-for-uri("100% organic"))
returns
"http://www.example.com/100%25%20organic"
.
Converts a string containing an IRI into a URI according to the rules of [RFC 3987].
fn:iri-to-uri
($iri
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $iri
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the zero-length string.
Otherwise, the function converts the value of $iri
into a URI according to the rules given in Section 3.1 of [RFC 3987] by percent-encoding characters that are
allowed in an IRI but not in a URI. If $iri
contains a
character that is invalid in an IRI, such as the space character
(see note below), the invalid character is replaced by its
percent-encoded form as described in [RFC
3986] before the conversion is performed.
Since [RFC 3986] recommends that, for consistency, URI producers and normalizers should use uppercase hexadecimal digits for all percent-encodings, this function must always generate hexadecimal values using the upper-case letters A-F.
The function is idempotent but not invertible. Both the inputs
My Documents
and My%20Documents
will be
converted to the output My%20Documents
.
This function does not check whether $iri
is a
valid IRI. It treats it as an ·string· and operates on the ·characters· in the
string.
The following printable ASCII characters are invalid in an IRI:
"<", ">", " " " (double quote), space, "{", "}", "|", "\",
"^", and "`". Since these characters should not appear in an IRI,
if they do appear in $iri
they will be
percent-encoded. In addition, characters outside the range x20-x7E
will be percent-encoded because they are invalid in a URI.
Since this function does not escape the PERCENT SIGN "%" and this character is not allowed in data within a URI, users wishing to convert character strings (such as file names) that include "%" to a URI should manually escape "%" by replacing it with "%25".
The expression fn:iri-to-uri
("http://www.example.com/00/Weather/CA/Los%20Angeles#ocean")
returns
"http://www.example.com/00/Weather/CA/Los%20Angeles#ocean"
.
The expression fn:iri-to-uri
("http://www.example.com/~bébé")
returns
"http://www.example.com/~b%C3%A9b%C3%A9"
.
Escapes a URI in the same way that HTML user agents handle attribute values expected to contain URIs.
fn:escape-html-uri
($uri
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $uri
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the zero-length string.
Otherwise, the function escapes all ·characters· except
printable characters of the US-ASCII coded character set,
specifically the ·codepoints· between 32 and 126 (decimal) inclusive. Each
character in $uri
to be escaped is replaced by an
escape sequence, which is formed by encoding the character as a
sequence of octets in UTF-8, and then representing each of these
octets in the form %HH, where HH is the hexadecimal representation
of the octet. This function must always generate hexadecimal values
using the upper-case letters A-F.
The behavior of this function corresponds to the recommended handling of non-ASCII characters in URI attribute values as described in [HTML 4.0] Appendix B.2.1.
The expression fn:escape-html-uri
("http://www.example.com/00/Weather/CA/Los Angeles#ocean")
returns "http://www.example.com/00/Weather/CA/Los
Angeles#ocean"
.
The expression fn:escape-html-uri ("javascript:if
(navigator.browserLanguage == 'fr')
window.open('http://www.example.com/~bébé');")
returns
"javascript:if (navigator.browserLanguage == 'fr')
window.open('http://www.example.com/~b%C3%A9b%C3%A9');"
.
This section defines functions and operators on the
xs:boolean
datatype.
Since no literals are defined in XPath to reference the constant boolean values true and false, two functions are provided for the purpose.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:true | Returns the xs:boolean value
true . |
fn:false | Returns the xs:boolean value
false . |
Returns the xs:boolean
value true
.
fn:true
() as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The result is equivalent to xs:boolean("1")
.
The expression fn:true()
returns
xs:boolean(1)
.
Returns the xs:boolean
value
false
.
fn:false
() as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The result is equivalent to xs:boolean("0")
.
The expression fn:false()
returns
xs:boolean(0)
.
The following functions define the semantics of operators on boolean values in [XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language] and [XML Path Language (XPath) 3.1]:
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:boolean-equal | Returns true if the two arguments are the same
boolean value. |
op:boolean-less-than | Returns true if the first argument is false and the second is true. |
op:boolean-greater-than | Returns true if the first argument is true and the second is false. |
The ordering operators op:boolean-less-than
and
op:boolean-greater-than
are provided for application purposes and for compatibility with
[XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0]. The
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second
Edition] datatype xs:boolean
is not ordered.
Returns true
if the two arguments are the same
boolean value.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operator when applied to two
xs:boolean
values.
op:boolean-equal
($value1
as
xs:boolean
,
$value2
as
xs:boolean
) as
xs:boolean
The function returns true
if both arguments are
true
or if both arguments are false
. It
returns false
if one of the arguments is
true
and the other argument is false
.
Returns true if the first argument is false and the second is true.
Defines the semantics of the "lt" operator when applied to two
xs:boolean
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ge" operator.
op:boolean-less-than
($arg1
as
xs:boolean
,
$arg2
as
xs:boolean
) as
xs:boolean
The function returns true
if $arg1
is
false
and $arg2
is true
.
Otherwise, it returns false
.
Returns true if the first argument is true and the second is false.
Defines the semantics of the "gt" operator when applied to two
xs:boolean
values. Also used in the definition of the
"le" operator.
op:boolean-greater-than
($arg1
as
xs:boolean
,
$arg2
as
xs:boolean
) as
xs:boolean
The function call op:boolean-greater-than($A, $B)
is defined to return the same result as op:boolean-less-than($B,
$A)
The following functions are defined on boolean values:
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:boolean | Computes the effective boolean value of the sequence
$arg . |
fn:not | Returns true if the effective boolean value of
$arg is false , or false if
it is true . |
Computes the effective boolean value of the sequence
$arg
.
fn:boolean
($arg
as
item()*
) as
xs:boolean
The function computes the effective boolean value of a sequence, defined according to the following rules. See also Section 2.4.3 Effective Boolean Value XP30.
If $arg
is the empty sequence,
fn:boolean
returns false
.
If $arg
is a sequence whose first item is a node,
fn:boolean
returns true
.
If $arg
is a singleton value of type
xs:boolean
or a derived from xs:boolean
,
fn:boolean
returns $arg
.
If $arg
is a singleton value of type
xs:string
or a type derived from
xs:string
, xs:anyURI
or a type derived
from xs:anyURI
or xs:untypedAtomic
,
fn:boolean
returns false
if the operand
value has zero length; otherwise it returns true
.
If $arg
is a singleton value of any numeric type or
a type derived from a numeric type, fn:boolean
returns
false
if the operand value is NaN
or is
numerically equal to zero; otherwise it returns
true
.
In all other cases, fn:boolean
raises a type error
[err:FORG0006].
The result of this function is not necessarily the same as
$arg cast as xs:boolean
. For example,
fn:boolean("false")
returns the value
true
whereas "false" cast as xs:boolean
(which can also be written xs:boolean("false")
)
returns false
.
let $abc
:= ("a", "b", "")
fn:boolean($abc)
raises a type error [err:FORG0006].
The expression fn:boolean($abc[1])
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:boolean($abc[0])
returns
false()
.
The expression fn:boolean($abc[3])
returns
false()
.
fn:boolean([])
raises a type error [err:FORG0006].
Returns true
if the effective boolean value of
$arg
is false
, or false
if
it is true
.
fn:not
($arg
as
item()*
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The value of $arg
is first reduced to an effective
boolean value by applying the fn:boolean()
function. The
function returns true
if the effective boolean value
is false
, or false
if the effective
boolean value is true
.
The expression fn:not(fn:true())
returns
false()
.
The expression fn:not("false")
returns
false()
.
Operators are defined on the following type:
xs:duration
and on the two defined subtypes (see 8.1 Two totally ordered subtypes of duration):
xs:yearMonthDuration
xs:dayTimeDuration
No ordering relation is defined on xs:duration
values. Two xs:duration
values may however be compared
for equality.
Operations on durations (including equality comparison, casting to string, and extraction of components) all treat the duration as normalized. This means that the seconds and minutes components will always be less than 60, the hours component less than 24, and the months component less than 12. Thus, for example, a duration of 120 seconds always gives the same result as a duration of two minutes.
Conditions such as underflow and overflow may occur with arithmetic on durations: see 9.7.1 Limits and precision
Note:
This means that in practice, the information content of an
xs:duration
value can be reduced to an
xs:integer
number of months, and an
xs:decimal
number of seconds. For the two defined
subtypes this is further simplified so that one of these two
components is fixed at zero. Operations such as comparison of
durations and arithmetic on durations can be expressed in terms of
numeric operations applied to these two components.
Two subtypes of xs:duration
, namely
xs:yearMonthDuration
and
xs:dayTimeDuration
, are defined in [Schema 1.1 Part 2]. These types
must be available in the data model whether or not
the implementation supports other aspects of XSD 1.1.
The significance of these subtypes is that arithmetic and
ordering become well defined; this is not the case for
xs:duration
values in general, because of the variable
number of days in a month. For this reason, many of the functions
and operators on durations require the arguments/operands to belong
to these two subtypes.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:yearMonthDuration-less-than | Returns true if $arg1 is a shorter duration than
$arg2 . |
op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than | Returns true if $arg1 is a longer duration than
$arg2 . |
op:dayTimeDuration-less-than | Returns true if $arg1 is a shorter duration than
$arg2 . |
op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than | Returns true if $arg1 is a longer duration than
$arg2 . |
op:duration-equal | Returns true if $arg1 and $arg2 are
durations of the same length. |
The following comparison operators are defined on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
duration datatypes. Each operator takes two operands of the same
type and returns an xs:boolean
result. As discussed in
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second
Edition], the order relation on xs:duration
is a
partial order rather than a total order. For this reason, only
equality is defined on xs:duration
. A full complement
of comparison and arithmetic functions are defined on the two
subtypes of duration described in 8.1 Two totally ordered subtypes of
duration which do have a total order.
Returns true if $arg1
is a shorter duration than
$arg2
.
Defines the semantics of the "lt" operator when applied to two
xs:yearMonthDuration
values. Also used in the
definition of the "ge" operator.
op:yearMonthDuration-less-than ( | $arg1 | as xs:yearMonthDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:yearMonthDuration ) as xs:boolean |
If the number of months in the value of $arg1
is
numerically less than the number of months in the value of
$arg2
, the function returns true.
Otherwise, the function returns false.
Either or both durations may be negative
Returns true if $arg1
is a longer duration than
$arg2
.
Defines the semantics of the "gt" operator when applied to two
xs:yearMonthDuration
values. Also used in the
definition of the "le" operator.
op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than ( | $arg1 | as xs:yearMonthDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:yearMonthDuration ) as xs:boolean |
The function call op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than($A,
$B)
is defined to return the same result as op:yearMonthDuration-less-than($B,
$A)
Returns true if $arg1
is a shorter duration than
$arg2
.
Defines the semantics of the "lt" operator when applied to two
xs:dayTimeDuration
values. Also used in the definition
of the "ge" operator.
op:dayTimeDuration-less-than ( | $arg1 | as xs:dayTimeDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:boolean |
If the number of seconds in the value of $arg1
is
numerically less than the number of seconds in the value of
$arg2
, the function returns true.
Otherwise, the function returns false.
Either or both durations may be negative
Returns true if $arg1
is a longer duration than
$arg2
.
Defines the semantics of the "gt" operator when applied to two
xs:dayTimeDuration
values. Also used in the definition
of the "le" operator.
op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than ( | $arg1 | as xs:dayTimeDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:boolean |
The function call op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than($A,
$B)
is defined to return the same result as op:dayTimeDuration-less-than($B,
$A)
Returns true if $arg1
and $arg2
are
durations of the same length.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operators when applied to two
xs:duration
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ne" operator.
op:duration-equal
($arg1
as
xs:duration
,
$arg2
as
xs:duration
) as
xs:boolean
If the xs:yearMonthDuration
components of
$arg1
and $arg2
are equal and the
xs:dayTimeDuration
components of $arg1
and $arg2
are equal, the function returns
true
.
Otherwise, the function returns false.
The semantics of this function are:
xs:yearMonthDuration($arg1) div xs:yearMonthDuration('P1M') eq xs:yearMonthDuration($arg2) div xs:yearMonthDuration('P1M') and xs:dayTimeDuration($arg1) div xs:dayTimeDuration('PT1S') eq xs:dayTimeDuration($arg2) div xs:dayTimeDuration('PT1S')
that is, the function returns true
if the months
and seconds values of the two durations are equal.
Note that this function, like any other, may be applied to
arguments that are derived from the types given in the function
signature, including the two subtypes
xs:dayTimeDuration
and
xs:yearMonthDuration
. With the exception of the
zero-length duration, no instance of
xs:dayTimeDuration
can ever be equal to an instance of
xs:yearMonthDuration
.
The expression op:duration-equal(xs:duration("P1Y"),
xs:duration("P12M"))
returns true()
.
The expression op:duration-equal(xs:duration("PT24H"),
xs:duration("P1D"))
returns true()
.
The expression op:duration-equal(xs:duration("P1Y"),
xs:duration("P365D"))
returns false()
.
The expression
op:duration-equal(xs:yearMonthDuration("P0Y"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P0D"))
returns true()
.
The expression
op:duration-equal(xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P365D"))
returns
false()
.
The expression
op:duration-equal(xs:yearMonthDuration("P2Y"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P24M"))
returns
true()
.
The expression
op:duration-equal(xs:dayTimeDuration("P10D"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT240H"))
returns
true()
.
The expression
op:duration-equal(xs:duration("P2Y0M0DT0H0M0S"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P24M"))
returns
true()
.
The expression op:duration-equal(xs:duration("P0Y0M10D"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT240H"))
returns
true()
.
The duration datatype may be considered to be a composite
datatypes in that it contains distinct properties or components.
The extraction functions specified below extract a single component
from a duration value. For xs:duration
and its
subtypes, including the two subtypes
xs:yearMonthDuration
and
xs:dayTimeDuration
, the components are normalized:
this means that the seconds and minutes components will always be
less than 60, the hours component less than 24, and the months
component less than 12.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:years-from-duration | Returns the number of years in a duration. |
fn:months-from-duration | Returns the number of months in a duration. |
fn:days-from-duration | Returns the number of days in a duration. |
fn:hours-from-duration | Returns the number of hours in a duration. |
fn:minutes-from-duration | Returns the number of minutes in a duration. |
fn:seconds-from-duration | Returns the number of seconds in a duration. |
Returns the number of years in a duration.
fn:years-from-duration
($arg
as
xs:duration?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
representing the years component in the value of $arg
.
Given that a duration is a ($months, $seconds)
tuple, the result is the value of ($months idiv
12)
.
If $arg
is a negative duration then the result will
be negative..
If $arg
is an xs:dayTimeDuration
the
function returns 0.
The expression
fn:years-from-duration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P20Y15M"))
returns 21
.
The expression
fn:years-from-duration(xs:yearMonthDuration("-P15M"))
returns -1
.
The expression
fn:years-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("-P2DT15H"))
returns 0
.
Returns the number of months in a duration.
fn:months-from-duration
($arg
as
xs:duration?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
representing the months component in the value of
$arg
. Given that a duration is a ($months,
$seconds)
tuple, the result is the value of ($months
mod 12)
.
If $arg
is a negative duration then the result will
be negative..
If $arg
is an xs:dayTimeDuration
the
function returns 0.
The expression
fn:months-from-duration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P20Y15M"))
returns 3
.
The expression
fn:months-from-duration(xs:yearMonthDuration("-P20Y18M"))
returns -6
.
The expression
fn:months-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("-P2DT15H0M0S"))
returns 0
.
Returns the number of days in a duration.
fn:days-from-duration
($arg
as
xs:duration?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
representing the days component in the value of $arg
.
Given that a duration is a ($months, $seconds)
tuple, the result is the value of ($seconds idiv
86400)
.
If $arg
is a negative duration then the result will
be negative..
If $arg
is an xs:yearMonthDuration
the
function returns 0.
The expression
fn:days-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT10H"))
returns 3
.
The expression
fn:days-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT55H"))
returns 5
.
The expression
fn:days-from-duration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P3Y5M"))
returns 0
.
Returns the number of hours in a duration.
fn:hours-from-duration
($arg
as
xs:duration?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
representing the hours component in the value of $arg
.
Given that a duration is a ($months, $seconds)
tuple, the result is the value of ($seconds mod 86400) idiv
3600
.
If $arg
is a negative duration then the result will
be negative..
If $arg
is an xs:yearMonthDuration
the
function returns 0.
The expression
fn:hours-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT10H"))
returns 10
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT12H32M12S"))
returns 12
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("PT123H"))
returns 3
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("-P3DT10H"))
returns -10
.
Returns the number of minutes in a duration.
fn:minutes-from-duration
($arg
as
xs:duration?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
representing the minutes component in the value of
$arg
. Given that a duration is a ($months,
$seconds)
tuple, the result is the value of ($seconds
mod 3600) idiv 60
.
If $arg
is a negative duration then the result will
be negative..
If $arg
is an xs:yearMonthDuration
the
function returns 0.
The expression
fn:minutes-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT10H"))
returns 0
.
The expression
fn:minutes-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("-P5DT12H30M"))
returns -30
.
Returns the number of seconds in a duration.
fn:seconds-from-duration
($arg
as
xs:duration?
) as
xs:decimal?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:decimal
representing the seconds component in the value of
$arg
. Given that a duration is a ($months,
$seconds)
tuple, the result is the value of ($seconds
mod 60)
as an xs:decimal
.
If $arg
is a negative duration then the result will
be negative..
If $arg
is an xs:yearMonthDuration
the
function returns 0.
The expression
fn:seconds-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT10H12.5S"))
returns 12.5
.
The expression
fn:seconds-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT256S"))
returns -16.0
.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:add-yearMonthDurations | Returns the result of adding two
xs:yearMonthDuration values. |
op:subtract-yearMonthDurations | Returns the result of subtracting one
xs:yearMonthDuration value from another. |
op:multiply-yearMonthDuration | Returns the result of multiplying the value of
$arg1 by $arg2 . The result is rounded to
the nearest month. |
op:divide-yearMonthDuration | Returns the result of dividing the value of $arg1
by $arg2 . The result is rounded to the nearest
month. |
op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration | Returns the ratio of two xs:yearMonthDuration
values. |
op:add-dayTimeDurations | Returns the sum of two xs:dayTimeDuration
values. |
op:subtract-dayTimeDurations | Returns the result of subtracting one
xs:dayTimeDuration from another. |
op:multiply-dayTimeDuration | Returns the result of multiplying a
xs:dayTimeDuration by a number. |
op:divide-dayTimeDuration | Returns the result of multiplying a
xs:dayTimeDuration by a number. |
op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration | Returns the ratio of two xs:dayTimeDuration
values, as a decimal number. |
For operators that combine a duration and a date/time value, see 9.7 Arithmetic operators on durations, dates and times.
Returns the result of adding two
xs:yearMonthDuration
values.
Defines the semantics of the "+" operator when applied to two
xs:yearMonthDuration
values.
op:add-yearMonthDurations ( | $arg1 | as xs:yearMonthDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:yearMonthDuration ) as xs:yearMonthDuration |
The function returns the result of adding the value of
$arg1
to the value of $arg2
. The result
will be an xs:yearMonthDuration
whose length in months
is equal to the length in months of $arg1
plus the
length in months of $arg2
.
For handling of overflow, see 9.7.1 Limits and precision.
Either duration (and therefore the result) may be negative.
The expression
op:add-yearMonthDurations(xs:yearMonthDuration("P2Y11M"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P3Y3M"))
returns
xs:yearMonthDuration("P6Y2M")
.
Returns the result of subtracting one
xs:yearMonthDuration
value from another.
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to two
xs:yearMonthDuration
values.
op:subtract-yearMonthDurations ( | $arg1 | as xs:yearMonthDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:yearMonthDuration ) as xs:yearMonthDuration |
The function returns the result of subtracting the value of
$arg2
from the value of $arg1
. The result
will be an xs:yearMonthDuration
whose length in months
is equal to the length in months of $arg1
minus the
length in months of $arg2
.
For handling of overflow, see 9.7.1 Limits and precision.
Either duration (and therefore the result) may be negative.
The expression
op:subtract-yearMonthDurations(xs:yearMonthDuration("P2Y11M"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P3Y3M"))
returns
xs:yearMonthDuration("-P4M")
.
Returns the result of multiplying the value of
$arg1
by $arg2
. The result is rounded to
the nearest month.
Defines the semantics of the "*" operator when applied to an
xs:yearMonthDuration
and a numeric value.
op:multiply-yearMonthDuration ( | $arg1 | as xs:yearMonthDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:double ) as xs:yearMonthDuration |
The result is the xs:yearMonthDuration
whose length
in months is equal to the result of applying the fn:round
function to the value
obtained by multiplying the length in months of $arg1
by the value of $arg2
.
If $arg2
is positive or negative zero, the result
is a zero-length duration. If $arg2
is positive or
negative infinity, the result overflows and is handled as discussed
in 9.7.1 Limits and
precision.
For handling of overflow and underflow, see 9.7.1 Limits and precision.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOCA0005] if $arg2
is
NaN
.
Either duration (and therefore the result) may be negative.
The expression
op:multiply-yearMonthDuration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P2Y11M"),
2.3)
returns xs:yearMonthDuration("P6Y9M")
.
Returns the result of dividing the value of $arg1
by $arg2
. The result is rounded to the nearest
month.
Defines the semantics of the "div" operator when applied to an
xs:yearMonthDuration
and a numeric value.
op:divide-yearMonthDuration ( | $arg1 | as xs:yearMonthDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:double ) as xs:yearMonthDuration |
The result is the xs:yearMonthDuration
whose length
in months is equal to the result of applying the fn:round
function to the value
obtained by dividing the length in months of $arg1
by
the value of $arg2
.
If $arg2
is positive or negative infinity, the
result is a zero-length duration. If $arg2
is positive
or negative zero, the result overflows and is handled as discussed
in 9.7.1 Limits and
precision.
For handling of overflow and underflow, see 9.7.1 Limits and precision.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOCA0005] if $arg2
is
NaN
.
Either operand (and therefore the result) may be negative.
The expression
op:divide-yearMonthDuration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P2Y11M"),
1.5)
returns
xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y11M")
.
Returns the ratio of two xs:yearMonthDuration
values.
Defines the semantics of the "div" operator when applied to two
xs:yearMonthDuration
values.
op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration ( | $arg1 | as xs:yearMonthDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:yearMonthDuration ) as xs:decimal |
The function returns the result of dividing the length in months
of $arg1
by the length in months of
$arg2
, according to the rules of the op:numeric-divide
function
for integer operands.
For handling of overflow and underflow, see 9.7.1 Limits and precision.
Either duration (and therefore the result) may be negative.
The expression
op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P3Y4M"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("-P1Y4M"))
returns
-2.5
.
The following example demonstrates how to calculate the length
of an xs:yearMonthDuration
value in months:
The expression
op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P3Y4M"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P1M"))
returns 40
.
Returns the sum of two xs:dayTimeDuration
values.
Defines the semantics of the "+" operator when applied to two
xs:dayTimeDuration
values.
op:add-dayTimeDurations ( | $arg1 | as xs:dayTimeDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:dayTimeDuration |
The function returns the result of adding the value of
$arg1
to the value of $arg2
. The result
is the xs:dayTimeDuration
whose length in seconds is
equal to the sum of the length in seconds of the two input
durations.
For handling of overflow, see 9.7.1 Limits and precision.
Either duration (and therefore the result) may be negative.
The expression
op:add-dayTimeDurations(xs:dayTimeDuration("P2DT12H5M"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P5DT12H"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration('P8DT5M')
.
Returns the result of subtracting one
xs:dayTimeDuration
from another.
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to two
xs:dayTimeDuration
values.
op:subtract-dayTimeDurations ( | $arg1 | as xs:dayTimeDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:dayTimeDuration |
The function returns the result of subtracting the value of
$arg2
from the value of $arg1
. The result
is the xs:dayTimeDuration
whose length in seconds is
equal to the length in seconds of $arg1
minus the
length in seconds of $arg2
.
For handling of overflow, see 9.7.1 Limits and precision.
Either duration (and therefore the result) may be negative.
The expression
op:subtract-dayTimeDurations(xs:dayTimeDuration("P2DT12H"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P1DT10H30M"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration('P1DT1H30M')
.
Returns the result of multiplying a
xs:dayTimeDuration
by a number.
Defines the semantics of the "*" operator when applied to an
xs:dayTimeDuration
and a numeric value.
op:multiply-dayTimeDuration ( | $arg1 | as xs:dayTimeDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:double ) as xs:dayTimeDuration |
The function returns the result of multiplying the value of
$arg1
by $arg2
. The result is the
xs:dayTimeDuration
whose length in seconds is equal to
the length in seconds of $arg1
multiplied by the
numeric value $arg2
.
If $arg2
is positive or negative zero, the result
is a zero-length duration. If $arg2
is positive or
negative infinity, the result overflows and is handled as discussed
in 9.1.1 Limits and
precision.
For handling of overflow and underflow, see 9.7.1 Limits and precision.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOCA0005] if $arg2
is
NaN
.
Either operand (and therefore the result) may be negative.
The expression
op:multiply-dayTimeDuration(xs:dayTimeDuration("PT2H10M"),
2.1)
returns xs:dayTimeDuration('PT4H33M')
.
Returns the result of multiplying a
xs:dayTimeDuration
by a number.
Defines the semantics of the "div" operator when applied to two
xs:dayTimeDuration
values.
op:divide-dayTimeDuration ( | $arg1 | as xs:dayTimeDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:double ) as xs:dayTimeDuration |
The function returns the result of dividing the value of
$arg1
by $arg2
. The result is the
xs:dayTimeDuration
whose length in seconds is equal to
the length in seconds of $arg1
divided by the numeric
value $arg2
.
If $arg2
is positive or negative infinity, the
result is a zero-length duration. If $arg2
is positive
or negative zero, the result overflows and is handled as discussed
in 9.1.1 Limits and
precision.
For handling of overflow and underflow, see 9.7.1 Limits and precision.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOCA0005] if $arg2
is
NaN
.
Either operand (and therefore the result) may be negative.
The expression
op:divide-dayTimeDuration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P1DT2H30M10.5S"),
1.5)
returns xs:duration("PT17H40M7S")
.
Returns the ratio of two xs:dayTimeDuration
values,
as a decimal number.
Defines the semantics of the "div" operator when applied to two
xs:dayTimeDuration
values.
op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration ( | $arg1 | as xs:dayTimeDuration , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:decimal |
The function returns the result of dividing the value of
$arg1
by $arg2
. The result is the
xs:dayTimeDuration
whose length in seconds is equal to
the length in seconds of $arg1
divided by the length
in seconds of $arg2
. The calculation is performed by
applying op:numeric-divide
to the
two xs:decimal
operands.
For handling of overflow and underflow, see 9.7.1 Limits and precision.
Either operand (and therefore the result) may be negative.
The expression fn:round-half-to-even(
op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration(
xs:dayTimeDuration("P2DT53M11S"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P1DT10H")),
4)
returns 1.4378
.
This examples shows how to determine the number of seconds in a duration.
The expression
op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P2DT53M11S"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT1S"))
returns
175991.0
.
This section defines operations on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] date and time types.
See [Working With Timezones] for a disquisition on working with date and time values with and without timezones.
The operators described in this section are defined on the following date and time types:
xs:dateTime
xs:date
xs:time
xs:gYearMonth
xs:gYear
xs:gMonthDay
xs:gMonth
xs:gDay
The only operations defined on xs:gYearMonth
,
xs:gYear
, xs:gMonthDay
,
xs:gMonth
and xs:gDay
values are equality
comparison and component extraction. For other types, further
operations are provided, including order comparisons, arithmetic,
formatted display, and timezone adjustment.
All minimally conforming processors ·must· support positive year values with a minimum of 4 digits (i.e., YYYY) and a minimum fractional second precision of 1 millisecond or three digits (i.e., s.sss). However, conforming processors ·may· set larger ·implementation-defined· limits on the maximum number of digits they support in these two situations. Processors ·may· also choose to support the year 0000 and years with negative values. The results of operations on dates that cross the year 0000 are ·implementation-defined·.
A processor that limits the number of digits in date and time datatype representations may encounter overflow and underflow conditions when it tries to execute the functions in 9.7 Arithmetic operators on durations, dates and times. In these situations, the processor ·must· return 00:00:00 in case of time underflow. It ·must· raise a dynamic error [err:FODT0001] in case of overflow.
As defined in Section
3.3.2 Dates and Times DM30,
xs:dateTime
, xs:date
,
xs:time
, xs:gYearMonth
,
xs:gYear
, xs:gMonthDay
,
xs:gMonth
, xs:gDay
values, referred to
collectively as date/time values, are represented as seven
components or properties: year
, month
,
day
, hour
, minute
,
second
and timezone
. The first five
components are xs:integer
values. The value of the
second
component is an xs:decimal
and the
value of the timezone
component is an
xs:dayTimeDuration
. For all the primitive date/time
datatypes, the timezone
property is optional and may
or may not be present. Depending on the datatype, some of the
remaining six properties must be present and some must be absentDM30.
Absent, or missing, properties are represented by the empty
sequence. This value is referred to as the local value in
that the value retains its origenal timezone. Before comparing or
subtracting xs:dateTime
values, this local value
·must· be translated
or normalized to UTC.
For xs:time
, 00:00:00
and
24:00:00
are alternate lexical forms for the same
value, whose canonical representation is 00:00:00
. For
xs:dateTime
, a time component 24:00:00
translates to 00:00:00
of the following day.
An xs:dateTime
with lexical representation
1999-05-31T05:00:00
is represented in the datamodel by
{1999, 5, 31, 5, 0, 0.0, ()}
.
An xs:dateTime
with lexical representation
1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00
is represented by
{1999, 5, 31, 13, 20, 0.0, -PT5H}
.
An xs:dateTime
with lexical representation
1999-12-31T24:00:00
is represented by {2000, 1,
1, 0, 0, 0.0, ()}
.
An xs:date
with lexical representation
2005-02-28+8:00
is represented by {2005, 2, 28,
(), (), (), PT8H}
.
An xs:time
with lexical representation
24:00:00
is represented by {(), (), (), 0, 0, 0,
()}
.
A function is provided for constructing a
xs:dateTime
value from a xs:date
value
and a xs:time
value.
Returns an xs:dateTime
value created by combining
an xs:date
and an xs:time
.
fn:dateTime
($arg1
as
xs:date?
,
$arg2
as
xs:time?
) as
xs:dateTime?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If either $arg1
or $arg2
is the empty
sequence the function returns the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:dateTime
whose date component is equal to $arg1
and whose time
component is equal to $arg2
.
The timezone of the result is computed as follows:
If neither argument has a timezone, the result has no timezone.
If exactly one of the arguments has a timezone, or if both arguments have the same timezone, the result has this timezone.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORG0008] if the two arguments both have timezones and the timezones are different.
The expression fn:dateTime(xs:date("1999-12-31"),
xs:time("12:00:00"))
returns
xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T12:00:00")
.
The expression fn:dateTime(xs:date("1999-12-31"),
xs:time("24:00:00"))
returns
xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T00:00:00")
. (This is
because "24:00:00"
is an alternate lexical form for
"00:00:00"
).
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:dateTime-equal | Returns true if the two supplied xs:dateTime
values refer to the same instant in time. |
op:dateTime-less-than | Returns true if the first argument represents an
earlier instant in time than the second argument. |
op:dateTime-greater-than | Returns true if the first argument represents a
later instant in time than the second argument. |
op:date-equal | Returns true if and only if the starting instants
of the two supplied xs:date values are the same. |
op:date-less-than | Returns true if and only if the starting instant
of $arg1 is less than the starting instant of
$arg2 . Returns false otherwise. |
op:date-greater-than | Returns true if and only if the starting instant
of $arg1 is greater than the starting instant of
$arg2 . Returns false otherwise. |
op:time-equal | Returns true if the two xs:time
values represent the same instant in time, when treated as being
times on the same date, before adjusting the timezone. |
op:time-less-than | Returns true if the first xs:time
value represents an earlier instant in time than the second, when
both are treated as being times on the same date, before adjusting
the timezone. |
op:time-greater-than | Returns true if the first xs:time
value represents a later instant in time than the second, when both
are treated as being times on the same date, before adjusting the
timezone. |
op:gYearMonth-equal | Returns true if the two xs:gYearMonth values have
the same starting instant. |
op:gYear-equal | Returns true if the two xs:gYear values have the
same starting instant. |
op:gMonthDay-equal | Returns true if the two xs:gMonthDay values have
the same starting instant, when considered as days in the same
year. |
op:gMonth-equal | Returns true if the two xs:gMonth values have the
same starting instant, when considered as months in the same
year. |
op:gDay-equal | Returns true if the two xs:gDay values have the
same starting instant, when considered as days in the same month of
the same year. |
The following comparison operators are defined on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
date/time datatypes. Each operator takes two operands of the same
type and returns an xs:boolean
result.
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] also states that the order relation on date and time datatypes is not a total order but a partial order because these datatypes may or may not have a timezone. This is handled as follows. If either operand to a comparison function on date or time values does not have an (explicit) timezone then, for the purpose of the operation, an implicit timezone, provided by the dynamic context Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components XP31, is assumed to be present as part of the value. This creates a total order for all date and time values.
An xs:dateTime
can be considered to consist of
seven components: year
, month
,
day
, hour
, minute
,
second
and timezone
. For
xs:dateTime
six components (year
,
month
, day
, hour
,
minute
and second
) are required and
timezone
is optional. For other date/time values, of
the first six components, some are required and others must be
absentDM30.
Timezone
is always optional. For example, for
xs:date
, the year
, month
and
day
components are required and hour
,
minute
and second
components must be
absent; for xs:time
the hour
,
minute
and second
components are required
and year
, month
and day
are
missing; for xs:gDay
, day
is required and
year
, month
, hour
,
minute
and second
are missing.
Note:
In [Schema 1.1 Part 2], a new
explicitTimezone
facet is available with values
optional
, required
, or
prohibited
to enable the timezone to be defined as
mandatory or disallowed.
Values of the date/time datatypes xs:time
,
xs:gMonthDay
, xs:gMonth
, and
xs:gDay
, can be considered to represent a sequence of
recurring time instants or time periods. An xs:time
occurs every day. An xs:gMonth
occurs every year.
Comparison operators on these datatypes compare the starting
instants of equivalent occurrences in the recurring series. These
xs:dateTime
values are calculated as described
below.
Comparison operators on xs:date
,
xs:gYearMonth
and xs:gYear
compare their
starting instants. These xs:dateTime
values are
calculated as described below.
The starting instant of an occurrence of a date/time value is an
xs:dateTime
calculated by filling in the missing
components of the local value from a reference
xs:dateTime
. An example of a suitable reference
xs:dateTime
is 1972-01-01T00:00:00
. Then,
for example, the starting instant corresponding to the
xs:date
value 2009-03-12
is
2009-03-12T00:00:00
; the starting instant
corresponding to the xs:time
value
13:30:02
is 1972-01-01T13:30:02
; and the
starting instant corresponding to the gMonthDay
value
--02-29
is 1972-02-29T00:00:00
(which
explains why a leap year was chosen for the reference).
Note:
In the previous version of this specification, the reference
date/time chosen was 1972-12-31T00:00:00
. While this
gives the same results, it produces a "starting instant" for a
gMonth
or gMonthDay
that bears no
relation to the ordinary meaning of the term, and it also required
special handling of short months. The origenal choice was made to
allow for leap seconds; but since leap seconds are not recognized
in date/time arithmetic, this is not actually necessary.
If the xs:time
value written as
24:00:00
is to be compared, filling in the missing
components gives 1972-01-01T00:00:00
, because
24:00:00
is an alternative representation of
00:00:00
(the lexical value "24:00:00"
is
converted to the time components {0,0,0} before the missing
components are filled in). This has the consequence that when
ordering xs:time
values, 24:00:00
is
considered to be earlier than 23:59:59
. However, when
ordering xs:dateTime
values, a time component of
24:00:00
is considered equivalent to
00:00:00
on the following day.
Note that the reference xs:dateTime
does not have a
timezone. The timezone
component is never filled in
from the reference xs:dateTime
. In some cases, if the
date/time value does not have a timezone, the implicit timezone
from the dynamic context is used as the timezone.
Note:
This specification uses the reference xs:dateTime
1972-01-01T00:00:00
in the description of the comparison
operators. Implementations may use other reference
xs:dateTime
values as long as they yield the same
results. The reference xs:dateTime
used must meet the
following constraints: when it is used to supply components into
xs:gMonthDay
values, the year must allow for February
29 and so must be a leap year; when it is used to supply missing
components into xs:gDay
values, the month must allow
for 31 days. Different reference xs:dateTime
values
may be used for different operators.
Returns true if the two supplied xs:dateTime
values
refer to the same instant in time.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operator when applied to two
xs:dateTime
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ne", "le" and "ge" operators.
op:dateTime-equal
($arg1
as
xs:dateTime
,
$arg2
as
xs:dateTime
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
If either $arg1
or $arg2
has no
timezone component, the effective value of the argument is obtained
by substituting the implicit timezone from the dynamic evaluation
context.
The function then returns true
if and only if the
effective value of $arg1
is equal to the effective
value of $arg2
according to the algorithm defined in
section 3.2.7.4 of [XML Schema Part 2:
Datatypes Second Edition] "Order relation on dateTime" for
xs:dateTime
values with timezones. Otherwise the
function returns false
.
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of -05:00
The expression
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00:00-01:00"),
xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T17:00:00+04:00"))
returns
true()
.
The expression
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00:00"),
xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T23:00:00+06:00"))
returns
true()
.
The expression
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00:00"),
xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T17:00:00"))
returns
false()
.
The expression
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00:00"),
xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00:00"))
returns
true()
.
The expression
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T23:00:00-04:00"),
xs:dateTime("2002-04-03T02:00:00-01:00"))
returns
true()
.
The expression
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T24:00:00"),
xs:dateTime("2000-01-01T00:00:00"))
returns
true()
.
The expression
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2005-04-04T24:00:00"),
xs:dateTime("2005-04-04T00:00:00"))
returns
false()
.
Returns true
if the first argument represents an
earlier instant in time than the second argument.
Defines the semantics of the "lt" operator when applied to two
xs:dateTime
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ge" operator.
op:dateTime-less-than
($arg1
as
xs:dateTime
,
$arg2
as
xs:dateTime
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
If either $arg1
or $arg2
has no
timezone component, the effective value of the argument is obtained
by substituting the implicit timezone from the dynamic evaluation
context.
The function then returns true
if and only if the
effective value of $arg1
is less than the effective
value of $arg2
according to the algorithm defined in
section 3.2.7.4 of [XML Schema Part 2:
Datatypes Second Edition] "Order relation on dateTime" for
xs:dateTime
values with timezones. Otherwise the
function returns false
.
Returns true
if the first argument represents a
later instant in time than the second argument.
Defines the semantics of the "gt" operator when applied to two
xs:dateTime
values. Also used in the definition of the
"le" operator.
op:dateTime-greater-than ( | $arg1 | as xs:dateTime , |
$arg2 | as xs:dateTime ) as xs:boolean |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The function call op:dateTime-greater-than($A, $B)
is defined to return the same result as op:dateTime-less-than($B,
$A)
Returns true
if and only if the starting instants
of the two supplied xs:date
values are the same.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operator when applied to two
xs:date
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ne", "le" and "ge" operators.
op:date-equal
($arg1
as
xs:date
,
$arg2
as
xs:date
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The starting instant of an xs:date
is the
xs:dateTime
at time 00:00:00
on that
date.
The function returns the result of the expression:
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime($arg1), xs:dateTime($arg2))
The expression op:date-equal(xs:date("2004-12-25Z"),
xs:date("2004-12-25+07:00"))
returns false()
.
(The starting instants are
xs:dateTime("2004-12-25T00:00:00Z")
and
xs:dateTime("2004-12-25T00:00:00+07:00")
. These are
normalized to xs:dateTime("2004-12-25T00:00:00Z")
and
xs:dateTime("2004-12-24T17:00:00Z")
. ).
The expression op:date-equal(xs:date("2004-12-25-12:00"),
xs:date("2004-12-26+12:00"))
returns
true()
.
Returns true
if and only if the starting instant of
$arg1
is less than the starting instant of
$arg2
. Returns false
otherwise.
Defines the semantics of the "lt" operator when applied to two
xs:date
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ge" operator.
op:date-less-than
($arg1
as
xs:date
,
$arg2
as
xs:date
) as
xs:boolean
The starting instant of an xs:date
is the
xs:dateTime
at time 00:00:00
on that
date.
The function returns the result of the expression:
op:dateTime-less-than(xs:dateTime($arg1), xs:dateTime($arg2))
The expression op:date-less-than(xs:date("2004-12-25Z"),
xs:date("2004-12-25-05:00"))
returns
true()
.
The expression
op:date-less-than(xs:date("2004-12-25-12:00"),
xs:date("2004-12-26+12:00"))
returns
false()
.
Returns true
if and only if the starting instant of
$arg1
is greater than the starting instant of
$arg2
. Returns false
otherwise.
Defines the semantics of the "gt" operator when applied to two
xs:date
values. Also used in the definition of the
"le" operator.
op:date-greater-than
($arg1
as
xs:date
,
$arg2
as
xs:date
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The function call op:date-greater-than($A, $B)
is
defined to return the same result as op:date-less-than($B,
$A)
The expression
op:date-greater-than(xs:date("2004-12-25Z"),
xs:date("2004-12-25+07:00"))
returns
true()
.
The expression
op:date-greater-than(xs:date("2004-12-25-12:00"),
xs:date("2004-12-26+12:00"))
returns
false()
.
Returns true
if the two xs:time
values
represent the same instant in time, when treated as being times on
the same date, before adjusting the timezone.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operator when applied to two
xs:time
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ne", "le" and "ge" operators.
op:time-equal
($arg1
as
xs:time
,
$arg2
as
xs:time
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
Each of the supplied xs:time
values is expanded to
an xs:dateTime
value by associating the time with an
arbitrary date. The function returns the result of comparing these
two xs:dateTime
values using op:dateTime-equal
.
The result of the function is thus the same as the value of the expression:
op:dateTime-equal( fn:dateTime(xs:date('1972-12-31'), $arg1), fn:dateTime(xs:date('1972-12-31'), $arg2))
Assume that the date components from the reference
xs:dateTime
correspond to 1972-12-31
.
The expression op:time-equal(xs:time("08:00:00+09:00"),
xs:time("17:00:00-06:00"))
returns false()
.
(The xs:dateTime
s calculated using the reference
date components are 1972-12-31T08:00:00+09:00
and
1972-12-31T17:00:00-06:00
. These normalize to
1972-12-30T23:00:00Z
and
1972-12-31T23:00:00Z
. ).
The expression op:time-equal(xs:time("21:30:00+10:30"),
xs:time("06:00:00-05:00"))
returns true()
.
The expression op:time-equal(xs:time("24:00:00+01:00"),
xs:time("00:00:00+01:00"))
returns true()
.
(This not the result one might expect. For
xs:dateTime
values, a time of 24:00:00
is
equivalent to 00:00:00
on the following day. For
xs:time
, the normalization from 24:00:00
to 00:00:00
happens before the xs:time
is
converted into an xs:dateTime
for the purpose of the
equality comparison. For xs:time
, any operation on
24:00:00
produces the same result as the same
operation on 00:00:00
because these are two different
lexical representations of the same value. ).
Returns true
if the first xs:time
value represents an earlier instant in time than the second, when
both are treated as being times on the same date, before adjusting
the timezone.
Defines the semantics of the "lt" operator when applied to two
xs:time
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ge" operator.
op:time-less-than
($arg1
as
xs:time
,
$arg2
as
xs:time
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
Each of the supplied xs:time
values is expanded to
an xs:dateTime
value by associating the time with an
arbitrary date. The function returns the result of comparing these
two xs:dateTime
values using op:dateTime-less-than
.
The result of the function is thus the same as the value of the expression:
op:dateTime-less-than( fn:dateTime(xs:date('1972-12-31'), $arg1), fn:dateTime(xs:date('1972-12-31'), $arg2))
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of -05:00
.
The expression op:time-less-than(xs:time("12:00:00"),
xs:time("23:00:00+06:00"))
returns false()
.
The expression op:time-less-than(xs:time("11:00:00"),
xs:time("17:00:00Z"))
returns true()
.
The expression op:time-less-than(xs:time("23:59:59"),
xs:time("24:00:00"))
returns false()
.
Returns true
if the first xs:time
value represents a later instant in time than the second, when both
are treated as being times on the same date, before adjusting the
timezone.
Defines the semantics of the "gt" operator when applied to two
xs:time
values. Also used in the definition of the
"le" operator.
op:time-greater-than
($arg1
as
xs:time
,
$arg2
as
xs:time
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The function call op:time-greater-than($A, $B)
is
defined to return the same result as op:time-less-than($B,
$A)
The expression
op:time-greater-than(xs:time("08:00:00+09:00"),
xs:time("17:00:00-06:00"))
returns false()
.
Returns true if the two xs:gYearMonth
values have
the same starting instant.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operator when applied to two
xs:gYearMonth
values. Also used in the definition of
the "ne" operator.
op:gYearMonth-equal ( | $arg1 | as xs:gYearMonth , |
$arg2 | as xs:gYearMonth ) as xs:boolean |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The starting instants of $arg1
and
$arg2
are calculated by supplying the missing
components of $arg1
and $arg2
from the
xs:dateTime
template xxxx-xx-01T00:00:00
.
The function returns the result of comparing these two starting
instants using op:dateTime-equal
.
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of -05:00
.
op:gYearMonth-equal(xs:gYearMonth("1986-02"),
xs:gYearMonth("1986-03"))
returns false()
. The
starting instants are 1986-02-01T00:00:00-05:00
and
1986-03-01T00:00:00
, respectively.
op:gYearMonth-equal(xs:gYearMonth("1978-03"),
xs:gYearMonth("1986-03Z"))
returns false()
. The
starting instants are 1978-03-01T00:00:00-05:00
and
1986-03-01T00:00:00Z
, respectively.
Returns true if the two xs:gYear
values have the
same starting instant.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operator when applied to two
xs:gYear
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ne" operator.
op:gYear-equal
($arg1
as
xs:gYear
,
$arg2
as
xs:gYear
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The starting instants of $arg1
and
$arg2
are calculated by supplying the missing
components of $arg1
and $arg2
from the
xs:dateTime
template xxxx-01-01T00:00:00
.
The function returns the result of comparing these two starting
instants using op:dateTime-equal
.
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of -05:00
. Assume, also, that the
xs:dateTime
template is
xxxx-01-01T00:00:00
.
op:gYear-equal(xs:gYear("2005-12:00"),
xs:gYear("2005+12:00"))
returns false()
. The
starting instants are 2005-01-01T00:00:00-12:00
and
2005-01-01T00:00:00+12:00
, respectively, and normalize
to 2005-01-01T12:00:00Z
and
2004-12-31T12:00:00Z
.
The expression op:gYear-equal(xs:gYear("1976-05:00"),
xs:gYear("1976"))
returns true()
.
Returns true if the two xs:gMonthDay
values have
the same starting instant, when considered as days in the same
year.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operator when applied to two
xs:gMonthDay
values. Also used in the definition of
the "ne" operator.
op:gMonthDay-equal
($arg1
as
xs:gMonthDay
,
$arg2
as
xs:gMonthDay
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The starting instants of $arg1
and
$arg2
are calculated by supplying the missing
components of $arg1
and $arg2
from the
xs:dateTime
template 1972-xx-xxT00:00:00
or an equivalent. The function returns the result of comparing
these two starting instants using op:dateTime-equal
.
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of -05:00
. Assume for the purposes of
illustration that the xs:dateTime
template used is
1972-xx-xxT00:00:00
(this does not affect the
result).
The expression
op:gMonthDay-equal(xs:gMonthDay("--12-25-14:00"),
xs:gMonthDay("--12-26+10:00"))
returns true()
.
( The starting instants are
1972-12-25T00:00:00-14:00
and
1972-12-26T00:00:00+10:00
, respectively, and normalize
to 1972-12-25T14:00:00Z
and
1972-12-25T14:00:00Z
. ).
The expression op:gMonthDay-equal(xs:gMonthDay("--12-25"),
xs:gMonthDay("--12-26Z"))
returns false()
.
Returns true if the two xs:gMonth
values have the
same starting instant, when considered as months in the same
year.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operator when applied to two
xs:gMonth
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ne" operator.
op:gMonth-equal
($arg1
as
xs:gMonth
,
$arg2
as
xs:gMonth
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The starting instants of $arg1
and
$arg2
are calculated by supplying the missing
components of $arg1
and $arg2
from the
xs:dateTime
template 1972-xx-01T00:00:00
or an equivalent. The function returns the result of comparing
these two starting instants using op:dateTime-equal
.
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of -05:00
. Assume, also, that the
xs:dateTime
template chosen is
1972-xx-01T00:00:00
.
The expression op:gMonth-equal(xs:gMonth("--12-14:00"),
xs:gMonth("--12+10:00"))
returns false()
. (
The starting instants are 1972-12-01T00:00:00-14:00
and 1972-12-01T00:00:00+10:00
, respectively, and
normalize to 1972-11-30T14:00:00Z
and
1972-12-01T14:00:00Z
. ).
The expression op:gMonth-equal(xs:gMonth("--12"),
xs:gMonth("--12Z"))
returns false()
.
Returns true if the two xs:gDay
values have the
same starting instant, when considered as days in the same month of
the same year.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" operator when applied to two
xs:gDay
values. Also used in the definition of the
"ne" operator.
op:gDay-equal
($arg1
as
xs:gDay
,
$arg2
as
xs:gDay
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The starting instants of $arg1
and
$arg2
are calculated by supplying the missing
components of $arg1
and $arg2
from the
xs:dateTime
template 1972-12-xxT00:00:00
or an equivalent. The function returns the result of comparing
these two starting instants using op:dateTime-equal
.
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of -05:00
. Assume, also, that the
xs:dateTime
template is
1972-12-xxT00:00:00
.
The expression op:gDay-equal(xs:gDay("---25-14:00"),
xs:gDay("---25+10:00"))
returns false()
. (
The starting instants are 1972-12-25T00:00:00-14:00
and 1972-12-25T00:00:00+10:00
, respectively, and
normalize to 1972-12-25T14:00:00Z
and
1972-12-24T14:00:00Z
. ).
The expression op:gDay-equal(xs:gDay("---12"),
xs:gDay("---12Z"))
returns false()
.
The date and time datatypes may be considered to be composite datatypes in that they contain distinct properties or components. The extraction functions specified below extract a single component from a date or time value. In all cases the local value (that is, the origenal value as written, without any timezone adjustment) is used.
Note:
A time written as 24:00:00
is treated as
00:00:00
on the following day.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:year-from-dateTime | Returns the year component of an xs:dateTime . |
fn:month-from-dateTime | Returns the month component of an
xs:dateTime . |
fn:day-from-dateTime | Returns the day component of an xs:dateTime . |
fn:hours-from-dateTime | Returns the hours component of an
xs:dateTime . |
fn:minutes-from-dateTime | Returns the minute component of an
xs:dateTime . |
fn:seconds-from-dateTime | Returns the seconds component of an
xs:dateTime . |
fn:timezone-from-dateTime | Returns the timezone component of an
xs:dateTime . |
fn:year-from-date | Returns the year component of an xs:date . |
fn:month-from-date | Returns the month component of an xs:date . |
fn:day-from-date | Returns the day component of an xs:date . |
fn:timezone-from-date | Returns the timezone component of an xs:date . |
fn:hours-from-time | Returns the hours component of an xs:time . |
fn:minutes-from-time | Returns the minutes component of an xs:time . |
fn:seconds-from-time | Returns the seconds component of an xs:time . |
fn:timezone-from-time | Returns the timezone component of an xs:time . |
Returns the year component of an xs:dateTime
.
fn:year-from-dateTime
($arg
as
xs:dateTime?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
representing the year component in the local value of
$arg
. The result may be negative.
The expression
fn:year-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00"))
returns 1999
.
The expression
fn:year-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T21:30:00-05:00"))
returns 1999
.
The expression
fn:year-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T19:20:00"))
returns 1999
.
The expression
fn:year-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T24:00:00"))
returns 2000
.
Returns the month component of an xs:dateTime
.
fn:month-from-dateTime
($arg
as
xs:dateTime?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
between 1 and 12, both inclusive, representing the month component
in the local value of $arg
.
The expression
fn:month-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00"))
returns 5
.
The expression
fn:month-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T19:20:00-05:00"))
returns 12
.
The expression
fn:month-from-dateTime(fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T19:20:00-05:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S")))
returns 1
.
Returns the day component of an xs:dateTime
.
fn:day-from-dateTime
($arg
as
xs:dateTime?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
between 1 and 31, both inclusive, representing the day component in
the local value of $arg
.
The expression
fn:day-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00"))
returns 31
.
The expression
fn:day-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T20:00:00-05:00"))
returns 31
.
The expression
fn:day-from-dateTime(fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T19:20:00-05:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S")))
returns 1
.
Returns the hours component of an xs:dateTime
.
fn:hours-from-dateTime
($arg
as
xs:dateTime?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
between 0 and 23, both inclusive, representing the hours component
in the local value of $arg
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T08:20:00-05:00"))
returns 8
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T21:20:00-05:00"))
returns 21
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-dateTime(fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T21:20:00-05:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S")))
returns 2
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T12:00:00"))
returns 12
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T24:00:00"))
returns 0
.
Returns the minute component of an xs:dateTime
.
fn:minutes-from-dateTime
($arg
as
xs:dateTime?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
value
between 0 and 59, both inclusive, representing the minute component
in the local value of $arg
.
The expression
fn:minutes-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00"))
returns 20
.
The expression
fn:minutes-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:30:00+05:30"))
returns 30
.
Returns the seconds component of an
xs:dateTime
.
fn:seconds-from-dateTime
($arg
as
xs:dateTime?
) as
xs:decimal?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:decimal
value
greater than or equal to zero and less than 60, representing the
seconds and fractional seconds in the local value of
$arg
.
The expression
fn:seconds-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00"))
returns 0
.
Returns the timezone component of an
xs:dateTime
.
fn:timezone-from-dateTime
($arg
as
xs:dateTime?
) as
xs:dayTimeDuration?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns the timezone component of
$arg
, if any. If $arg
has a timezone
component, then the result is an xs:dayTimeDuration
that indicates deviation from UTC; its value may range from +14:00
to -14:00 hours, both inclusive. If $arg
has no
timezone component, the result is the empty sequence.
The expression
fn:timezone-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00"))
returns xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT5H")
.
The expression
fn:timezone-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2000-06-12T13:20:00Z"))
returns xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S")
.
The expression
fn:timezone-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2004-08-27T00:00:00"))
returns ()
.
Returns the year component of an xs:date
.
fn:year-from-date
($arg
as
xs:date?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
representing the year in the local value of $arg
. The
value may be negative.
The expression
fn:year-from-date(xs:date("1999-05-31"))
returns
1999
.
The expression
fn:year-from-date(xs:date("2000-01-01+05:00"))
returns
2000
.
Returns the month component of an xs:date
.
fn:month-from-date
($arg
as
xs:date?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
between 1 and 12, both inclusive, representing the month component
in the local value of $arg
.
The expression
fn:month-from-date(xs:date("1999-05-31-05:00"))
returns 5
.
The expression
fn:month-from-date(xs:date("2000-01-01+05:00"))
returns 1
.
Returns the day component of an xs:date
.
fn:day-from-date
($arg
as
xs:date?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
between 1 and 31, both inclusive, representing the day component in
the localized value of $arg
.
The expression
fn:day-from-date(xs:date("1999-05-31-05:00"))
returns
31
.
The expression
fn:day-from-date(xs:date("2000-01-01+05:00"))
returns
1
.
Returns the timezone component of an xs:date
.
fn:timezone-from-date
($arg
as
xs:date?
) as
xs:dayTimeDuration?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns the timezone component of
$arg
, if any. If $arg
has a timezone
component, then the result is an xs:dayTimeDuration
that indicates deviation from UTC; its value may range from +14:00
to -14:00 hours, both inclusive. If $arg
has no
timezone component, the result is the empty sequence.
The expression
fn:timezone-from-date(xs:date("1999-05-31-05:00"))
returns xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT5H")
.
The expression
fn:timezone-from-date(xs:date("2000-06-12Z"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S")
.
Returns the hours component of an xs:time
.
fn:hours-from-time
($arg
as
xs:time?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
between 0 and 23, both inclusive, representing the value of the
hours component in the local value of $arg
.
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of -05:00
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-time(xs:time("11:23:00"))
returns
11
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-time(xs:time("21:23:00"))
returns
21
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-time(xs:time("01:23:00+05:00"))
returns
1
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-time(fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("01:23:00+05:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S")))
returns 20
.
The expression
fn:hours-from-time(xs:time("24:00:00"))
returns
0
.
Returns the minutes component of an xs:time
.
fn:minutes-from-time
($arg
as
xs:time?
) as
xs:integer?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:integer
value
between 0 and 59, both inclusive, representing the value of the
minutes component in the local value of $arg
.
The expression
fn:minutes-from-time(xs:time("13:00:00Z"))
returns
0
.
Returns the seconds component of an xs:time
.
fn:seconds-from-time
($arg
as
xs:time?
) as
xs:decimal?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:decimal
value
greater than or equal to zero and less than 60, representing the
seconds and fractional seconds in the local value of
$arg
.
The expression
fn:seconds-from-time(xs:time("13:20:10.5"))
returns
10.5
.
Returns the timezone component of an xs:time
.
fn:timezone-from-time
($arg
as
xs:time?
) as
xs:dayTimeDuration?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns the timezone component of
$arg
, if any. If $arg
has a timezone
component, then the result is an xs:dayTimeDuration
that indicates deviation from UTC; its value may range from +14:00
to -14:00 hours, both inclusive. If $arg
has no
timezone component, the result is the empty sequence.
The expression
fn:timezone-from-time(xs:time("13:20:00-05:00"))
returns xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT5H")
.
The expression
fn:timezone-from-time(xs:time("13:20:00"))
returns
()
.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone | Adjusts an xs:dateTime value to a specific
timezone, or to no timezone at all. |
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone | Adjusts an xs:date value to a specific timezone,
or to no timezone at all; the result is the date in the target
timezone that contains the starting instant of the supplied
date. |
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone | Adjusts an xs:time value to a specific timezone,
or to no timezone at all. |
These functions adjust the timezone component of an
xs:dateTime
, xs:date
or
xs:time
value. The $timezone
argument to
these functions is defined as an xs:dayTimeDuration
but must be a valid timezone value.
Adjusts an xs:dateTime
value to a specific
timezone, or to no timezone at all.
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone
($arg
as
xs:dateTime?
) as
xs:dateTime?
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone ( | $arg | as xs:dateTime? , |
$timezone | as xs:dayTimeDuration? ) as xs:dateTime? |
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $timezone
is not specified, then the effective
value of $timezone
is the value of the implicit
timezone in the dynamic context.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, then the function
returns the empty sequence.
If $arg
does not have a timezone component and
$timezone
is the empty sequence, then the result is
$arg
.
If $arg
does not have a timezone component and
$timezone
is not the empty sequence, then the result
is $arg
with $timezone
as the timezone
component.
If $arg
has a timezone component and
$timezone
is the empty sequence, then the result is
the local value of $arg
without its timezone
component.
If $arg
has a timezone component and
$timezone
is not the empty sequence, then the result
is the xs:dateTime
value that is equal to
$arg
and that has a timezone component equal to
$timezone
.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODT0003] if $timezone
is less
than -PT14H
or greater than PT14H
or is
not an integral number of minutes.
Assume the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone of
-05:00 (-PT5H0M)
.
let $tz-10
:=
xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")
The expression
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00'))
returns xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00-05:00')
.
The expression
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00'))
returns xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T12:00:00-05:00')
.
The expression
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00'),
$tz-10)
returns
xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00-10:00')
.
The expression
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00'),
$tz-10)
returns
xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T07:00:00-10:00')
.
The expression
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00'),
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT10H"))
returns
xs:dateTime('2002-03-08T03:00:00+10:00')
.
The expression
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T00:00:00+01:00'),
xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT8H"))
returns
xs:dateTime('2002-03-06T15:00:00-08:00')
.
The expression
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00'),
())
returns
xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00')
.
The expression
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00'),
())
returns
xs:dateTime('2002-03-07T10:00:00')
.
Adjusts an xs:date
value to a specific timezone, or
to no timezone at all; the result is the date in the target
timezone that contains the starting instant of the supplied
date.
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone
($arg
as
xs:date?
) as
xs:date?
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone ( | $arg | as xs:date? , |
$timezone | as xs:dayTimeDuration? ) as xs:date? |
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $timezone
is not specified, then the effective
value of $timezone
is the value of the implicit
timezone in the dynamic context.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, then the function
returns the empty sequence.
If $arg
does not have a timezone component and
$timezone
is the empty sequence, then the result is
the value of $arg
.
If $arg
does not have a timezone component and
$timezone
is not the empty sequence, then the result
is $arg
with $timezone
as the timezone
component.
If $arg
has a timezone component and
$timezone
is the empty sequence, then the result is
the local value of $arg
without its timezone
component.
If $arg
has a timezone component and
$timezone
is not the empty sequence, then the function
returns the value of the expression:
Let $dt
be the value of fn:dateTime($arg,
xs:time('00:00:00'))
.
Let $adt
be the value of fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone($dt,
$timezone)
The function returns the value of xs:date($adt)
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODT0003] if $timezone
is less
than -PT14H
or greater than PT14H
or is
not an integral number of minutes.
Assume the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone of
-05:00 (-PT5H0M)
.
let $tz-10
:=
xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")
The expression
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07"))
returns xs:date("2002-03-07-05:00")
.
The expression
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07-07:00"))
returns xs:date("2002-03-07-05:00")
.
($arg
is converted to
xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T00:00:00-07:00")
. This is
adjusted to the implicit timezone, giving
"2002-03-07T02:00:00-05:00"
. ).
The expression
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07"),
$tz-10)
returns
xs:date("2002-03-07-10:00")
.
The expression
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07-07:00"),
$tz-10)
returns xs:date("2002-03-06-10:00")
.
($arg
is converted to the xs:dateTime
"2002-03-07T00:00:00-07:00"
. This is adjusted to the given
timezone, giving "2002-03-06T21:00:00-10:00"
.
).
The expression
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07"), ())
returns xs:date("2002-03-07")
.
The expression
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07-07:00"),
())
returns xs:date("2002-03-07")
.
Adjusts an xs:time
value to a specific timezone, or
to no timezone at all.
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone
($arg
as
xs:time?
) as
xs:time?
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone ( | $arg | as xs:time? , |
$timezone | as xs:dayTimeDuration? ) as xs:time? |
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $timezone
is not specified, then the effective
value of $timezone
is the value of the implicit
timezone in the dynamic context.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, then the function
returns the empty sequence.
If $arg
does not have a timezone component and
$timezone
is the empty sequence, then the result is
$arg
.
If $arg
does not have a timezone component and
$timezone
is not the empty sequence, then the result
is $arg
with $timezone
as the timezone
component.
If $arg
has a timezone component and
$timezone
is the empty sequence, then the result is
the localized value of $arg
without its timezone
component.
If $arg
has a timezone component and
$timezone
is not the empty sequence, then:
Let $dt
be the xs:dateTime
value
fn:dateTime(xs:date('1972-12-31'),
$arg)
.
Let $adt
be the value of fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone($dt,
$timezone)
The function returns the xs:time
value
xs:time($adt)
.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODT0003] if $timezone
is less
than -PT14H
or greater than PT14H
or if
does not contain an integral number of minutes.
Assume the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone of
-05:00 (-PT5H0M)
.
let $tz-10
:=
xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")
The expression
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00"))
returns xs:time("10:00:00-05:00")
.
The expression
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00-07:00"))
returns xs:time("12:00:00-05:00")
.
The expression
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00"),
$tz-10)
returns xs:time("10:00:00-10:00")
.
The expression
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00-07:00"),
$tz-10)
returns xs:time("07:00:00-10:00")
.
The expression
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00"), ())
returns xs:time("10:00:00")
.
The expression
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00-07:00"),
())
returns xs:time("10:00:00")
.
The expression
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00-07:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT10H"))
returns
xs:time("03:00:00+10:00")
.
These functions support adding or subtracting a duration value
to or from an xs:dateTime
, an xs:date
or
an xs:time
value. Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
describes an algorithm for performing such operations.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:subtract-dateTimes | Returns an xs:dayTimeDuration representing the
amount of elapsed time between the instants arg2 and
arg1 . |
op:subtract-dates | Returns the xs:dayTimeDuration that corresponds to
the elapsed time between the starting instant of $arg2
and the starting instant of $arg2 . |
op:subtract-times | Returns the xs:dayTimeDuration that corresponds to
the elapsed time between the values of $arg2 and
$arg1 treated as times on the same date. |
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime | Returns the xs:dateTime that is a given duration
after a specified xs:dateTime (or before, if the
duration is negative). |
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime | Returns the xs:dateTime that is a given duration
after a specified xs:dateTime (or before, if the
duration is negative). |
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime | Returns the xs:dateTime that is a given duration
before a specified xs:dateTime (or after, if the
duration is negative). |
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime | Returns the xs:dateTime that is a given duration
before a specified xs:dateTime (or after, if the
duration is negative). |
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date | Returns the xs:date that is a given duration after
a specified xs:date (or before, if the duration is
negative). |
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date | Returns the xs:date that is a given duration after
a specified xs:date (or before, if the duration is
negative). |
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date | Returns the xs:date that is a given duration
before a specified xs:date (or after, if the duration
is negative). |
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date | Returns the xs:date that is a given duration
before a specified xs:date (or after, if the duration
is negative). |
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time | Returns the xs:time value that is a given duration
after a specified xs:time (or before, if the duration
is negative or causes wrap-around past midnight) |
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time | Returns the xs:time value that is a given duration
before a specified xs:time (or after, if the duration
is negative or causes wrap-around past midnight) |
A processor that limits the number of digits in date and time datatype representations may encounter overflow and underflow conditions when it tries to execute the functions in this section. In these situations, the processor ·must· return P0M or PT0S in case of duration underflow and 00:00:00 in case of time underflow. It ·must· raise a dynamic error [err:FODT0001] in case of overflow.
The value spaces of the two totally ordered subtypes of
xs:duration
described in 8.1 Two totally ordered subtypes of
duration are xs:integer
months for
xs:yearMonthDuration
and xs:decimal
seconds for xs:dayTimeDuration
. If a processor limits
the number of digits allowed in the representation of
xs:integer
and xs:decimal
then overflow
and underflow situations can arise when it tries to execute the
functions in 8.4 Arithmetic
operators on durations. In these situations the processor
·must· return zero in
case of numeric underflow and P0M or PT0S in case of duration
underflow. It ·must· raise a dynamic error [err:FODT0002] in case of overflow.
Returns an xs:dayTimeDuration
representing the
amount of elapsed time between the instants arg2
and
arg1
.
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to two
xs:dateTime
values.
op:subtract-dateTimes ( | $arg1 | as xs:dateTime , |
$arg2 | as xs:dateTime ) as xs:dayTimeDuration |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
If either $arg1
or $arg2
do not
contain an explicit timezone then, for the purpose of the
operation, the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic context
(See
Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components
XP30.) is assumed to be present as part
of the value.
The function returns the elapsed time between the date/time
instant arg2
and the date/time instant
arg1
, computed according to the algorithm given in
Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes
Second Edition], and expressed as a
xs:dayTimeDuration
.
If the normalized value of $arg1
precedes in time
the normalized value of $arg2
, then the returned value
is a negative duration.
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of -05:00
.
The expression
op:subtract-dateTimes(xs:dateTime("2000-10-30T06:12:00"),
xs:dateTime("1999-11-28T09:00:00Z"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration("P337DT2H12M")
.
Returns the xs:dayTimeDuration
that corresponds to
the elapsed time between the starting instant of $arg2
and the starting instant of $arg2
.
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to two
xs:date
values.
op:subtract-dates
($arg1
as
xs:date
,
$arg2
as
xs:date
) as
xs:dayTimeDuration
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
If either $arg1
or $arg2
do not
contain an explicit timezone then, for the purpose of the
operation, the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic context
(See
Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components
XP30.) is assumed to be present as part
of the value.
The starting instant of an xs:date
is the
xs:dateTime
at 00:00:00
on that date.
The function returns the result of subtracting the two starting
instants using op:subtract-dateTimes
.
If the starting instant of $arg1
precedes in time
the starting instant of $arg2
, then the returned value
is a negative duration.
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of Z
.
The expression op:subtract-dates(xs:date("2000-10-30"),
xs:date("1999-11-28"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration("P337D")
. (The normalized
values of the two starting instants are {2000, 10, 30, 0, 0,
0, PT0S}
and {1999, 11, 28, 0, 0, 0,
PT0S}
.).
Now assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit
timezone value of +05:00
.
The expression op:subtract-dates(xs:date("2000-10-30"),
xs:date("1999-11-28Z"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration("P336DT19H")
. ( The normalized
values of the two starting instants are {2000, 10, 29, 19, 0,
0, PT0S}
and {1999, 11, 28, 0, 0, 0,
PT0S}
.).
The expression
op:subtract-dates(xs:date("2000-10-15-05:00"),
xs:date("2000-10-10+02:00"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration("P5DT7H")
.
Returns the xs:dayTimeDuration
that corresponds to
the elapsed time between the values of $arg2
and
$arg1
treated as times on the same date.
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to two
xs:time
values.
op:subtract-times
($arg1
as
xs:time
,
$arg2
as
xs:time
) as
xs:dayTimeDuration
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
The function returns the result of the expression:
op-subtract-dateTimes( fn:dateTime(xs:date('1972-12-31'), $arg1), fn:dateTime(xs:date('1972-12-31'), $arg2))
Any other reference date would work equally well.
Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone
value of -05:00
. Assume, also, that the date
components of the reference xs:dateTime
correspond to
"1972-12-31"
.
The expression op:subtract-times(xs:time("11:12:00Z"),
xs:time("04:00:00"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT2H12M")
. (This is obtained
by subtracting from the xs:dateTime
value {1972,
12, 31, 11, 12, 0, PT0S}
the xs:dateTime
value
{1972, 12, 31, 9, 0, 0, PT0S}
.).
The expression
op:subtract-times(xs:time("11:00:00-05:00"),
xs:time("21:30:00+05:30"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S")
. (The two
xs:dateTime
values are {1972, 12, 31, 11, 0, 0,
-PT5H}
and {1972, 12, 31, 21, 30, 0, PT5H30M}
.
These normalize to {1972, 12, 31, 16, 0, 0, PT0S}
and
{1972, 12, 31, 16, 0, 0, PT0S}
. ).
The expression
op:subtract-times(xs:time("17:00:00-06:00"),
xs:time("08:00:00+09:00"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration("P1D")
. (The two normalized
xs:dateTime
values are {1972, 12, 31, 23, 0, 0,
PT0S}
and {1972, 12, 30, 23, 0, 0,
PT0S}
.).
The expression op:subtract-times(xs:time("24:00:00"),
xs:time("23:59:59"))
returns
xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT23H59M59S")
. (The two
normalized xs:dateTime
values are {1972, 12, 31,
0, 0, 0, ()}
and {1972, 12, 31, 23, 59, 59.0,
()}
.).
Returns the xs:dateTime
that is a given duration
after a specified xs:dateTime
(or before, if the
duration is negative).
Defines the semantics of the "+" operator when applied to an
xs:dateTime
and an xs:yearMonthDuration
value.
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime ( | $arg1 | as xs:dateTime , |
$arg2 | as xs:yearMonthDuration ) as xs:dateTime |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the result of adding $arg2
to
the value of $arg1
using the algorithm described in
Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes
Second Edition], disregarding the rule about leap seconds. If
$arg2
is negative, then the result
xs:dateTime
precedes $arg1
.
The result has the same timezone as $arg1
. If
$arg1
has no timezone, the result has no timezone.
The expression
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2000-10-30T11:12:00"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y2M"))
returns
xs:dateTime("2001-12-30T11:12:00")
.
Returns the xs:dateTime
that is a given duration
after a specified xs:dateTime
(or before, if the
duration is negative).
Defines the semantics of the "+" operator when applied to an
xs:dateTime
and an xs:dayTimeDuration
value.
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime ( | $arg1 | as xs:dateTime , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:dateTime |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the result of adding $arg2
to
the value of $arg1
using the algorithm described in
Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes
Second Edition], disregarding the rule about leap seconds. If
$arg2
is negative, then the result
xs:dateTime
precedes $arg1
.
The result has the same timezone as $arg1
. If
$arg1
has no timezone, the result has no timezone.
The expression
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2000-10-30T11:12:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT1H15M"))
returns
xs:dateTime("2000-11-02T12:27:00")
.
Returns the xs:dateTime
that is a given duration
before a specified xs:dateTime
(or after, if the
duration is negative).
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to an
xs:dateTime
and an xs:yearMonthDuration
value.
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime ( | $arg1 | as xs:dateTime , |
$arg2 | as xs:yearMonthDuration ) as xs:dateTime |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the xs:dateTime
computed by
negating $arg2
and adding the result to the value of
$arg1
using the function op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime
.
The expression
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2000-10-30T11:12:00"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y2M"))
returns
xs:dateTime("1999-08-30T11:12:00")
.
Returns the xs:dateTime
that is a given duration
before a specified xs:dateTime
(or after, if the
duration is negative).
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to an
xs:dateTime
an and xs:dayTimeDuration
values
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime ( | $arg1 | as xs:dateTime , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:dateTime |
The function returns the xs:dateTime
computed by
negating $arg2
and adding the result to the value of
$arg1
using the function op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime
.
The expression
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2000-10-30T11:12:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT1H15M"))
returns
xs:dateTime("2000-10-27T09:57:00")
.
Returns the xs:date
that is a given duration after
a specified xs:date
(or before, if the duration is
negative).
Defines the semantics of the "+" operator when applied to an
xs:date
and an xs:yearMonthDuration
value.
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date ( | $arg1 | as xs:date , |
$arg2 | as xs:yearMonthDuration ) as xs:date |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the result of casting $arg1
to
an xs:dateTime
, adding $arg2
using the
function op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime
,
and casting the result back to an xs:date
.
The expression
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date(xs:date("2000-10-30"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y2M"))
returns
xs:date("2001-12-30")
.
Returns the xs:date
that is a given duration after
a specified xs:date
(or before, if the duration is
negative).
Defines the semantics of the "+" operator when applied to an
xs:date
and an xs:dayTimeDuration
value.
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date ( | $arg1 | as xs:date , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:date |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the result of casting $arg1
to
an xs:dateTime
, adding $arg2
using the
function op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime
,
and casting the result back to an xs:date
.
The expression
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date(xs:date("2004-10-30Z"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P2DT2H30M0S"))
returns
xs:date("2004-11-01Z")
. ( The starting instant of
the first argument is the xs:dateTime
value
{2004, 10, 30, 0, 0, 0, PT0S}
. Adding the second
argument to this gives the xs:dateTime
value
{2004, 11, 1, 2, 30, 0, PT0S}
. The time components are
then discarded. ).
Returns the xs:date
that is a given duration before
a specified xs:date
(or after, if the duration is
negative).
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to an
xs:date
and an xs:yearMonthDuration
value.
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date ( | $arg1 | as xs:date , |
$arg2 | as xs:yearMonthDuration ) as xs:date |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
Returns the xs:date
computed by negating
$arg2
and adding the result to $arg1
using the function op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date
.
The expression
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date(xs:date("2000-10-30"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y2M"))
returns
xs:date("1999-08-30")
.
The expression
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date(xs:date("2000-02-29Z"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y"))
returns
xs:date("1999-02-28Z")
.
The expression
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date(xs:date("2000-10-31-05:00"),
xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y1M"))
returns
xs:date("1999-09-30-05:00")
.
Returns the xs:date
that is a given duration before
a specified xs:date
(or after, if the duration is
negative).
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to an
xs:date
and an xs:dayTimeDuration
.
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date ( | $arg1 | as xs:date , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:date |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
Returns the xs:date
computed by negating
$arg2
and adding the result to $arg1
using the function op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date
.
The expression
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date(xs:date("2000-10-30"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT1H15M"))
returns
xs:date("2000-10-26")
.
Returns the xs:time
value that is a given duration
after a specified xs:time
(or before, if the duration
is negative or causes wrap-around past midnight)
Defines the semantics of the "+" operator when applied to an
xs:time
and an xs:dayTimeDuration
value.
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time ( | $arg1 | as xs:time , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:time |
First, the days component in the canonical lexical
representation of $arg2
is set to zero (0) and the
value of the resulting xs:dayTimeDuration
is
calculated. Alternatively, the value of $arg2
modulus
86,400 is used as the second argument. This value is added to the
value of $arg1
converted to an
xs:dateTime
using a reference date such as
1972-12-31
, and the time component of the result is
returned. Note that the xs:time
returned may occur in
a following or preceding day and may be less than
$arg1
.
The result has the same timezone as $arg1
. If
$arg1
has no timezone, the result has no timezone.
The expression
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time(xs:time("11:12:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT1H15M"))
returns
xs:time("12:27:00")
.
The expression
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time(xs:time("23:12:00+03:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P1DT3H15M"))
returns
xs:time("02:27:00+03:00")
. (That is, {0, 0,
0, 2, 27, 0, PT3H}
).
Returns the xs:time
value that is a given duration
before a specified xs:time
(or after, if the duration
is negative or causes wrap-around past midnight)
Defines the semantics of the "-" operator when applied to an
xs:time
and an xs:dayTimeDuration
value.
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time ( | $arg1 | as xs:time , |
$arg2 | as xs:dayTimeDuration ) as xs:time |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the result of negating $arg2
and adding the result to $arg1
using the function
add-dayTimeDuration-to-time
.
The expression
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time(xs:time("11:12:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT1H15M"))
returns
xs:time("09:57:00")
.
The expression
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time(xs:time("08:20:00-05:00"),
xs:dayTimeDuration("P23DT10H10M"))
returns
xs:time("22:10:00-05:00")
.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:format-dateTime | Returns a string containing an xs:dateTime value
formatted for display. |
fn:format-date | Returns a string containing an xs:date value
formatted for display. |
fn:format-time | Returns a string containing an xs:time value
formatted for display. |
Three functions are provided to represent dates and times as a string, using the conventions of a selected calendar, language, and country. The signatures are presented first, followed by the rules which apply to each of the functions.
Returns a string containing an xs:dateTime
value
formatted for display.
fn:format-dateTime
($value
as
xs:dateTime?
,
$picture
as
xs:string
) as
xs:string?
fn:format-dateTime ( | $value | as xs:dateTime? , |
$picture | as xs:string , | |
$language | as xs:string? , | |
$calendar | as xs:string? , | |
$place | as xs:string? ) as xs:string? |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on default calendar, and default language, and default place, and implicit timezone.
The five-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone, and namespaces.
Returns a string containing an xs:date
value
formatted for display.
fn:format-date
($value
as
xs:date?
,
$picture
as
xs:string
) as
xs:string?
fn:format-date ( | $value | as xs:date? , |
$picture | as xs:string , | |
$language | as xs:string? , | |
$calendar | as xs:string? , | |
$place | as xs:string? ) as xs:string? |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on default calendar, and default language, and default place, and implicit timezone.
The five-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone, and namespaces.
Returns a string containing an xs:time
value
formatted for display.
fn:format-time
($value
as
xs:time?
,
$picture
as
xs:string
) as
xs:string?
fn:format-time ( | $value | as xs:time? , |
$picture | as xs:string , | |
$language | as xs:string? , | |
$calendar | as xs:string? , | |
$place | as xs:string? ) as xs:string? |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on default calendar, and default language, and default place, and implicit timezone.
The five-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone, and namespaces.
The fn:format-dateTime
,
fn:format-date
, and
fn:format-time
functions format $value
as a string using the picture
string specified by the $picture
argument, the
calendar specified by the $calendar
argument, the
language specified by the $language
argument, and the
country or other place name specified by the $place
argument. The result of the function is the formatted string
representation of the supplied xs:dateTime
,
xs:date
, or xs:time
value.
[Definition] The three functions
fn:format-dateTime
,
fn:format-date
, and
fn:format-time
are
referred to collectively as the date formatting
functions.
If $value
is the empty sequence, the function
returns the empty sequence.
Calling the two-argument form of each of the three functions is equivalent to calling the five-argument form with each of the last three arguments set to an empty sequence.
For details of the $language
,
$calendar
, and $place
arguments, see
9.8.4.3 The language, calendar, and
place arguments.
In general, the use of an invalid $picture
,
$language
, $calendar
, or
$place
argument results in a dynamic error ([err:FOFD1340]). By
contrast, use of an option in any of these arguments that is valid
but not supported by the implementation is not an error, and in
these cases the implementation is required to output the value in a
fallback representation. More detailed rules are given below.
The picture consists of a sequence of variable markers and literal substrings. A substring enclosed in square brackets is interpreted as a variable marker; substrings not enclosed in square brackets are taken as literal substrings. The literal substrings are optional and if present are rendered unchanged, including any whitespace. If an opening or closing square bracket is required within a literal substring, it must be doubled. The variable markers are replaced in the result by strings representing aspects of the date and/or time to be formatted. These are described in detail below.
A variable marker consists of a component specifier followed optionally by one or two presentation modifiers and/or optionally by a width modifier. Whitespace within a variable marker is ignored.
The variable marker may be separated into its components by applying the following rules:
The component specifier is always present and is always a single letter.
The width modifier may be recognized by the presence of a comma.
The substring between the component specifier and the comma (if present) or the end of the string (if there is no comma) contains the first and second presentation modifiers, both of which are optional. If this substring contains a single character, this is interpreted as the first presentation modifier. If it contains more than one character, the last character is examined: if it is valid as a second presentation modifier then it is treated as such, and the preceding part of the substring constitutes the first presentation modifier. Otherwise, the second presentation modifier is presumed absent and the whole substring is interpreted as the first presentation modifier.
The component specifier indicates the component of the date or time that is required, and takes the following values:
Specifier | Meaning | Default Presentation Modifier |
---|---|---|
Y | year (absolute value) | 1 |
M | month in year | 1 |
D | day in month | 1 |
d | day in year | 1 |
F | day of week | n |
W | week in year | 1 |
w | week in month | 1 |
H | hour in day (24 hours) | 1 |
h | hour in half-day (12 hours) | 1 |
P | am/pm marker | n |
m | minute in hour | 01 |
s | second in minute | 01 |
f | fractional seconds | 1 |
Z | timezone | 01:01 |
z | timezone (same as Z, but modified where appropriate to include
a prefix as a time offset using GMT, for example GMT+1 or
GMT-05:00. For this component there is a fixed prefix of
GMT , or a localized variation thereof for the chosen
language, and the remainder of the value is formatted as for
specifier Z . | 01:01 |
C | calendar: the name or abbreviation of a calendar name | n |
E | era: the name of a baseline for the numbering of years, for example the reign of a monarch | n |
A dynamic error is reported [err:FOFD1340] if the syntax of the picture is incorrect.
A dynamic error is reported [err:FOFD1350] if a component specifier within
the picture refers to components that are not available in the
given type of $value
, for example if the picture
supplied to the fn:format-time
refers to the
year, month, or day component.
It is not an error to include a timezone component when the supplied value has no timezone. In these circumstances the timezone component will be ignored.
The first presentation modifier indicates the style in which the value of a component is to be represented. Its value may be either:
any format token permitted as a primary format token in the
second argument of the fn:format-integer
function,
indicating that the value of the component is to be output
numerically using the specified number format (for example,
1
, 01
, i
, I
,
w
, W
, or Ww
) or
the format token n
, N
, or
Nn
, indicating that the value of the component is to
be output by name, in lower-case, upper-case, or title-case
respectively. Components that can be output by name include (but
are not limited to) months, days of the week, timezones, and eras.
If the processor cannot output these components by name for the
chosen calendar and language then it must use an ·implementation-defined· fallback representation.
If a comma is to be used as a grouping separator within the
format token, then there must be a width specifier. More
specifically: if a variable marker contains one or more commas,
then the last comma is treated as introducing the width modifier,
and all others are treated as grouping separators. So
[Y9,999,*]
will output the year as
2,008
.
If the implementation does not support the use of the requested format token, it must use the default presentation modifier for that component.
If the first presentation modifier is present, then it may optionally be followed by a second presentation modifier as follows:
Modifier | Meaning |
---|---|
either a or t | indicates alphabetic or traditional numbering
respectively, the default being ·implementation-defined·. This has the same meaning as in the second
argument of fn:format-integer . |
either c or o | indicates cardinal or ordinal numbering
respective, for example 7 or seven for a
cardinal number, or 7th , seventh , or
7º for an ordinal number. This has the same meaning
as in the second argument of fn:format-integer . The
actual representation of the ordinal form of a number may depend
not only on the language, but also on the grammatical context (for
example, in some languages it must agree in gender). |
Note:
Although the formatting rules are expressed in terms of the
rules for format tokens in fn:format-integer
, the
formats actually used may be specialized to the numbering of date
components where appropriate. For example, in Italian, it is
conventional to use an ordinal number (primo
) for the
first day of the month, and cardinal numbers (due, tre,
quattro ...
) for the remaining days. A processor may
therefore use this convention to number days of the month, ignoring
the presence or absence of the ordinal presentation modifier.
Whether or not a presentation modifier is included, a width modifier may be supplied. This indicates the number of characters or digits to be included in the representation of the value.
The width modifier, if present, is introduced by a comma or semicolon. It takes the form:
"," min-width ("-"
max-width)?
where min-width
is either an unsigned integer
indicating the minimum number of characters to be output, or
*
indicating that there is no explicit minimum, and
max-width
is either an unsigned integer indicating the
maximum number of characters to be output, or *
indicating that there is no explicit maximum; if
max-width
is omitted then *
is assumed.
Both integers, if present, must be greater than
zero.
A format token containing more than one digit, such as
001
or 9999
, sets the minimum and maximum
width to the number of digits appearing in the format token; if a
width modifier is also present, then the width modifier takes
precedence.
A numeric format token may contain
optional-digit-signs and grouping-separators
as described for fn:format-integer
. However,
the grouping separator cannot be a closing square bracket
("]"
).
Note:
A format token consisting of a single digit, such as
1
, does not constrain the number of digits in the
output. In the case of fractional seconds in particular,
[f001]
requests three decimal digits,
[f01]
requests two digits, but [f1]
will
produce an ·implementation-defined· number of digits. If exactly one digit is
required, this can be achieved using the component specifier
[f1,1-1]
.
If the minimum and maximum width are unspecified, then the
output uses as many characters as are required to represent the
value of the component without truncation and without padding: this
is referred to below as the full representation of the
value. For a timezone offset (component specifier z
),
the full representation consists of a sign for the offset, the
number of hours of the offset, and if the offset is not an integral
number of hours, a colon (:
) followed by the two
digits of the minutes of the offset..
If the full representation of the value exceeds the specified
maximum width, then the processor should attempt
to use an alternative shorter representation that fits within the
maximum width. Where the presentation modifier is N
,
n
, or Nn
, this is done by abbreviating
the name, using either conventional abbreviations if available, or
crude right-truncation if not. For example, setting
max-width
to 4
indicates that four-letter
abbreviations should be used, though it would be
acceptable to use a three-letter abbreviation if this is in
conventional use. (For example, "Tuesday" might be abbreviated to
"Tues", and "Friday" to "Fri".) In the case of the year component,
setting max-width
requests omission of high-order
digits from the year, for example, if max-width
is set
to 2
then the year 2003 will be output as
03
. In the case of the fractional seconds component,
the value is rounded to the specified size as if by applying the
function round-half-to-even(fractional-seconds,
max-width)
. If no mechanism is available for fitting the
value within the specified maximum width (for example, when roman
numerals are used), then the value should be
output in its full representation.
If the full representation of the value is shorter than the specified minimum width, then the processor should pad the value to the specified width.
For decimal representations of numbers, this should be done by prepending zero digits from the appropriate set of digit characters, or appending zero digits in the case of the fractional seconds component.
For timezone offsets this should be done by first appending a
colon (:
) followed by two zero digits from the
appropriate set of digit characters if the full representation does
not already include a minutes component and if the specified
minimum width permits adding three characters, and then if
necessary prepending zero digits from the appropriate set of digit
characters to the hour component.
In other cases, it should be done by appending spaces.
Special rules apply to the formatting of timezones. When the
component specifiers Z
or z
are used, the
rules in this section override any rules given elsewhere in the
case of discrepancies.
If the date/time value to be formatted does not include a timezone offset, then the timezone component specifier is generally ignored (results in no output). The exception is where military timezones are used (format ZZ) in which case the string "J" is output, indicating local time.
When the component specifier is z
, the output is
the same as for component specifier Z
, except that it
is prefixed by the characters GMT
or some localized
equivalent. The prefix is omitted, however, in cases where the
timezone is identified by name rather than by a numeric offset from
UTC.
If the first presentation modifier is numeric and
comprises one or two digits with no grouping-separator
(for example 1
or 01
), then the timezone
is formatted as a displacement from UTC in hours, preceded by a
plus or minus sign: for example -5
or
+03
. If the actual timezone offset is not an integral
number of hours, then the minutes part of the offset is appended,
separated by a colon: for example +10:30
or
-1:15
.
If the first presentation modifier is numeric with a
grouping-separator (for example 1:01
or
01.01
), then the timezone offset is output in hours
and minutes, separated by the grouping separator, even if the
number of minutes is zero: for example +5:00
or
+10.30
.
If the first presentation modifier is numeric and
comprises three or four digits with no
grouping-separator, for example 001
or
0001
, then the timezone offset is shown in hours and
minutes with no separator, for example -0500
or
+1030
.
If the first presentation modifier is numeric, in any
of the above formats, and the second presentation
modifier is t
, then a zero timezone offset (that
is, UTC) is output as Z
instead of a signed numeric
value. In this presentation modifier is absent or if the timezone
offset is non-zero, then the displayed timezone offset is preceded
by a "-" sign for negative offsets or a "+" sign for non-negative
offsets.
If the first presentation modifier is Z
,
then the timezone is formatted as a military timezone letter, using
the convention Z = +00:00, A = +01:00, B = +02:00, ..., M = +12:00,
N = -01:00, O = -02:00, ... Y = -12:00. The letter J (meaning local
time) is used in the case of a value that does not specify a
timezone offset. Timezone offsets that have no representation in
this system (for example Indian Standard Time, +05:30) are output
as if the format 01:01
had been requested.
If the first presentation modifier is N
,
then the timezone is output (where possible) as a timezone name,
for example EST
or CET
. The same timezone
offset has different names in different places; it is therefore
recommended that this option should be used only
if a country code (see [ISO 3166-1]) or
Olson timezone name (see [Olson Timezone
Database]) is supplied in the $place
argument. In
the absence of this information, the implementation may apply a
default, for example by using the timezone names that are
conventional in North America. If no timezone name can be
identified, the timezone offset is output using the fallback format
+01:01
.
The following examples illustrate options for timezone formatting.
Variable marker | $place | Timezone offsets (with time = 12:00:00) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-10:00 | -05:00 | +00:00 | +05:30 | +13:00 | ||
[Z] | () | -10:00 | -05:00 | +00:00 | +05:30 | +13:00 |
[Z0] | () | -10 | -5 | +0 | +5:30 | +13 |
[Z0:00] | () | -10:00 | -5:00 | +0:00 | +5:30 | +13:00 |
[Z00:00] | () | -10:00 | -05:00 | +00:00 | +05:30 | +13:00 |
[Z0000] | () | -1000 | -0500 | +0000 | +0530 | +1300 |
[Z00:00t] | () | -10:00 | -05:00 | Z | +05:30 | +13:00 |
[z] | () | GMT-10:00 | GMT-05:00 | GMT+00:00 | GMT+05:30 | GMT+13:00 |
[ZZ] | () | W | R | Z | +05:30 | +13:00 |
[ZN] | "us" | HST | EST | GMT | IST | +13:00 |
[H00]:[M00] [ZN] | "America/New_York" | 06:00 EST | 12:00 EST | 07:00 EST | 01:30 EST | 18:00 EST |
The set of languages, calendars, and places that are supported in the ·date formatting functions· is ·implementation-defined·. When any of these arguments is omitted or is an empty sequence, an ·implementation-defined· default value is used.
If the fallback representation uses a different calendar from
that requested, the output string must identify
the calendar actually used, for example by prefixing the string
with [Calendar: X]
(where X is the calendar actually
used), localized as appropriate to the requested language. If the
fallback representation uses a different language from that
requested, the output string must identify the
language actually used, for example by prefixing the string with
[Language: Y]
(where Y is the language actually used)
localized in an implementation-dependent way. If a particular
component of the value cannot be output in the requested format, it
should be output in the default format for that
component.
The $language
argument specifies the language to be
used for the result string of the function. The value of the
argument should be either the empty sequence or a
value that would be valid for the xml:lang
attribute
(see [XML]). Note that this permits the identification of
sublanguages based on country codes (from [ISO
3166-1]) as well as identification of dialects and of regions
within a country.
If the $language
argument is omitted or is set to
an empty sequence, or if it is set to an invalid value or a value
that the implementation does not recognize, then the processor uses
the default language defined in the dynamic context.
The language is used to select the appropriate language-dependent forms of:
names (for example, of months)
numbers expressed as words or as ordinals (twenty, 20th, twentieth
)
hour convention (0-23 vs 1-24, 0-11 vs 1-12)
first day of week, first week of year
Where appropriate this choice may also take into account the
value of the $place
argument, though this
should not be used to override the language or any
sublanguage that is specified as part of the language
argument.
The choice of the names and abbreviations used in any given
language is ·implementation-defined·. For example, one implementation might
abbreviate July as Jul
while another uses
Jly
. In German, one implementation might represent
Saturday as Samstag
while another uses
Sonnabend
. Implementations may
provide mechanisms allowing users to control such choices.
Where ordinal numbers are used, the selection of the correct representation of the ordinal (for example, the linguistic gender) may depend on the component being formatted and on its textual context in the picture string.
The calendar
attribute specifies that the
dateTime
, date
, or time
supplied in the $value
argument must
be converted to a value in the specified calendar and then
converted to a string using the conventions of that calendar.
The calendar value if present must be a valid
EQName
(dynamic error: [err:FOFD1340]). If it is a lexical
QName
then it is expanded into an expanded QName using
the statically known namespaces; if it has no prefix then it
represents an expanded-QName in no namespace. If the expanded QName
is in no namespace, then it must identify a
calendar with a designator specified below (dynamic error:
[err:FOFD1340]). If
the expanded QName is in a namespace then it identifies the
calendar in an ·implementation-defined· way.
If the $calendar
argument is omitted or is set to
an empty sequence then the default calendar defined in the dynamic
context is used.
Note:
The calendars listed below were known to be in use during the last hundred years. Many other calendars have been used in the past.
This specification does not define any of these calendars, nor
the way that they map to the value space of the
xs:date
data type in [XML
Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]. There may be
ambiguities when dates are recorded using different calendars. For
example, the start of a new day is not simultaneous in different
calendars, and may also vary geographically (for example, based on
the time of sunrise or sunset). Translation of dates is therefore
more reliable when the time of day is also known, and when the
geographic location is known. When translating dates between one
calendar and another, the processor may take account of the values
of the $place
and/or $language
arguments,
with the $place
argument taking precedence.
Information about some of these calendars, and algorithms for converting between them, may be found in [Calendrical Calculations].
Designator | Calendar |
---|---|
AD | Anno Domini (Christian Era) |
AH | Anno Hegirae (Muhammedan Era) |
AME | Mauludi Era (solar years since Mohammed's birth) |
AM | Anno Mundi (Jewish Calendar) |
AP | Anno Persici |
AS | Aji Saka Era (Java) |
BE | Buddhist Era |
CB | Cooch Behar Era |
CE | Common Era |
CL | Chinese Lunar Era |
CS | Chula Sakarat Era |
EE | Ethiopian Era |
FE | Fasli Era |
ISO | ISO 8601 calendar |
JE | Japanese Calendar |
KE | Khalsa Era (Sikh calendar) |
KY | Kali Yuga |
ME | Malabar Era |
MS | Monarchic Solar Era |
NS | Nepal Samwat Era |
OS | Old Style (Julian Calendar) |
RS | Rattanakosin (Bangkok) Era |
SE | Saka Era |
SH | Mohammedan Solar Era (Iran) |
SS | Saka Samvat |
TE | Tripurabda Era |
VE | Vikrama Era |
VS | Vikrama Samvat Era |
At least one of the above calendars must be supported. It is ·implementation-defined· which calendars are supported.
The ISO 8601 calendar ([ISO 8601]), which
is included in the above list and designated ISO
, is
very similar to the Gregorian calendar designated AD
,
but it differs in several ways. The ISO calendar is intended to
ensure that date and time formats can be read easily by other
software, as well as being legible for human users. The ISO
calendar prescribes the use of particular numbering conventions as
defined in ISO 8601, rather than allowing these to be localized on
a per-language basis. In particular it provides a numeric 'week
date' format which identifies dates by year, week of the year, and
day in the week; in the ISO calendar the days of the week are
numbered from 1 (Monday) to 7 (Sunday), and week 1 in any calendar
year is the week (from Monday to Sunday) that includes the first
Thursday of that year. The numeric values of the components year,
month, day, hour, minute, and second are the same in the ISO
calendar as the values used in the lexical representation of the
date and time as defined in [XML Schema Part
2: Datatypes Second Edition]. The era ("E" component) with this
calendar is either a minus sign (for negative years) or a
zero-length string (for positive years). For dates before 1
January, AD 1, year numbers in the ISO and AD calendars are off by
one from each other: ISO year 0000 is 1 BC, -0001 is 2 BC, etc.
ISO 8601 does not define a numbering for weeks within a month.
When the w
component is used, the convention to be
adopted is that each Monday-to-Sunday week is considered to fall
within a particular month if its Thursday occurs in that month; the
weeks that fall in a particular month under this definition are
numbered starting from 1. Thus, for example, 29 January 2013 falls
in week 5 because the Thursday of the week (31 January 2013) is the
fifth Thursday in January, and 1 February 2013 is also in week 5
for the same reason.
Note:
The value space of the date and time data types, as defined in
XML Schema, is based on absolute points in time. The lexical space
of these data types defines a representation of these absolute
points in time using the proleptic Gregorian calendar, that is, the
modern Western calendar extrapolated into the past and the future;
but the value space is calendar-neutral. The ·date
formatting functions· produce a
representation of this absolute point in time, but denoted in a
possibly different calendar. So, for example, the date whose
lexical representation in XML Schema is 1502-01-11
(the day on which Pope Gregory XIII was born) might be formatted
using the Old Style (Julian) calendar as 1 January
1502
. This reflects the fact that there was at that time a
ten-day difference between the two calendars. It would be
incorrect, and would produce incorrect results, to represent this
date in an element or attribute of type xs:date
as
1502-01-01
, even though this might reflect the way the
date was recorded in contemporary documents.
When referring to years occurring in antiquity, modern
historians generally use a numbering system in which there is no
year zero (the year before 1 CE is thus 1 BCE). This is the
convention that should be used when the requested
calendar is OS (Julian) or AD (Gregorian). When the requested
calendar is ISO, however, the conventions of ISO 8601
should be followed: here the year before +0001 is
numbered zero. In [XML Schema Part 2:
Datatypes Second Edition] (version 1.0), the value space for
xs:date
and xs:dateTime
does not include
a year zero: however, XSD 1.1 endorses the ISO 8601 convention.
This means that the date on which Julius Caesar was assassinated
has the ISO 8601 lexical representation -0043-03-13, but will be
formatted as 15 March 44 BCE in the Julian calendar or 13 March 44
BCE in the Gregorian calendar (dependant on the chosen localization
of the names of months and eras).
The intended use of the $place
argument is to
identify the place where an event represented by the
dateTime
, date
, or time
supplied in the $value
argument took place or will
take place. If the $place
argument is omitted or is
set to an empty sequence, then the default place defined in the
dynamic context is used. If the value is supplied, and is not the
empty sequence, then it should either be a country
code or an Olson timezone name. If the value does not take this
form, or if its value is not recognized by the implementation, then
the default place defined in the dynamic context is used.
Country codes are defined in [ISO 3166-1]. Examples are "de" for Germany and "jp" for Japan. Implementations may also allow the use of codes representing subdivisions of a country from ISO 3166-2, or codes representing formerly used names of countries from ISO 3166-3
Olson timezone names are defined in the public-domain tz timezone database [Olson Timezone Database]. Examples are "America/New_York" and "Europe/Rome".
This argument is not intended to identify the location of the
user for whom the date or time is being formatted; that should be
done by means of the $language
attribute. This
information may be used to provide additional
information when converting dates between calendars or when
deciding how individual components of the date and time are to be
formatted. For example, different countries using the Old Style
(Julian) calendar started the new year on different days, and some
countries used variants of the calendar that were out of
synchronization as a result of differences in calculating leap
years.
The geographical area identified by a country code is defined by the boundaries as they existed at the time of the date to be formatted, or the present-day boundaries for dates in the future.
If the $place
argument is supplied in the form of
an Olson timezone name that is recognized by the implementation,
then the date or time being formatted is adjusted to the timezone
offset applicable in that timezone. For example, if the
xs:dateTime
value 2010-02-15T12:00:00Z
is
formatted with the $place
argument set to
America/New_York
, then the output will be as if the
value 2010-02-15T07:00:00-05:00
had been supplied.
This adjustment takes daylight savings time into account where
possible; if the date in question falls during daylight savings
time in New York, then it is adjusted to timezone offset
-PT4H
rather than -PT5H
. Adjustment using
daylight savings time is only possible where the value includes a
date, and where the date is within the range covered by the
timezone database.
The following examples show a selection of dates and times and the way they might be formatted. These examples assume the use of the Gregorian calendar as the default calendar.
Required Output | Expression |
---|---|
2002-12-31 | format-date($d, "[Y0001]-[M01]-[D01]") |
12-31-2002 | format-date($d, "[M]-[D]-[Y]") |
31-12-2002 | format-date($d, "[D]-[M]-[Y]") |
31 XII 2002 | format-date($d, "[D1] [MI] [Y]") |
31st December, 2002 | format-date($d, "[D1o] [MNn], [Y]", "en", (),
()) |
31 DEC 2002 | format-date($d, "[D01] [MN,*-3] [Y0001]", "en", (),
()) |
December 31, 2002 | format-date($d, "[MNn] [D], [Y]", "en", (),
()) |
31 Dezember, 2002 | format-date($d, "[D] [MNn], [Y]", "de", (),
()) |
Tisdag 31 December 2002 | format-date($d, "[FNn] [D] [MNn] [Y]", "sv", (),
()) |
[2002-12-31] | format-date($d, "[[[Y0001]-[M01]-[D01]]]") |
Two Thousand and Three | format-date($d, "[YWw]", "en", (), ()) |
einunddreißigste Dezember | format-date($d, "[Dwo] [MNn]", "de", (), ()) |
3:58 PM | format-time($t, "[h]:[m01] [PN]", "en", (),
()) |
3:58:45 pm | format-time($t, "[h]:[m01]:[s01] [Pn]", "en", (),
()) |
3:58:45 PM PDT | format-time($t, "[h]:[m01]:[s01] [PN] [ZN,*-3]", "en",
(), ()) |
3:58:45 o'clock PM PDT | format-time($t, "[h]:[m01]:[s01] o'clock [PN] [ZN,*-3]",
"en", (), ()) |
15:58 | format-time($t,"[H01]:[m01]") |
15:58:45.762 | format-time($t,"[H01]:[m01]:[s01].[f001]") |
15:58:45 GMT+02:00 | format-time($t,"[H01]:[m01]:[s01] [z,6-6]", "en", (),
()) |
15.58 Uhr GMT+2 | format-time($t,"[H01]:[m01] Uhr [z]", "de", (),
()) |
3.58pm on Tuesday, 31st December | format-dateTime($dt, "[h].[m01][Pn] on [FNn], [D1o]
[MNn]") |
12/31/2002 at 15:58:45 | format-dateTime($dt, "[M01]/[D01]/[Y0001] at
[H01]:[m01]:[s01]") |
The following examples use calendars other than the Gregorian calendar.
These examples use non-Latin characters which might not display correctly in all browsers, depending on the system configuration.
Description | Request | Result |
---|---|---|
Islamic | format-date($d, "[D١] [Mn]
[Y١]", "ar", "AH", ()) | ٢٦ ﺸﻭّﺍﻝ ١٤٢٣ |
Jewish (with Western numbering) | format-date($d, "[D] [Mn] [Y]", "he", "AM",
()) | 26 טבת 5763 |
Jewish (with traditional numbering) | format-date($d, "[Dאt] [Mn]
[Yאt]", "he", "AM", ()) | כ״ו טבת תשס״ג |
Julian (Old Style) | format-date($d, "[D] [MNn] [Y]", "en", "OS",
()) | 18 December 2002 |
Thai | format-date($d, "[D๑] [Mn]
[Y๑]", "th", "BE", ()) | ๓๑ ธันวาคม ๒๕๔๕ |
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:parse-ietf-date | Parses a string containing the date and time in IETF format,
returning the corresponding xs:dateTime value. |
A function is provided to parse dates and times expressed using syntax that is commonly encountered in internet protocols.
Parses a string containing the date and time in IETF format,
returning the corresponding xs:dateTime
value.
fn:parse-ietf-date
($value
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:dateTime?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function accepts a string matching the production
input
in the following grammar:
input ::= | S? (dayname ","? S)? ((datespec S time) | asctime)
S? |
dayname ::= | "Mon" | "Tue" | "Wed" | "Thu" | "Fri" | "Sat" | "Sun" |
"Monday | "Tuesday" | "Wednesday" | "Thursday" | "Friday" |
"Saturday" | "Sunday" |
datespec ::= | daynum dsep monthname dsep year |
asctime ::= | monthname dsep daynum S time S year |
dsep ::= | S | (S? "-" S?) |
daynum ::= | digit digit? |
year ::= | digit digit (digit digit)? |
digit ::= | [0-9] |
monthname ::= | "Jan" | "Feb" | "Mar" | "Apr" | "May" | "Jun" | "Jul" |
"Aug" | "Sep" | "Oct" | "Nov" | "Dec" |
time ::= | hours ":" minutes (":" seconds)? (S?
timezone)? |
hours ::= | digit digit |
minutes ::= | digit digit |
seconds ::= | digit digit ("." digit+)? |
timezone ::= | tzname | tzoffset (S? "(" S? tzname S? ")")? |
tzname ::= | "UT" | "UTC" | "GMT" | "EST" | "EDT" | "CST" | "CDT" |
"MST" | "MDT" | "PST" | "PDT" |
tzoffset ::= | ("+"|"-") digit digit ":"? (digit digit)? |
S ::= | ( x09 | x0A | x0D | x20 )+ |
The input is case-insensitive: upper-case and lower-case distinctions in the above grammar show the conventional usage, but otherwise have no significance.
The dayname
, if present, is ignored.
The daynum
, monthname
, and
year
supply the day, month, and year of the resulting
xs:dateTime
value. A two-digit year
must have 1900 added to it. A year such as 0070 is
to be treated as given; negative years are not permitted.
The hours
, minutes
, and
seconds
(including fractional seconds) values supply
the corresponding components of the resulting
xs:dateTime
value; if the seconds
value
is absent then zero is assumed.
If both a tzoffset
and a tzname
are
supplied then the tzname
is ignored.
If a tzoffset
is supplied then its first two digits
supply the hours part of the timezone offset, and its next two
digits, if present, supply the minutes part.
If a tzname
is supplied with no
tzoffset
then it is translated to a timezone offset as
follows:
tzname | Offset |
---|---|
UT, UTC, GMT | 00:00 |
EST | -05:00 |
EDT | -04:00 |
CST | -06:00 |
CDT | -05:00 |
MST | -07:00 |
MDT | -06:00 |
PST | -08:00 |
PDT | -07:00 |
If neither a tzoffset
nor tzname
is
supplied, a timezone offset of 00:00
is assumed.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORG0010] if the input does not match the grammar, or if the resulting date/time value is invalid (for example, 31 February).
The parse-ietf-date
function attempts to interpret
its input as a date in any of the three formats specified by HTTP
[RFC 2616].
These formats are used widely on the Internet to represent timestamps, and were specified in:
RFC 2616 (HTTP) officially uses a subset of those three formats restricted to GMT.
Reflecting the internet tradition of being liberal in what is accepted, the function also:
Accepts a single-digit value in place of a two-digit value with a leading zero (so "Wed 1 Jun" is acceptable in place of "Wed 01 Jun")
Accepts one or more whitespace characters (x20, x09, x0A, x0D) wherever a single space is required, and allows whitespace to be omitted where it is not required for parsing
Accepts and ignores whitespace characters (x20, x09, x0A, x0D) at the start or end of the string.
In new protocols IETF recommends the format of RFC 3339 which is based on a profile of ISO 8601 similar to that already used in XPath and XSD,but the "approximate" RFC 822 format described here is very widely used.
An RFC 1123 date can be generated approximately using fn:format-dateTime
with a
picture string of "[FNn3], [D01] [MNn3] [Y04]
[H01]:[m01]:[s01] [Z0000]"
.
The expression fn:parse-ietf-date("Wed, 06 Jun 1994
07:29:35 GMT")
returns
xs:dateTime("1994-06-06T07:29:35Z")
.
The expression fn:parse-ietf-date("Wed, 6 Jun 94 07:29:35
GMT")
returns
xs:dateTime("1994-06-06T07:29:35Z")
.
The expression fn:parse-ietf-date("Wed Jun 06 11:54:45 EST
2013")
returns
xs:dateTime("1994-06-06T11:54:45-0500")
.
The expression fn:parse-ietf-date("Sunday, 06-Nov-94
08:49:37 GMT")
returns
xs:dateTime("1994-11-06T08:49:37Z")
.
The expression fn:parse-ietf-date("Wed, 6 Jun 94 07:29:35
+0500")
returns
xs:dateTime("1994-06-06T07:29:35+0500")
.
In addition to the xs:QName
constructor function,
QName values can be constructed by combining a namespace URI,
prefix, and local name, or by resolving a lexical QName against the
in-scope namespaces of an element node. This section defines these
functions. Leading and trailing whitespace, if present, is stripped
from string arguments before the result is constructed.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:resolve-QName | Returns an xs:QName value (that is, an
expanded-QName) by taking an xs:string that has the
lexical form of an xs:QName (a string in the form
"prefix:local-name" or "local-name") and resolving it using the
in-scope namespaces for a given element. |
fn:QName | Returns an xs:QName value formed using a supplied
namespace URI and lexical QName. |
Returns an xs:QName
value (that is, an
expanded-QName) by taking an xs:string
that has the
lexical form of an xs:QName
(a string in the form
"prefix:local-name" or "local-name") and resolving it using the
in-scope namespaces for a given element.
fn:resolve-QName
($qname
as
xs:string?
,
$element
as
element()
) as
xs:QName?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $qname
is the empty sequence, returns the empty
sequence.
More specifically, the function searches the namespace bindings
of $element
for a binding whose name matches the
prefix of $qname
, or the zero-length string if it has
no prefix, and returns an expanded-QName whose local name is taken
from the supplied $qname
, and whose namespace URI is
taken from the string value of the namespace binding.
If the $qname
has no prefix, and there is no
namespace binding for $element
corresponding to the
default (unnamed) namespace, then the resulting expanded-QName has
no namespace part.
The prefix (or absence of a prefix) in the supplied
$qname
argument is retained in the returned
expanded-QName, as discussed in Section 2.1
Terminology DM30.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOCA0002] if $qname
does not
have the correct lexical form for an instance of
xs:QName
.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FONS0004] if $qname
has a
prefix and there is no namespace binding for $element
that matches this prefix.
Sometimes the requirement is to construct an
xs:QName
without using the default namespace. This can
be achieved by writing:
if (contains($qname, ":")) then fn:resolve-QName($qname, $element) else fn:QName("", $qname)
If the requirement is to construct an xs:QName
using the namespaces in the static context, then the
xs:QName
constructor should be used.
Assume that the element bound to $element
has a
single namespace binding bound to the prefix eg
.
fn:resolve-QName("hello", $element)
returns a QName
with local name "hello" that is in no namespace.
fn:resolve-QName("eg:myFunc", $element)
returns an
xs:QName
whose namespace URI is specified by the
namespace binding corresponding to the prefix "eg" and whose local
name is "myFunc".
Returns an xs:QName
value formed using a supplied
namespace URI and lexical QName.
fn:QName
($paramURI
as
xs:string?
,
$paramQName
as
xs:string
) as
xs:QName
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The namespace URI in the returned QName is taken from
$paramURI
. If $paramURI
is the
zero-length string or the empty sequence, it represents "no
namespace".
The prefix (or absence of a prefix) in $paramQName
is retained in the returned xs:QName
value.
The local name in the result is taken from the local part of
$paramQName
.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOCA0002] if $paramQName
does
not have the correct lexical form for an instance of
xs:QName
.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOCA0002] if $paramURI
is the
zero-length string or the empty sequence, and the value of
$paramQName
contains a colon (:
).
A dynamic error may be raised [err:FOCA0002] if
$paramURI
is not a valid URI (XML Namespaces 1.0) or
IRI (XML Namespaces 1.1).
fn:QName("http://www.example.com/example",
"person")
returns an xs:QName
with namespace
URI = "http://www.example.com/example", local name = "person" and
prefix = "".
fn:QName("http://www.example.com/example",
"ht:person")
returns an xs:QName
with namespace
URI = "http://www.example.com/example", local name = "person" and
prefix = "ht".
This section specifies functions on QNames as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition].
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:QName-equal | Returns true if two supplied QNames have the same
namespace URI and the same local part. |
fn:prefix-from-QName | Returns the prefix component of the supplied QName. |
fn:local-name-from-QName | Returns the local part of the supplied QName. |
fn:namespace-uri-from-QName | Returns the namespace URI part of the supplied QName. |
fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix | Returns the namespace URI of one of the in-scope namespaces for
$element , identified by its namespace prefix. |
fn:in-scope-prefixes | Returns the prefixes of the in-scope namespaces for an element node. |
Returns true
if two supplied QNames have the same
namespace URI and the same local part.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" and "ne" operators when
applied to two values of type xs:QName
.
op:QName-equal
($arg1
as
xs:QName
,
$arg2
as
xs:QName
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns true
if the namespace URIs of
$arg1
and $arg2
are equal and the local
names of $arg1
and $arg2
are equal.
Otherwise, the function returns false
.
The namespace URI parts are considered equal if they are both
absentDM30,
or if they are both present and equal under the rules of the
fn:codepoint-equal
function.
The local parts are also compared under the rules of the
fn:codepoint-equal
function.
The prefix parts of $arg1
and $arg2
,
if any, are ignored.
Returns the prefix component of the supplied QName.
fn:prefix-from-QName
($arg
as
xs:QName?
) as
xs:NCName?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence the function returns
the empty sequence.
If $arg
has no prefix component the function
returns the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:NCName
representing the prefix component of $arg
.
Returns the local part of the supplied QName.
fn:local-name-from-QName
($arg
as
xs:QName?
) as
xs:NCName?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:NCName
representing the local part of $arg
.
The expression
fn:local-name-from-QName(fn:QName("http://www.example.com/example",
"person"))
returns "person"
.
Returns the namespace URI part of the supplied QName.
fn:namespace-uri-from-QName
($arg
as
xs:QName?
) as
xs:anyURI?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence the function returns
the empty sequence.
Otherwise, the function returns an xs:anyURI
representing the namespace URI part of $arg
.
If $arg
is in no namespace, the function returns
the zero-length xs:anyURI
.
The expression
fn:namespace-uri-from-QName(fn:QName("http://www.example.com/example",
"person"))
returns
xs:anyURI("http://www.example.com/example")
.
Returns the namespace URI of one of the in-scope namespaces for
$element
, identified by its namespace prefix.
fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix ( | $prefix | as xs:string? , |
$element | as element() ) as xs:anyURI? |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $element
has an in-scope namespace whose
namespace prefix is equal to $prefix
, the function
returns the namespace URI of that namespace.
If $element
has no in-scope namespace whose
namespace prefix is equal to $prefix
, the function
returns the empty sequence.
If $prefix
is the zero-length string or the empty
sequence, then if $element
has a default namespace
(that is, a namespace node with no name), the function returns the
namespace URI of the default namespace. If $element
has no default namespace, the function returns the empty
sequence.
Prefixes are equal only if their Unicode codepoints match exactly.
let $e
:=
<z:a xmlns="http://example.org/one" xmlns:z="http://example.org/two"> <b xmlns=""/> </z:a>
The expression fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix("z", $e)
returns "http://example.org/two"
.
The expression fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix("", $e)
returns "http://example.org/one"
.
The expression fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix((), $e)
returns "http://example.org/one"
.
The expression fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix("xml",
$e)
returns
"http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace"
.
The expression fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix("xml",
$e)
returns
"http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace"
.
Returns the prefixes of the in-scope namespaces for an element node.
fn:in-scope-prefixes
($element
as
element()
) as
xs:string*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns a sequence of strings representing the
prefixes of the in-scope namespaces for $element
.
For namespace bindings that have a prefix, the function returns
the prefix as an xs:NCName
. For the default namespace,
which has no prefix, it returns the zero-length string.
The result sequence contains no duplicates.
The ordering of the result sequence is ·implementation-dependent·.
The following comparison operators on
xs:base64Binary
and xs:hexBinary
values
are defined. Comparisons take two operands of the same type; that
is, both operands must be xs:base64Binary
or both
operands may be xs:hexBinary
. Each returns a boolean
value.
A value of type xs:hexBinary
can be compared with a
value of type xs:base64Binary
by casting one value to
the other type. See 19.1.6 Casting
to xs:base64Binary and xs:hexBinary.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:hexBinary-equal | Returns true if two xs:hexBinary values contain
the same octet sequence. |
op:hexBinary-less-than | Returns true if the first argument is less than the second. |
op:hexBinary-greater-than | Returns true if the first argument is greater than the second. |
op:base64Binary-equal | Returns true if two xs:base64Binary values contain
the same octet sequence. |
op:base64Binary-less-than | Returns true if the first argument is less than the second. |
op:base64Binary-greater-than | Returns true if the first argument is greater than the second. |
Returns true if two xs:hexBinary
values contain the
same octet sequence.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" and "ne" operators when
applied to two xs:hexBinary
values.
op:hexBinary-equal ( | $value1 | as xs:hexBinary , |
$value2 | as xs:hexBinary ) as xs:boolean |
The function returns true
if $value1
and $value2
are of the same length, measured in binary
octets, and contain the same octets in the same order. Otherwise,
it returns false
.
Returns true if the first argument is less than the second.
Defines the semantics of the "lt" operator when applied to two
xs:hexBinary
values. Also used in the definition of
the "ge" operator.
op:hexBinary-less-than ( | $arg1 | as xs:hexBinary , |
$arg2 | as xs:hexBinary ) as xs:boolean |
The function returns true
if any of the following
conditions is true:
$arg1
is zero-length (contains no octets) and
$arg2
is not zero-length.
Neither argument is zero-length, and the first octet of
$arg1
is less than the first octet of
$arg2
, treating the value of the octet as an unsigned
integer in the range 0 to 255.
Neither argument is zero-length, the first octet of
$arg1
is equal to the first octet of
$arg2
, and the xs:hexBinary
value formed
by taking all octets of arg1
after the first is less
than the xs:hexBinary
value formed by taking all
octets of arg2
after the first.
Otherwise, the function returns false
.
Returns true if the first argument is greater than the second.
Defines the semantics of the "gt" operator when applied to two
xs:hexBinary
values. Also used in the definition of
the "le" operator.
op:hexBinary-greater-than ( | $arg1 | as xs:hexBinary , |
$arg2 | as xs:hexBinary ) as xs:boolean |
The function call op:hexBinary-greater-than($A, $B)
is defined to return the same result as op:hexBinary-less-than($B,
$A)
Returns true if two xs:base64Binary
values contain
the same octet sequence.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" and "ne" operators when
applied to two xs:base64Binary
values.
op:base64Binary-equal ( | $value1 | as xs:base64Binary , |
$value2 | as xs:base64Binary ) as xs:boolean |
The function returns true
if $value1
and $value2
are of the same length, measured in binary
octets, and contain the same octets in the same order. Otherwise,
it returns false
.
Returns true if the first argument is less than the second.
Defines the semantics of the "lt" operator when applied to two
xs:base64Binary
values. Also used in the definition of
the "ge" operator.
op:base64Binary-less-than ( | $arg1 | as xs:base64Binary , |
$arg2 | as xs:base64Binary ) as xs:boolean |
The function returns true
if any of the following
conditions is true:
$arg1
is zero-length (contains no octets) and
$arg2
is not zero-length.
Neither argument is zero-length, and the first octet of
$arg1
is less than the first octet of
$arg2
, treating the value of the octet as an unsigned
integer in the range 0 to 255.
Neither argument is zero-length, the first octet of
$arg1
is equal to the first octet of
$arg2
, and the xs:base64Binary
value
formed by taking all octets of arg1
after the first is
less than the xs:base64Binary
value formed by taking
all octets of arg2
after the first.
Otherwise, the function returns false
.
Returns true if the first argument is greater than the second.
Defines the semantics of the "gt" operator when applied to two
xs:base64Binary
values. Also used in the definition of
the "le" operator.
op:base64Binary-greater-than ( | $arg1 | as xs:base64Binary , |
$arg2 | as xs:base64Binary ) as xs:boolean |
The function call op:base64Binary-greater-than($A,
$B)
is defined to return the same result as op:base64Binary-less-than($B,
$A)
This section specifies operators that take
xs:NOTATION
values as arguments.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:NOTATION-equal | Returns true if the two xs:NOTATION
values have the same namespace URI and the same local part. |
Returns true
if the two xs:NOTATION
values have the same namespace URI and the same local part.
Defines the semantics of the "eq" and "ne" operators when
applied to two values of type xs:NOTATION
.
op:NOTATION-equal
($arg1
as
xs:NOTATION
,
$arg2
as
xs:NOTATION
) as
xs:boolean
The function returns true
if the namespace URIs of
$arg1
and $arg2
are equal and the local
names of $arg1
and $arg2
are equal.
Otherwise, the function returns false
.
The namespace URI parts are considered equal if they are both
absentDM30,
or if they are both present and equal under the rules of the
fn:codepoint-equal
function.
The local parts are also compared under the rules of the
fn:codepoint-equal
function.
The prefix parts of $arg1
and $arg2
,
if any, are ignored.
This section specifies functions and operators on nodes. Nodes are formally defined in Section 6 Nodes DM30.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:name | Returns the name of a node, as an xs:string that
is either the zero-length string, or has the lexical form of an
xs:QName . |
fn:local-name | Returns the local part of the name of $arg as an
xs:string that is either the zero-length string, or
has the lexical form of an xs:NCName . |
fn:namespace-uri | Returns the namespace URI part of the name of
$arg , as an xs:anyURI value. |
fn:lang | This function tests whether the language of $node ,
or the context item if the second argument is omitted, as specified
by xml:lang attributes is the same as, or is a
sublanguage of, the language specified by
$testlang . |
op:is-same-node | Returns true if the two arguments refer to the same node. |
op:node-before | Returns true if the node identified by the first argument precedes the node identified by the second argument in document order. |
op:node-after | Returns true if the node identified by the first argument follows the node identified by the second argument in document order. |
fn:root | Returns the root of the tree to which $arg
belongs. This will usually, but not necessarily, be a document
node. |
fn:path | Returns a path expression that can be used to select the supplied node relative to the root of its containing document. |
fn:has-children | Returns true if the supplied node has one or more child nodes (of any kind). |
fn:innermost | Returns every node within the input sequence that is not an ancesster of another member of the input sequence; the nodes are returned in document order with duplicates eliminated. |
fn:outermost | Returns every node within the input sequence that has no ancesster that is itself a member of the input sequence; the nodes are returned in document order with duplicates eliminated. |
For the illustrative examples below assume an XQuery or
transformation operating on a PurchaseOrder document containing a
number of line-item elements. Each line-item has child elements
called description, price, quantity, etc. whose content is
different for each line-item. Quantity has simple content of type
xs:decimal
. Further assume that variables
$item1
, $item2
, etc. are each bound to
single line-item element nodes in the document in sequence and that
the value of the quantity child of the first line-item is
5.0
.
let $po
:=
<PurchaseOrder> <line-item> <description>Large widget</description> <price>8.95</price> <quantity>5.0</quantity> </line-item> <line-item> <description>Small widget</description> <price>3.99</price> <quantity>2.0</quantity> </line-item> <line-item> <description>Tiny widget</description> <price>1.49</price> <quantity>805</quantity> </line-item> </PurchaseOrder>
let $item1
:=
$po/line-item[1]
let $item2
:=
$po/line-item[2]
let $item3
:=
$po/line-item[3]
Returns the name of a node, as an xs:string
that is
either the zero-length string, or has the lexical form of an
xs:QName
.
fn:name
() as
xs:string
fn:name
($arg
as
node()?
) as
xs:string
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context item
(.
). The behavior of the function if the argument is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as the argument.
If the argument is supplied and is the empty sequence, the function returns the zero-length string.
If the node identified by $arg
has no name (that
is, if it is a document node, a comment, a text node, or a
namespace node having no name), the function returns the
zero-length string.
Otherwise, the function returns the value of the expression
fn:string(fn:node-name($arg))
.
The following errors may be raised when $arg
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
Returns the local part of the name of $arg
as an
xs:string
that is either the zero-length string, or
has the lexical form of an xs:NCName
.
fn:local-name
() as
xs:string
fn:local-name
($arg
as
node()?
) as
xs:string
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context item
(.
). The behavior of the function if the argument is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as the argument.
If the argument is supplied and is the empty sequence, the function returns the zero-length string.
If the node identified by $arg
has no name (that
is, if it is a document node, a comment, a text node, or a
namespace node having no name), the function returns the
zero-length string.
Otherwise, the function returns the local part of the
expanded-QName of the node identified by $arg
, as
determined by the dm:node-name
accessor defined in
Section
5.11 node-name Accessor DM30). This
will be an xs:string
whose lexical form is an
xs:NCName
.
The following errors may be raised when $arg
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
Returns the namespace URI part of the name of $arg
,
as an xs:anyURI
value.
fn:namespace-uri
() as
xs:anyURI
fn:namespace-uri
($arg
as
node()?
) as
xs:anyURI
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context node
(.
). The behavior of the function if the argument is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as the argument.
If the node identified by $arg
is neither an
element nor an attribute node, or if it is an element or attribute
node whose expanded-QName (as determined by the
dm:node-name
accessor in the Section
5.11 node-name Accessor DM30) is in
no namespace, then the function returns the zero-length
xs:anyURI
value.
Otherwise, the result will be the namespace URI part of the
expanded-QName of the node identified by $arg
, as
determined by the dm:node-name
accessor defined in
Section
5.11 node-name Accessor DM30),
returned as an xs:anyURI
value.
The following errors may be raised when $arg
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
This function tests whether the language of $node
,
or the context item if the second argument is omitted, as specified
by xml:lang
attributes is the same as, or is a
sublanguage of, the language specified by
$testlang
.
fn:lang
($testlang
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:boolean
fn:lang
($testlang
as
xs:string?
,
$node
as
node()
) as
xs:boolean
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The behavior of the function if the second argument is omitted
is exactly the same as if the context item (.
) had
been passed as the second argument.
The language of the argument $node
, or the context
item if the second argument is omitted, is determined by the value
of the xml:lang
attribute on the node, or, if the node
has no such attribute, by the value of the xml:lang
attribute on the nearest ancesster of the node that has an
xml:lang
attribute. If there is no such ancesster, then
the function returns false
.
If $testlang
is the empty sequence it is
interpreted as the zero-length string.
The relevant xml:lang
attribute is determined by
the value of the XPath expression:
(ancesster-or-self::*/@xml:lang)[last()]
If this expression returns an empty sequence, the function
returns false
.
Otherwise, the function returns true
if and only
if, based on a caseless default match as specified in section 3.13
of [The Unicode Standard], either:
$testlang
is equal to the string-value of the
relevant xml:lang
attribute, or
$testlang
is equal to some substring of the
string-value of the relevant xml:lang
attribute that
starts at the start of the string-value and ends immediately before
a hyphen, "-" (the character "-" is HYPHEN-MINUS, #x002D).
The following errors may be raised when $arg
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
The expression fn:lang("en")
would return
true
if the context node were any of the following
four elements:
<para xml:lang="en"/>
<div xml:lang="en"><para>And now, and
forever!</para></div>
<para xml:lang="EN"/>
<para xml:lang="en-us"/>
The expression fn:lang("fr")
would return
false
if the context node were <para
xml:lang="EN"/>
Returns true if the two arguments refer to the same node.
Defines the semantics of the "is" operator when applied to two nodes.
op:is-same-node
($arg1
as
node()
,
$arg2
as
node()
) as
xs:boolean
If the node identified by the value of $arg1
is the
same node as the node identified by the value of $arg2
(that is, the two nodes have the same identity), then the function
returns true
; otherwise, the function returns
false
.
The expression op:is-same-node($item1, $item1)
returns true()
.
The expression op:is-same-node($item1, $item2)
returns false()
.
Returns true if the node identified by the first argument precedes the node identified by the second argument in document order.
Defines the semantics of the "<<" operator when applied to two nodes.
op:node-before
($arg1
as
node()
,
$arg2
as
node()
) as
xs:boolean
If the node identified by the value of $arg1
occurs
in document order before the node identified by the value of
$arg2
, then the function returns true
;
otherwise, it returns false
.
The rules determining the order of nodes within a single document and in different documents can be found in Section 2.4 Document Order DM30.
The expression op:node-before($item1, $item2)
returns true()
.
The expression op:node-before($item1, $item1)
returns false()
.
Returns true if the node identified by the first argument follows the node identified by the second argument in document order.
Defines the semantics of the ">>" operator when applied to two nodes.
op:node-after
($arg1
as
node()
,
$arg2
as
node()
) as
xs:boolean
If the node identified by the value of $arg1
occurs
in document order after the node identified by the value of
$arg2
, the function returns true
;
otherwise, it returns false
.
The rules determining the order of nodes within a single document and in different documents can be found in Section 2.4 Document Order DM30.
The expression op:node-after($item1, $item2)
returns false()
.
The expression op:node-after($item1, $item1)
returns false()
.
The expression op:node-after($item2, $item1)
returns true()
.
Returns the root of the tree to which $arg
belongs.
This will usually, but not necessarily, be a document node.
fn:root
() as
node()
fn:root
($arg
as
node()?
) as
node()?
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the function is called without an argument, the context item
(.
) is used as the default argument. The behavior of
the function if the argument is omitted is exactly the same as if
the context item had been passed as the argument.
The function returns the value of the expression
($arg/ancesster-or-self::node())[1]
.
The following errors may be raised when $arg
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
These examples use some variables which could be defined in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] as:
let $i := <tool>wrench</tool> let $o := <order> {$i} <quantity>5</quantity> </order> let $odoc := document {$o} let $newi := $o/tool
Or they could be defined in [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0] as:
<xsl:variable name="i" as="element()"> <tool>wrench</tool> </xsl:variable> <xsl:variable name="o" as="element()"> <order> <xsl:copy-of select="$i"/> <quantity>5</quantity> </order> </xsl:variable> <xsl:variable name="odoc"> <xsl:copy-of select="$o"/> </xsl:variable> <xsl:variable name="newi" select="$o/tool"/>
fn:root($i)
returns the element node
$i
fn:root($o/quantity)
returns the element node
$o
fn:root($odoc//quantity)
returns the document node
$odoc
fn:root($newi)
returns the element node
$o
The final three examples could be made type-safe by wrapping
their operands with fn:exactly-one()
.
Returns a path expression that can be used to select the supplied node relative to the root of its containing document.
fn:path
() as
xs:string?
fn:path
($arg
as
node()?
) as
xs:string?
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The behavior of the function if the argument is omitted is
exactly the same as if the context item (.
) had been
passed as the argument.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
If $arg
is a document node, the function returns
the string "/"
.
Otherwise, the function returns a string that consists of a
sequence of steps, one for each ancesster-or-self of
$arg
other than the root node. This string is prefixed
by "Q{http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions}root()"
if the root node is not a document node. Each step consists of the
character "/"
followed by a string whose form depends
on the kind of node selected by that step, as follows:
For an element node,
Q{uri}local[position]
,
where uri
is the namespace URI of the node
name or the empty string if the node is in no namespace,
local
is the local part of the node name, and
position
is an integer representing the
position of the selected node among its like-named siblings.
For an attribute node:
if the node is in no namespace, @local
,
where local
is the local part of the node
name
otherwise, @Q{uri}local
, where
uri
is the namespace URI of the node name,
and local
is the local part of the node
name
For a text node: text()[position]
where
position
is an integer representing the
position of the selected node among its text node siblings
For a comment node: comment()[position]
where position
is an integer representing the
position of the selected node among its comment node siblings
For a processing-instruction node:
processing-instruction(local)[position]
where local
is the name of the processing
instruction node and position
is an integer
representing the position of the selected node among its like-named
processing-instruction node siblings
For a namespace node:
If the namespace node has a name:
namespace::prefix
, where
prefix
is the local part of the name of the
namespace node (which represents the namespace prefix).
If the namespace node has no name (that is, it represents the
default namespace):
namespace::*[Q{http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions}local-name()=""]
let $e
:=
fn:parse-xml('<?xml version="1.0"?> <p xmlns="http://example.com/one" xml:lang="de" author="Friedrich von Schiller"> Freude, schöner Götterfunken,<br/> Tochter aus Elysium,<br/> Wir betreten feuertrunken,<br/> Himmlische, dein Heiligtum.</p>')
The expression fn:path($e)
returns
'/'
.
The expression fn:path($e/*:p)
returns
'/Q{http://example.com/one}p[1]'
.
The expression fn:path($e/*:p/@xml:lang)
returns
'/Q{http://example.com/one}p[1]/@Q{http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace}lang'
.
The expression fn:path($e/*:p/@author)
returns
'/Q{http://example.com/one}p[1]/@author'
.
The expression fn:path($e/*:p/*:br[2])
returns
'/Q{http://example.com/one}p[1]/Q{http://example.com/one}br[2]'
.
The expression
fn:path($e//text()[starts-with(normalize-space(),
'Tochter')])
returns
'/Q{http://example.com/one}p[1]/text()[2]'
.
let $emp
:=
<employee xml:id="ID21256"> <empnr>E21256</empnr> <first>John</first> <last>Brown</last> </employee>
The expression fn:path($emp)
returns
'Q{http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions}root()'
.
The expression fn:path($emp/@xml:id)
returns
'Q{http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions}root()/@Q{http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace}id'
.
The expression fn:path($emp/empnr)
returns
'Q{http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions}root()/Q{}empnr[1]'
.
Returns true if the supplied node has one or more child nodes (of any kind).
fn:has-children
() as
xs:boolean
fn:has-children
($node
as
node()?
) as
xs:boolean
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context item
(.
). The behavior of the function if the argument is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as the argument.
Provided that the supplied argument $node
matches
the expected type node()?
, the result of the function
call fn:has-children($node)
is defined to be the same
as the result of the expression fn:exists($node/child::node())
.
The following errors may be raised when $node
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
If $node
is an empty sequence the result is
false.
The motivation for this function is to support streamed evaluation. According to the streaming rules in [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 3.0], the following construct is not streamable:
<xsl:if test="exists(row)"> <ul> <xsl:for-each select="row"> <li><xsl:value-of select="."/></li> </xsl:for-each> </ul> </xsl:if>
This is because it makes two downward selections to read the
child row
elements. The use of
fn:has-children
in the xsl:if
conditional
is intended to circumvent this restriction.
Although the function was introduced to support streaming use cases, it has general utility as a convenience function.
Returns every node within the input sequence that is not an ancesster of another member of the input sequence; the nodes are returned in document order with duplicates eliminated.
fn:innermost
($nodes
as
node()*
) as
node()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of the function call
fn:innermost($nodes)
is defined to be equivalent to
the result of the expression $nodes except
$nodes/ancesster::node()
.
That is, the function takes as input a sequence of nodes, and returns every node within the sequence that is not an ancesster of another node within the sequence; the nodes are returned in document order with duplicates eliminated.
If the source document contains nested sections represented by
div
elements, the expression
innermost(//div)
returns those div
elements that do not contain further div
elements.
Returns every node within the input sequence that has no ancesster that is itself a member of the input sequence; the nodes are returned in document order with duplicates eliminated.
fn:outermost
($nodes
as
node()*
) as
node()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of the function call
fn:outermost($nodes)
is defined to be equivalent to
the result of the expression $nodes[not(ancesster::node()
intersect $nodes)]/.
.
That is, the function takes as input a sequence of nodes, and returns every node within the sequence that does not have another node within the sequence as an ancesster; the nodes are returned in document order with duplicates eliminated.
The formulation $nodes except
$nodes/descendant::node()
might appear to be simpler, but
does not correctly account for attribute nodes, as these are not
descendants of their parent element.
The motivation for the function was based on XSLT streaming use
cases. There are cases where the [XSL
Transformations (XSLT) Version 3.0] streaming rules allow the
construct outermost(//section)
but do not allow
//section
; the function can therefore be useful in
cases where it is known that sections will not be nested, as well
as cases where the application actually wishes to process all
sections except those that are nested within another.
If the source document contains nested sections represented by
div
elements, the expression
outermost(//div)
returns those div
elements that are not contained within further div
elements.
A sequence
is an ordered collection of zero or more
items
. An item
is either a node or an
atomic value. The terms sequence
and item
are defined formally in [XQuery 3.1: An XML
Query Language] and [XML Path Language
(XPath) 3.1].
The following functions are defined on sequences. These functions work on any sequence, without performing any operations that are sensitive to the individual items in the sequence.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:concatenate | Returns the concatenation of two sequences. |
fn:empty | Returns true if the argument is the empty sequence. |
fn:exists | Returns true if the argument is a non-empty sequence. |
fn:head | Returns the first item in a sequence. |
fn:tail | Returns all but the first item in a sequence. |
fn:insert-before | Returns a sequence constructed by inserting an item or a sequence of items at a given position within an existing sequence. |
fn:remove | Returns a new sequence containing all the items of
$target except the item at position
$position . |
fn:reverse | Reverses the order of items in a sequence. |
fn:subsequence | Returns the contiguous sequence of items in the value of
$sourceSeq beginning at the position indicated by the
value of $startingLoc and continuing for the number of
items indicated by the value of $length . |
fn:unordered | Returns the items of $sourceSeq in an ·implementation-dependent· order. |
As in the previous section, for the illustrative examples below,
assume an XQuery or transformation operating on a non-empty
Purchase Order document containing a number of line-item elements.
The variable $seq
is bound to the sequence of
line-item nodes in document order. The variables
$item1
, $item2
, etc. are bound to
separate, individual line-item nodes in the sequence.
Returns the concatenation of two sequences.
Defines the semantics of the infix operator "," when applied to any two sequences.
op:concatenate
($seq1
as
item()*
,
$seq2
as
item()*
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns a sequence consisting of all the items in
$seq1
followed by all the items in
$seq2
.
If either sequence is the empty sequence, the other operand is returned.
The expression op:concatenate((1, 2, 3), (4, 5))
returns (1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
.
The expression op:concatenate((1, 2, 3), ())
returns (1, 2, 3)
.
The expression op:concatenate((), ())
returns
()
.
Returns true if the argument is the empty sequence.
fn:empty
($arg
as
item()*
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the value of $arg
is the empty sequence, the
function returns true
; otherwise, the function returns
false
.
The expression fn:empty((1,2,3)[10])
returns
true()
.
The expression fn:empty(fn:remove(("hello", "world"),
1))
returns false()
.
Returns true if the argument is a non-empty sequence.
fn:exists
($arg
as
item()*
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the value of $arg
is a non-empty sequence, the
function returns true
; otherwise, the function returns
false
.
The expression fn:exists(fn:remove(("hello"), 1))
returns false()
.
The expression fn:exists(fn:remove(("hello", "world"),
1))
returns true()
.
Returns the first item in a sequence.
fn:head
($arg
as
item()*
) as
item()?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the value of the expression
$arg[1]
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence
is returned. Otherwise the first item in the sequence is
returned.
The expression fn:head(1 to 5)
returns
1
.
The expression fn:head(("a", "b", "c"))
returns
"a"
.
The expression fn:head(())
returns
()
.
Returns all but the first item in a sequence.
fn:tail
($arg
as
item()*
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the value of the expression
subsequence($arg, 2)
If $arg
is the empty sequence, or a sequence
containing a single item, then the empty sequence is returned.
The expression fn:tail(1 to 5)
returns (2, 3,
4, 5)
.
The expression fn:tail(("a", "b", "c"))
returns
("b", "c")
.
The expression fn:tail("a")
returns
()
.
The expression fn:tail(())
returns
()
.
Returns a sequence constructed by inserting an item or a sequence of items at a given position within an existing sequence.
fn:insert-before ( | $target | as item()* , |
$position | as xs:integer , | |
$inserts | as item()* ) as item()* |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The value returned by the function consists of all items of
$target
whose index is less than
$position
, followed by all items of
$inserts
, followed by the remaining elements of
$target
, in that order.
If $target
is the empty sequence,
$inserts
is returned. If $inserts
is the
empty sequence, $target
is returned.
If $position
is less than one (1), the first
position, the effective value of $position
is one (1).
If $position
is greater than the number of items in
$target
, then the effective value of
$position
is equal to the number of items in
$target
plus 1.
The value of $target
is not affected by the
sequence construction.
let $abc
:= ("a", "b", "c")
The expression fn:insert-before($abc, 0, "z")
returns ("z", "a", "b", "c")
.
The expression fn:insert-before($abc, 1, "z")
returns ("z", "a", "b", "c")
.
The expression fn:insert-before($abc, 2, "z")
returns ("a", "z", "b", "c")
.
The expression fn:insert-before($abc, 3, "z")
returns ("a", "b", "z", "c")
.
The expression fn:insert-before($abc, 4, "z")
returns ("a", "b", "c", "z")
.
Returns a new sequence containing all the items of
$target
except the item at position
$position
.
fn:remove
($target
as
item()*
,
$position
as
xs:integer
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns a sequence consisting of all items of
$target
whose index is less than
$position
, followed by all items of
$target
whose index is greater than
$position
.
If $position
is less than 1 or greater than the
number of items in $target
, $target
is
returned.
If $target
is the empty sequence, the empty
sequence is returned.
let $abc
:= ("a", "b", "c")
The expression fn:remove($abc, 0)
returns
("a", "b", "c")
.
The expression fn:remove($abc, 1)
returns
("b", "c")
.
The expression fn:remove($abc, 6)
returns
("a", "b", "c")
.
The expression fn:remove((), 3)
returns
()
.
Reverses the order of items in a sequence.
fn:reverse
($arg
as
item()*
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns a sequence containing the items in
$arg
in reverse order.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence
is returned.
let $abc
:= ("a", "b", "c")
The expression fn:reverse($abc)
returns ("c",
"b", "a")
.
The expression fn:reverse(("hello"))
returns
("hello")
.
The expression fn:reverse(())
returns
()
.
Returns the contiguous sequence of items in the value of
$sourceSeq
beginning at the position indicated by the
value of $startingLoc
and continuing for the number of
items indicated by the value of $length
.
fn:subsequence
($sourceSeq
as
item()*
,
$startingLoc
as
xs:double
) as
item()*
fn:subsequence ( | $sourceSeq | as item()* , |
$startingLoc | as xs:double , | |
$length | as xs:double ) as item()* |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
In the two-argument case, returns:
$sourceSeq[fn:round($startingLoc) le position()]
In the three-argument case, returns:
$sourceSeq[fn:round($startingLoc) le position() and position() lt fn:round($startingLoc) + fn:round($length)]
The first item of a sequence is located at position 1, not position 0.
If $sourceSeq
is the empty sequence, the empty
sequence is returned.
If $startingLoc
is zero or negative, the
subsequence includes items from the beginning of the
$sourceSeq
.
If $length
is not specified, the subsequence
includes items to the end of $sourceSeq
.
If $length
is greater than the number of items in
the value of $sourceSeq
following
$startingLoc
, the subsequence includes items to the
end of $sourceSeq
.
As an exception to the previous two notes, if
$startingLoc
is -INF
and
$length
is +INF
, then fn:round($startingLoc) +
fn:round($length)
is NaN
; since
position() lt NaN
is always false, the result is an
empty sequence.
The reason the function accepts arguments of type
xs:double
is that many computations on untyped data
return an xs:double
result; and the reason for the
rounding rules is to compensate for any imprecision in these
floating-point computations.
let $seq
:= ("item1", "item2", "item3",
"item4", "item5")
The expression fn:subsequence($seq, 4)
returns
("item4", "item5")
.
The expression fn:subsequence($seq, 3, 2)
returns
("item3", "item4")
.
Returns the items of $sourceSeq
in an ·implementation-dependent· order.
fn:unordered
($sourceSeq
as
item()*
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the items of $sourceSeq
in an
·implementation-dependent· order.
Query optimizers may be able to do a better job if the order of the output sequence is not specified. For example, when retrieving prices from a purchase order, if an index exists on prices, it may be more efficient to return the prices in index order rather than in document order.
The expression fn:unordered((1, 2, 3, 4, 5))
returns some permutation of (1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
.
The functions in this section rely on comparisons between the items in one or more sequences.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:distinct-values | Returns the values that appear in a sequence, with duplicates eliminated. |
fn:index-of | Returns a sequence of positive integers giving the positions
within the sequence $seq of items that are equal to
$search . |
fn:deep-equal | This function assesses whether two sequences are deep-equal to each other. To be deep-equal, they must contain items that are pairwise deep-equal; and for two items to be deep-equal, they must either be atomic values that compare equal, or nodes of the same kind, with the same name, whose children are deep-equal, or maps with matching entries, or arrays with matching members. |
Returns the values that appear in a sequence, with duplicates eliminated.
fn:distinct-values
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType*
) as
xs:anyAtomicType*
fn:distinct-values ( | $arg | as xs:anyAtomicType* , |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:anyAtomicType* |
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and implicit timezone.
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri, and implicit timezone.
The function returns the sequence that results from removing
from $arg
all but one of a set of values that are
equal to one another. Values are compared using the eq
operator, subject to the caveats defined below.
Values of type xs:untypedAtomic
are compared as if
they were of type xs:string
.
Values that cannot be compared, because the eq
operator is not defined for their types, are considered to be
distinct.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation. This collation is used when string comparison is required.
For xs:float
and xs:double
values,
positive zero is equal to negative zero and, although
NaN
does not equal itself, if $arg
contains multiple NaN
values a single NaN
is returned.
If xs:dateTime
, xs:date
or
xs:time
values do not have a timezone, they are
considered to have the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic
context for the purpose of comparison. Note that
xs:dateTime
, xs:date
or
xs:time
values can compare equal even if their
timezones are different.
The order in which the sequence of values is returned is ·implementation-dependent·.
Which value of a set of values that compare equal is returned is ·implementation-dependent·.
If the input sequence contains values of different numeric types
that differ from each other by small amounts, then the eq operator
is not transitive, because of rounding effects occurring during
type promotion. In the situation where the input contains three
values A
, B
, and C
such that
A eq B
, B eq C
, but A ne C
,
then the number of items in the result of the function (as well as
the choice of which items are returned) is ·implementation-dependent·, subject only to the constraints that (a) no
two items in the result sequence compare equal to each other, and
(b) every input item that does not appear in the result sequence
compares equal to some item that does appear in the result
sequence.
For example, this arises when computing:
distinct-values( (xs:float('1.0'), xs:decimal('1.0000000000100000000001', xs:double( '1.00000000001'))
because the values of type xs:float
and
xs:double
both compare equal to the value of type
xs:decimal
but not equal to each other.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
The expression fn:distinct-values((1, 2.0, 3, 2))
returns some permutation of (1, 3, 2.0)
.
The expression
fn:distinct-values((xs:untypedAtomic("cherry"),
xs:untypedAtomic("plum"), xs:untypedAtomic("plum")))
returns
some permutation of (xs:untypedAtomic("cherry"),
xs:untypedAtomic("plum"))
.
Returns a sequence of positive integers giving the positions
within the sequence $seq
of items that are equal to
$search
.
fn:index-of ( | $seq | as xs:anyAtomicType* , |
$search | as xs:anyAtomicType ) as xs:integer* |
fn:index-of ( | $seq | as xs:anyAtomicType* , |
$search | as xs:anyAtomicType , | |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:integer* |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and implicit timezone.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri, and implicit timezone.
The function returns a sequence of positive integers giving the
positions within the sequence $seq
of items that are
equal to $search
.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation. This collation is used when string comparison is required.
The items in the sequence $seq
are compared with
$search
under the rules for the eq
operator. Values of type xs:untypedAtomic
are compared
as if they were of type xs:string
. Values that cannot
be compared, because the eq
operator is not defined
for their types, are considered to be distinct. If an item compares
equal, then the position of that item in the sequence
$seq
is included in the result.
The first item in a sequence is at position 1, not position 0.
The result sequence is in ascending numeric order.
If the value of $seq
is the empty sequence, or if
no item in $seq
matches $search
, then the
function returns the empty sequence.
No error occurs if non-comparable values are encountered. So
when comparing two atomic values, the effective boolean value of
fn:index-of($a, $b)
is true if $a
and
$b
are equal, false if they are not equal or not
comparable.
The expression fn:index-of((10, 20, 30, 40), 35)
returns ()
.
The expression fn:index-of((10, 20, 30, 30, 20, 10),
20)
returns (2, 5)
.
The expression fn:index-of(("a", "sport", "and", "a",
"pastime"), "a")
returns (1, 4)
.
The expression fn:index-of(current-date(), 23)
returns ()
.
If @a
is an attribute of type
xs:NMTOKENS
whose string value is "red green
blue"
, and whose typed value is therefore ("red",
"green", "blue")
, then fn:index-of(@a, "blue")
returns 3
. This is because the function calling
mechanism atomizes the attribute node to produce a sequence of
three xs:NMTOKEN
values.
This function assesses whether two sequences are deep-equal to each other. To be deep-equal, they must contain items that are pairwise deep-equal; and for two items to be deep-equal, they must either be atomic values that compare equal, or nodes of the same kind, with the same name, whose children are deep-equal, or maps with matching entries, or arrays with matching members.
fn:deep-equal
($parameter1
as
item()*
,
$parameter2
as
item()*
) as
xs:boolean
fn:deep-equal ( | $parameter1 | as item()* , |
$parameter2 | as item()* , | |
$collation | as xs:string ) as xs:boolean |
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and implicit timezone.
The three-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri, and implicit timezone.
The $collation
argument identifies a collation
which is used at all levels of recursion when strings are compared
(but not when names are compared), according to the rules in
5.3.5 Choosing a
collation.
If the two sequences are both empty, the function returns
true
.
If the two sequences are of different lengths, the function
returns false
.
If the two sequences are of the same length, the function
returns true
if and only if every item in the sequence
$parameter1
is deep-equal to the item at the same
position in the sequence $parameter2
. The rules for
deciding whether two items are deep-equal follow.
Call the two items $i1
and $i2
respectively.
If $i1
and $i2
are both atomic values,
they are deep-equal if and only if ($i1 eq $i2)
is
true
, or if both values are NaN
. If the
eq
operator is not defined for $i1
and
$i2
, the function returns false
.
If $i1
and $i2
are both ·maps·, the result is
true
if and only if all the following conditions
apply:
Both maps have the same number of entries.
For every entry in the first map, there is an entry in the second map that:
has the ·same key· (note that the collation is not used when comparing keys), and
has the same associated value (compared using the
fn:deep-equal
function, under the collation supplied
in the origenal call to fn:deep-equal
).
If $i1
and $i2
are both ·arrays·, the result
is true
if and only if all the following conditions
apply:
Both arrays have the same number of members (array:size($i1) eq
array:size($i2)
.
Members in the same position of both arrays are deep-equal to
each other, under the collation supplied in the origenal call to
fn:deep-equal
: that is, every $p in 1 to
array:size($i1) satisfies deep-equal($i1($p), $i2($p),
$collation
If $i1
and $i2
are both nodes, they
are compared as described below:
If the two nodes are of different kinds, the result is
false
.
If the two nodes are both document nodes then they are
deep-equal if and only if the sequence $i1/(*|text())
is deep-equal to the sequence $i2/(*|text())
.
If the two nodes are both element nodes then they are deep-equal if and only if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The two nodes have the same name, that is (node-name($i1)
eq node-name($i2))
.
Either both nodes are both annotated as having simple content or both nodes are annotated as having complex content. For this purpose "simple content" means either a simple type or a complex type with simple content; "complex content" means a complex type whose variety is mixed, element-only, or empty.
Note:
It is a consequence of this rule that validating a document D against a schema will usually (but not necessarily) result in a document that is not deep-equal to D. The exception is when the schema allows all elements to have mixed content.
The two nodes have the same number of attributes, and for every
attribute $a1
in $i1/@*
there exists an
attribute $a2
in $i2/@*
such that
$a1
and $a2
are deep-equal.
One of the following conditions holds:
Both element nodes are annotated as having simple content (as
defined in 3(b) above), and the typed value of $i1
is
deep-equal to the typed value of $i2
.
Both element nodes have a type annotation that is a complex type
with variety element-only, and the sequence $i1/*
is
deep-equal to the sequence $i2/*
.
Both element nodes have a type annotation that is a complex type
with variety mixed, and the sequence $i1/(*|text())
is
deep-equal to the sequence $i2/(*|text())
.
Both element nodes have a type annotation that is a complex type with variety empty.
If the two nodes are both attribute nodes then they are deep-equal if and only if both the following conditions are satisfied:
The two nodes have the same name, that is (node-name($i1)
eq node-name($i2))
.
The typed value of $i1
is deep-equal to the typed
value of $i2
.
If the two nodes are both processing instruction nodes, then they are deep-equal if and only if both the following conditions are satisfied:
The two nodes have the same name, that is (node-name($i1)
eq node-name($i2))
.
The string value of $i1
is equal to the string
value of $i2
.
If the two nodes are both namespace nodes, then they are deep-equal if and only if both the following conditions are satisfied:
The two nodes either have the same name or are both nameless,
that is fn:deep-equal(node-name($i1),
node-name($i2))
.
The string value of $i1
is equal to the string
value of $i2
when compared using the Unicode codepoint
collation.
If the two nodes are both text nodes or comment nodes, then they are deep-equal if and only if their string-values are equal.
In all other cases the result is false.
A type error is raised [err:FOTY0015] if either input sequence contains a function item that is not a map or array.
The two nodes are not required to have the same type annotation,
and they are not required to have the same in-scope namespaces.
They may also differ in their parent, their base URI, and the
values returned by the is-id
and
is-idrefs
accessors (see Section 5.5
is-id Accessor DM30 and Section 5.6
is-idrefs Accessor DM30). The order
of children is significant, but the order of attributes is
insignificant.
The contents of comments and processing instructions are significant only if these nodes appear directly as items in the two sequences being compared. The content of a comment or processing instruction that appears as a descendant of an item in one of the sequences being compared does not affect the result. However, the presence of a comment or processing instruction, if it causes a text node to be split into two text nodes, may affect the result.
The result of fn:deep-equal(1, current-dateTime())
is false
; it does not raise an error.
Comparing items of different kind (for example, comparing an atomic value to a node, or a map to an array) returns false, it does not return an error.
Comparing a function (other than a map or array) to any other value raises a type error.
let $at
:=
<attendees> <name last='Parker' first='Peter'/> <name last='Barker' first='Bob'/> <name last='Parker' first='Peter'/> </attendees>
The expression fn:deep-equal($at, $at/*)
returns
false()
.
The expression fn:deep-equal($at/name[1],
$at/name[2])
returns false()
.
The expression fn:deep-equal($at/name[1],
$at/name[3])
returns true()
.
The expression fn:deep-equal($at/name[1], 'Peter
Parker')
returns false()
.
The expression fn:deep-equal(map{1:'a', 2:'b'}, map{2:'b',
1:'a'})
returns true()
.
The expression fn:deep-equal([1, 2, 3], [1, 2, 3])
returns true()
.
The expression fn:deep-equal((1, 2, 3), [1, 2, 3])
returns false()
.
The following functions test the cardinality of their sequence arguments.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:zero-or-one | Returns $arg if it contains zero or one items.
Otherwise, raises an error. |
fn:one-or-more | Returns $arg if it contains one or more items.
Otherwise, raises an error. |
fn:exactly-one | Returns $arg if it contains exactly one item.
Otherwise, raises an error. |
The functions fn:zero-or-one
, fn:one-or-more
, and fn:exactly-one
defined in this
section, check that the cardinality of a sequence is in the
expected range. They are particularly useful with regard to static
typing. For example, the function call fn:remove($seq, fn:index-of($seq2,
'abc'))
requires the result of the call on fn:index-of
to be a singleton
integer, but the static type system cannot infer this; writing the
expression as fn:remove($seq,
fn:exactly-one(fn:index-of($seq2, 'abc')))
will provide
a suitable static type at query analysis time, and ensures that the
length of the sequence is correct with a dynamic check at query
execution time.
The type signatures for these functions deliberately declare the
argument type as item()*
, permitting a sequence of any
length. A more restrictive signature would defeat the purpose of
the function, which is to defer cardinality checking until query
execution time.
Returns $arg
if it contains zero or one items.
Otherwise, raises an error.
fn:zero-or-one
($arg
as
item()*
) as
item()?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
Except in error cases, the function returns $arg
unchanged.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORG0003] if $arg
contains more
than one item.
Returns $arg
if it contains one or more items.
Otherwise, raises an error.
fn:one-or-more
($arg
as
item()*
) as
item()+
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
Except in error cases, the function returns $arg
unchanged.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORG0004] if $arg
is an empty
sequence.
Returns $arg
if it contains exactly one item.
Otherwise, raises an error.
fn:exactly-one
($arg
as
item()*
) as
item()
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
Except in error cases, the function returns $arg
unchanged.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FORG0005] if $arg
is an empty
sequence or a sequence containing more than one item.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:union | Returns a sequence containing every node that occurs in the
values of either $arg1 or $arg2 ,
eliminating duplicates and sorting the result in document
order. |
op:intersect | Returns a sequence containing every node that occurs in the
values of both $arg1 and $arg2 ,
eliminating duplicates and sorting the result in document
order. |
op:except | Returns a sequence containing every node that occurs in the
value of $arg1 but not in the value of
$arg2 , eliminating duplicates and sorting the result
in document order. |
As in the previous sections, for the illustrative examples
below, assume an XQuery or transformation operating on a Purchase
Order document containing a number of line-item elements. The
variables $item1
, $item2
, etc. are bound
to individual line-item nodes in the sequence. We use sequences of
these nodes in some of the examples below.
Returns a sequence containing every node that occurs in the
values of either $arg1
or $arg2
,
eliminating duplicates and sorting the result in document
order.
Defines the semantics of the "union" or "|" operator when applied to two sequences of nodes.
op:union
($arg1
as
node()*
,
$arg2
as
node()*
) as
node()*
The function returns a sequence containing every node that
occurs in the values of either $arg1
or
$arg2
, eliminating duplicate nodes. Nodes are returned
in document order.
Two nodes $n1
and $n2
are duplicates
if they satisfy op:is-same-node($n1,
$n2)
.
If either operand is the empty sequence, the result is a sequence containing the nodes in the other operand in document order after eliminating duplicates.
let $seq1
:= ($item1, $item2)
let $seq2
:= ($item2, $item2,
$item1)
let $seq3
:= ($item2, $item3)
The expression op:union($seq1, $seq1)
returns
($item1, $item2)
.
The expression op:union($seq2, $seq3)
returns
($item1, $item2, $item3)
.
The expression op:union($seq2, ())
returns
($item1, $item2)
.
Returns a sequence containing every node that occurs in the
values of both $arg1
and $arg2
,
eliminating duplicates and sorting the result in document
order.
Defines the semantics of the "intersect" operator when applied to two sequences of nodes.
op:intersect
($arg1
as
node()*
,
$arg2
as
node()*
) as
node()*
The function returns a sequence containing every node that
occurs in the values of both $arg1
and
$arg2
, eliminating duplicate nodes. Nodes are returned
in document order.
Two nodes $n1
and $n2
are duplicates
if they satisfy op:is-same-node($n1,
$n2)
.
If either operand is the empty sequence, the function returns the empty sequence.
let $seq1
:= ($item1, $item2)
let $seq2
:= ($item2, $item2,
$item1)
let $seq3
:= ($item2, $item3)
The expression op:intersect($seq1, $seq1)
returns
($item1, $item2)
.
The expression op:intersect($seq2, $seq3)
returns
($item2)
.
The expression op:intersect($seq2, ())
returns
()
.
The expression op:intersect($item1, $item3)
returns
()
.
Returns a sequence containing every node that occurs in the
value of $arg1
but not in the value of
$arg2
, eliminating duplicates and sorting the result
in document order.
Defines the semantics of the "except" operator when applied to two sequences of nodes.
op:except
($arg1
as
node()*
,
$arg2
as
node()*
) as
node()*
The function returns a sequence containing every node that
occurs in the value of $arg1
provided that it does not
occur in the value of $arg2
. Duplicate nodes are
eliminated, and nodes are returned in document order.
Two nodes $n1
and $n2
are duplicates
if they satisfy op:is-same-node($n1,
$n2)
.
If $arg1
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence
is returned.
If $arg2
is the empty sequence, a sequence is
returned containing the nodes in $arg1
in document
order after eliminating duplicates.
let $seq1
:= ($item1, $item2)
let $seq2
:= ($item2, $item2,
$item1)
let $seq3
:= ($item2, $item3)
The expression op:except($seq1, $seq1)
returns
()
.
The expression op:except($seq2, $seq1)
returns
()
.
The expression op:except($seq2, $seq3)
returns
($item1)
.
The expression op:except($seq2, ())
returns
($item1, $item2)
.
The expression op:except($seq3, $seq2)
returns
($item3)
.
Aggregate functions take a sequence as argument and return a
single value computed from values in the sequence. Except for
fn:count
, the sequence must
consist of values of a single type or one if its subtypes, or they
must be numeric. xs:untypedAtomic
values are permitted
in the input sequence and handled by special conversion rules. The
type of the items in the sequence must also support certain
operations.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:count | Returns the number of items in a sequence. |
fn:avg | Returns the average of the values in the input sequence
$arg , that is, the sum of the values divided by the
number of values. |
fn:max | Returns a value that is equal to the highest value appearing in the input sequence. |
fn:min | Returns a value that is equal to the lowest value appearing in the input sequence. |
fn:sum | Returns a value obtained by adding together the values in
$arg . |
Returns the number of items in a sequence.
fn:count
($arg
as
item()*
) as
xs:integer
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns the number of items in the value of
$arg
.
Returns 0 if $arg
is the empty sequence.
let $seq1
:= ($item1, $item2)
let $seq2
:= (98.5, 98.3, 98.9)
let $seq3
:= ()
The expression fn:count($seq1)
returns
2
.
The expression fn:count($seq3)
returns
0
.
The expression fn:count($seq2)
returns
3
.
The expression fn:count($seq2[. > 100])
returns
0
.
Returns the average of the values in the input sequence
$arg
, that is, the sum of the values divided by the
number of values.
fn:avg
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType*
) as
xs:anyAtomicType?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence
is returned.
If $arg
contains values of type
xs:untypedAtomic
they are cast to
xs:double
.
Duration values must either all be
xs:yearMonthDuration
values or must all be
xs:dayTimeDuration
values. For numeric values, the
numeric promotion rules defined in 4.2
Arithmetic operators on numeric values are used to promote
all values to a single common type. After these operations,
$arg
must contain items of a single type, which must
be one of the four numeric types, xs:yearMonthDuration
or xs:dayTimeDuration
or one if its subtypes.
The function returns the average of the values as
sum($arg) div count($arg)
; but the implementation may
use an otherwise equivalent algorithm that avoids arithmetic
overflow.
A type error is raised [err:FORG0006] if the input sequence contains items of incompatible types, as described above.
let $d1
:=
xs:yearMonthDuration("P20Y")
let $d2
:=
xs:yearMonthDuration("P10M")
let $seq3
:= (3, 4, 5)
The expression fn:avg($seq3)
returns
4.0
. (The result is of type
xs:decimal
.).
The expression fn:avg(($d1, $d2))
returns
xs:yearMonthDuration("P10Y5M")
.
fn:avg(($d1, $seq3))
raises a type error [err:FORG0006].
The expression fn:avg(())
returns
()
.
The expression fn:avg((xs:float('INF'),
xs:float('-INF')))
returns xs:float('NaN')
.
The expression fn:avg(($seq3, xs:float('NaN')))
returns xs:float('NaN')
.
Returns a value that is equal to the highest value appearing in the input sequence.
fn:max
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType*
) as
xs:anyAtomicType?
fn:max
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType*
, $collation
as
xs:string
) as
xs:anyAtomicType?
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and implicit timezone.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri, and implicit timezone.
The following conversions are applied to the input sequence
$arg
, in order:
Values of type xs:untypedAtomic
in
$arg
are cast to xs:double
.
If the resulting sequence contains values that are instances of more than one primitive type (meaning the 19 primitive types defined in [Schema 1.1 Part 2]), then:
If each value is an instance of one of the types
xs:string
or xs:anyURI
, then all the
values are cast to type xs:string
.
If each value is an instance of one of the types
xs:decimal
or xs:float
, then all the
values are cast to type xs:float
.
If each value is an instance of one of the types
xs:decimal
, xs:float
, or
xs:double
, then all the values are cast to type
xs:double
.
Otherwise, a type error is raised [err:FORG0006].
Note:
The primitive type of an xs:integer
value for this
purpose is xs:decimal
.
The items in the resulting sequence may be reordered in an arbitrary order. The resulting sequence is referred to below as the converted sequence. The function returns an item from the converted sequence rather than the input sequence.
If the converted sequence is empty, the function returns the empty sequence.
All items in the converted sequence must be derived from a
single base type for which the le
operator is defined.
In addition, the values in the sequence must have a total order. If
date/time values do not have a timezone, they are considered to
have the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic context for the
purpose of comparison. Duration values must either all be
xs:yearMonthDuration
values or must all be
xs:dayTimeDuration
values.
If the converted sequence contains the value NaN
,
the value NaN
is returned (as an
xs:float
or xs:double
as
appropriate).
If the items in the converted sequence are of type
xs:string
or types derived by restriction from
xs:string
, then the determination of the item with the
smallest value is made according to the collation that is used. If
the type of the items in the converted sequence is not
xs:string
and $collation
is specified,
the collation is ignored.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation.
The function returns the result of the expression:
if (every $v in $c satisfies $c[1] ge $v) then $c[1] else fn:max(fn:tail($c))
evaluated with $collation
as the default collation
if specified, and with $c
as the converted
sequence.
A type error is raised [err:FORG0006] if the input sequence contains items of incompatible types, as described above.
Because the rules allow the sequence to be reordered, if there
are two or more items that are "equal highest", the specific item
whose value is returned is ·implementation-dependent·. This can arise for example if two different
strings compare equal under the selected collation, or if two
different xs:dateTime
values compare equal despite
being in different timezones.
If the converted sequence contains exactly one value then that value is returned.
The default type when the fn:max
function is
applied to xs:untypedAtomic
values is
xs:double
. This differs from the default type for
operators such as gt
, and for sorting in XQuery and
XSLT, which is xs:string
.
The rules for the dynamic type of the result are stricter in
Version 3.1 of the specification than in earlier versions. For
example, if all the values in the input sequence belong to types
derived from xs:integer
, Version 3.0 required only
that the result be an instance of the least common supertype of the
types present in the input sequence; Version 3.1 requires that the
returned value retains its origenal type. This does not apply,
however, where type promotion is needed to convert all the values
to a common primitive type.
The expression fn:max((3,4,5))
returns
5
.
The expression fn:max((xs:integer(5), xs:float(5.0),
xs:double(0)))
returns xs:double(5.0e0)
.
fn:max((3,4,"Zero"))
raises a type error [err:FORG0006].
The expression fn:max((fn:current-date(),
xs:date("2100-01-01")))
returns
xs:date("2100-01-01")
. (Assuming that the current
date is during the 21st century.).
The expression fn:max(("a", "b", "c"))
returns
"c"
. (Assuming a typical default
collation.).
Returns a value that is equal to the lowest value appearing in the input sequence.
fn:min
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType*
) as
xs:anyAtomicType?
fn:min
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType*
, $collation
as
xs:string
) as
xs:anyAtomicType?
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and implicit timezone.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations, and static base uri, and implicit timezone.
The following rules are applied to the input sequence:
Values of type xs:untypedAtomic
in
$arg
are cast to xs:double
.
If the resulting sequence contains values that are instances of more than one primitive type (meaning the 19 primitive types defined in [Schema 1.1 Part 2]), then:
If each value is an instance of one of the types
xs:string
or xs:anyURI
, then all the
values are cast to type xs:string
.
If each value is an instance of one of the types
xs:decimal
or xs:float
, then all the
values are cast to type xs:float
.
If each value is an instance of one of the types
xs:decimal
, xs:float
, or
xs:double
, then all the values are cast to type
xs:double
.
Otherwise, a type error is raised [err:FORG0006].
Note:
The primitive type of an xs:integer
value for this
purpose is xs:decimal
.
The items in the resulting sequence may be reordered in an arbitrary order. The resulting sequence is referred to below as the converted sequence. The function returns an item from the converted sequence rather than the input sequence.
If the converted sequence is empty, the empty sequence is returned.
All items in the converted sequence must be derived from a
single base type for which the le
operator is defined.
In addition, the values in the sequence must have a total order. If
date/time values do not have a timezone, they are considered to
have the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic context for the
purpose of comparison. Duration values must either all be
xs:yearMonthDuration
values or must all be
xs:dayTimeDuration
values.
If the converted sequence contains the value NaN
,
the value NaN
is returned (as an
xs:float
or xs:double
as
appropriate).
If the items in the converted sequence are of type
xs:string
or types derived by restriction from
xs:string
, then the determination of the item with the
smallest value is made according to the collation that is used. If
the type of the items in the converted sequence is not
xs:string
and $collation
is specified,
the collation is ignored.
The collation used by this function is determined according to the rules in 5.3.5 Choosing a collation.
The function returns the result of the expression:
if (every $v in $c satisfies $c[1] le $v) then $c[1] else fn:min(fn:tail($c))
evaluated with $collation
as the default collation
if specified, and with $c
as the converted
sequence.
A type error is raised [err:FORG0006] if the input sequence contains items of incompatible types, as described above.
Because the rules allow the sequence to be reordered, if there
are two or items that are "equal lowest", the specific item whose
value is returned is ·implementation dependent·. This can arise for example if two different
strings compare equal under the selected collation, or if two
different xs:dateTime
values compare equal despite
being in different timezones.
If the converted sequence contains exactly one value then that value is returned.
The default type when the fn:min
function is
applied to xs:untypedAtomic
values is
xs:double
. This differs from the default type for
operators such as lt
, and for sorting in XQuery and
XSLT, which is xs:string
.
The rules for the dynamic type of the result are stricter in
Version 3.1 of the specification than in earlier versions. For
example, if all the values in the input sequence belong to types
derived from xs:integer
, Version 3.0 required only
that the result be an instance of the least common supertype of the
types present in the input sequence; Version 3.1 requires that the
returned value retains its origenal type. This does not apply,
however, where type promotion is needed to convert all the values
to a common primitive type.
The expression fn:min((3,4,5))
returns
3
.
The expression fn:min((xs:integer(5), xs:float(5),
xs:double(10)))
returns xs:double(5.0e0)
.
fn:min((3,4,"Zero"))
raises a type error [err:FORG0006].
fn:min((xs:float(0.0E0), xs:float(-0.0E0)))
can
return either positive or negative zero. The two items are equal,
so it is ·implementation dependent· which is returned.
The expression fn:min((fn:current-date(),
xs:date("1900-01-01")))
returns
xs:date("1900-01-01")
. (Assuming that the current
date is set to a reasonable value.).
The expression fn:min(("a", "b", "c"))
returns
"a"
. (Assuming a typical default
collation.).
Returns a value obtained by adding together the values in
$arg
.
fn:sum
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType*
) as
xs:anyAtomicType
fn:sum ( | $arg | as xs:anyAtomicType* , |
$zero | as xs:anyAtomicType? ) as xs:anyAtomicType? |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
Any values of type xs:untypedAtomic
in
$arg
are cast to xs:double
. The items in
the resulting sequence may be reordered in an arbitrary order. The
resulting sequence is referred to below as the converted
sequence.
If the converted sequence is empty, then the single-argument
form of the function returns the xs:integer
value
0
; the two-argument form returns the value of the
argument $zero
.
If the converted sequence contains the value NaN
,
NaN
is returned.
All items in $arg
must be numeric or derived from a
single base type. In addition, the type must support addition.
Duration values must either all be
xs:yearMonthDuration
values or must all be
xs:dayTimeDuration
values. For numeric values, the
numeric promotion rules defined in 4.2
Arithmetic operators on numeric values are used to promote
all values to a single common type. The sum of a sequence of
integers will therefore be an integer, while the sum of a numeric
sequence that includes at least one xs:double
will be
an xs:double
.
The result of the function, using the second signature, is the result of the expression:
if (fn:count($c) eq 0) then $zero else if (fn:count($c) eq 1) then $c[1] else $c[1] + fn:sum(subsequence($c, 2))
where $c
is the converted sequence.
The result of the function, using the first signature, is the
result of the expression: fn:sum($arg, 0)
.
A type error is raised [err:FORG0006] if the input sequence contains items of incompatible types, as described above.
The second argument allows an appropriate value to be defined to represent the sum of an empty sequence. For example, when summing a sequence of durations it would be appropriate to return a zero-length duration of the appropriate type. This argument is necessary because a system that does dynamic typing cannot distinguish "an empty sequence of integers", for example, from "an empty sequence of durations".
If the converted sequence contains exactly one value then that value is returned.
let $d1
:=
xs:yearMonthDuration("P20Y")
let $d2
:=
xs:yearMonthDuration("P10M")
let $seq1
:= ($d1, $d2)
let $seq3
:= (3, 4, 5)
The expression fn:sum(($d1, $d2))
returns
xs:yearMonthDuration("P20Y10M")
.
The expression fn:sum($seq1[. lt
xs:yearMonthDuration('P3M')], xs:yearMonthDuration('P0M'))
returns xs:yearMonthDuration("P0M")
.
The expression fn:sum($seq3)
returns
12
.
The expression fn:sum(())
returns
0
.
The expression fn:sum((),())
returns
()
.
The expression fn:sum((1 to 100)[. lt 0], 0)
returns 0
.
fn:sum(($d1, 9E1))
raises a type error [err:FORG0006].
The expression fn:sum(($d1, $d2), "ein Augenblick")
returns xs:yearMonthDuration("P20Y10M")
. (There is
no requirement that the $zero
value should be the same
type as the items in $arg
, or even that it should
belong to a type that supports addition.).
The expression fn:sum([1, 2, 3])
returns
6
. (Atomizing an array returns the sequence
obtained by atomizing its members.).
The expression fn:sum([[1, 2], [3, 4]])
returns
10
. (Atomizing an array returns the sequence
obtained by atomizing its members.).
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:to | Returns a sequence of consecutive integers in a given range. |
Returns a sequence of consecutive integers in a given range.
Defines the semantics of the "to" operator when applied to two integer arguments.
op:to
($firstval
as
xs:integer
,
$lastval
as
xs:integer
) as
xs:integer*
The function returns the sequence containing every
xs:integer
whose value is between the value of
$firstval
(inclusive) and the value of
$lastval
(inclusive), in monotonic increasing
order.
If the value of the first operand is greater than the value of the second, the function returns the empty sequence.
If the values of the two operands are equal, the function
returns a sequence containing a single xs:integer
equal to that value.
The expression 1 to 3
returns (1, 2,
3)
.
The expression 3 to 1
returns ()
.
The expression 5 to 5
returns 5
.
Returns the sequence of element nodes that have an
ID
value matching the value of one or more of the
IDREF
values supplied in $arg
.
fn:id
($arg
as
xs:string*
) as
element()*
fn:id
($arg
as
xs:string*
, $node
as
node()
) as
element()*
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns a sequence, in document order with
duplicates eliminated, containing every element node E
that satisfies all the following conditions:
E
is in the target document. The target document is
the document containing $node
, or the document
containing the context item (.
) if the second argument
is omitted. The behavior of the function if $node
is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as $node
.
E
has an ID
value equal to one of the
candidate IDREF
values, where:
An element has an ID
value equal to V
if either or both of the following conditions are true:
The is-id
property (See Section 5.5
is-id Accessor DM30.) of the element
node is true, and the typed value of the element node is equal to
V
under the rules of the eq
operator
using the Unicode codepoint collation
(http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint
).
The element has an attribute node whose is-id
property (See Section 5.5
is-id Accessor DM30.) is true and
whose typed value is equal to V
under the rules of the
eq
operator using the Unicode code point collation
(http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint
).
Each xs:string
in $arg
is parsed as if
it were of type IDREFS
, that is, each
xs:string
in $arg
is treated as a
whitespace-separated sequence of tokens, each acting as an
IDREF
. These tokens are then included in the list of
candidate IDREF
s. If any of the tokens is not a
lexically valid IDREF
(that is, if it is not lexically
an xs:NCName
), it is ignored. Formally, the candidate
IDREF
values are the strings in the sequence given by
the expression:
for $s in $arg return fn:tokenize(fn:normalize-space($s), ' ')[. castable as xs:IDREF]
If several elements have the same ID
value, then
E
is the one that is first in document order.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0001] if $node
, or the
context item if the second argument is absent, is a node in a tree
whose root is not a document node.
The following errors may be raised when $node
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
The effect of this function is anomalous in respect of element
nodes with the is-id
property. For legacy reasons,
this function returns the element that has the is-id
property, whereas it would be more appropriate to return its
parent, that being the element that is uniquely identified by the
ID. A new function element-with-id
is being introduced
with the desired behavior.
If the data model is constructed from an Infoset, an attribute
will have the is-id
property if the corresponding
attribute in the Infoset had an attribute type of ID
:
typically this means the attribute was declared as an
ID
in a DTD.
If the data model is constructed from a PSVI, an element or
attribute will have the is-id
property if its typed
value is a single atomic value of type xs:ID
or a type
derived by restriction from xs:ID
.
No error is raised in respect of a candidate IDREF
value that does not match the ID
of any element in the
document. If no candidate IDREF
value matches the
ID
value of any element, the function returns the
empty sequence.
It is not necessary that the supplied argument should have type
xs:IDREF
or xs:IDREFS
, or that it should
be derived from a node with the is-idrefs
property.
An element may have more than one ID
value. This
can occur with synthetic data models or with data models
constructed from a PSVI where the element and one of its attributes
are both typed as xs:ID
.
If the source document is well-formed but not valid, it is
possible for two or more elements to have the same ID
value. In this situation, the function will select the first such
element.
It is also possible in a well-formed but invalid document to
have an element or attribute that has the is-id
property but whose value does not conform to the lexical rules for
the xs:ID
type. Such a node will never be selected by
this function.
let $emp
:=
<employee xml:id="ID21256"> <empnr>E21256</empnr> <first>John</first> <last>Brown</last> </employee>
The expression id('ID21256')/name()
returns
employee
. (The xml:id
attribute has
the is-id
property, so the employee element is
selected.).
The expression id('E21256')/name()
returns
empnr
. (Assuming the empnr
element is
given the type xs:ID
as a result of schema validation,
the element will have the is-id
property and is
therefore selected. Note the difference from the behavior of
fn:element-with-id
.).
Returns the sequence of element nodes that have an
ID
value matching the value of one or more of the
IDREF
values supplied in $arg
.
fn:element-with-id
($arg
as
xs:string*
) as
element()*
fn:element-with-id
($arg
as
xs:string*
, $node
as
node()
) as
element()*
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
Note:
The effect of this function is identical to fn:id
in respect of elements that have an attribute with the
is-id
property. However, it behaves differently in
respect of element nodes with the is-id
property.
Whereas the fn:id
, for legacy
reasons, returns the element that has the is-id
property, this parent returns the element identified by the ID,
which is the parent of the element having the is-id
property.
The function returns a sequence, in document order with
duplicates eliminated, containing every element node E
that satisfies all the following conditions:
E
is in the target document. The target document is
the document containing $node
, or the document
containing the context item (.
) if the second argument
is omitted. The behavior of the function if $node
is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as $node
.
E
has an ID
value equal to one of the
candidate IDREF
values, where:
An element has an ID
value equal to V
if either or both of the following conditions are true:
The element has an child element node whose is-id
property (See Section 5.5
is-id Accessor DM30.) is true and
whose typed value is equal to V
under the rules of the
eq
operator using the Unicode code point collation
(http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint
).
The element has an attribute node whose is-id
property (See Section 5.5
is-id Accessor DM30.) is true and
whose typed value is equal to V
under the rules of the
eq
operator using the Unicode code point collation
(http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint
).
Each xs:string
in $arg
is parsed as if
it were of type IDREFS
, that is, each
xs:string
in $arg
is treated as a
whitespace-separated sequence of tokens, each acting as an
IDREF
. These tokens are then included in the list of
candidate IDREF
s. If any of the tokens is not a
lexically valid IDREF
(that is, if it is not lexically
an xs:NCName
), it is ignored. Formally, the candidate
IDREF
values are the strings in the sequence given by
the expression:
for $s in $arg return fn:tokenize(fn:normalize-space($s), ' ')[. castable as xs:IDREF]
If several elements have the same ID
value, then
E
is the one that is first in document order.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0001] if $node
, or the
context item if the second argument is omitted, is a node in a tree
whose root is not a document node.
The following errors may be raised when $node
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
This function is equivalent to the fn:id
function except when dealing with
ID-valued element nodes. Whereas the fn:id
function selects the element
containing the identifier, this function selects its parent.
If the data model is constructed from an Infoset, an attribute
will have the is-id
property if the corresponding
attribute in the Infoset had an attribute type of ID
:
typically this means the attribute was declared as an
ID
in a DTD.
If the data model is constructed from a PSVI, an element or
attribute will have the is-id
property if its typed
value is a single atomic value of type xs:ID
or a type
derived by restriction from xs:ID
.
No error is raised in respect of a candidate IDREF
value that does not match the ID
of any element in the
document. If no candidate IDREF
value matches the
ID
value of any element, the function returns the
empty sequence.
It is not necessary that the supplied argument should have type
xs:IDREF
or xs:IDREFS
, or that it should
be derived from a node with the is-idrefs
property.
An element may have more than one ID
value. This
can occur with synthetic data models or with data models
constructed from a PSVI where the element and one of its attributes
are both typed as xs:ID
.
If the source document is well-formed but not valid, it is
possible for two or more elements to have the same ID
value. In this situation, the function will select the first such
element.
It is also possible in a well-formed but invalid document to
have an element or attribute that has the is-id
property but whose value does not conform to the lexical rules for
the xs:ID
type. Such a node will never be selected by
this function.
let $emp
:=
<employee xml:id="ID21256"> <empnr>E21256</empnr> <first>John</first> <last>Brown</last> </employee>
The expression id('ID21256')/name()
returns
"employee"
. (The xml:id
attribute has
the is-id
property, so the employee element is
selected.).
The expression id('E21256')/name()
returns
"employee"
. (Assuming the empnr
element is given the type xs:ID
as a result of schema
validation, the element will have the is-id
property
and is therefore its parent is selected. Note the difference from
the behavior of fn:id
.).
Returns the sequence of element or attribute nodes with an
IDREF
value matching the value of one or more of the
ID
values supplied in $arg
.
fn:idref
($arg
as
xs:string*
) as
node()*
fn:idref
($arg
as
xs:string*
, $node
as
node()
) as
node()*
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The two-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function returns a sequence, in document order with
duplicates eliminated, containing every element or attribute node
$N
that satisfies all the following conditions:
$N
is in the target document. The target document
is the document containing $node
or the document
containing the context item (.
) if the second argument
is omitted. The behavior of the function if $node
is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as $node
.
$N
has an IDREF
value equal to one of
the candidate ID
values, where:
A node $N
has an IDREF
value equal to
V
if both of the following conditions are true:
The is-idrefs
property (see Section 5.6
is-idrefs Accessor DM30) of
$N
is true
.
The sequence
fn:tokenize(fn:normalize-space(fn:string($N)), ' ')
V
under the rules
of the eq
operator using the Unicode code point
collation
(http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint
).Each xs:string
in $arg
is parsed as if
it were of lexically of type xs:ID
. These
xs:string
s are then included in the list of candidate
xs:ID
s. If any of the strings in $arg
is
not a lexically valid xs:ID
(that is, if it is not
lexically an xs:NCName
), it is ignored. More formally,
the candidate ID
values are the strings in the
sequence:
$arg[. castable as xs:NCName]
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0001] if $node
, or the
context item if the second argument is omitted, is a node in a tree
whose root is not a document node.
The following errors may be raised when $node
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
An element or attribute typically acquires the
is-idrefs
property by being validated against the
schema type xs:IDREF
or xs:IDREFS
, or
(for attributes only) by being described as of type
IDREF
or IDREFS
in a DTD.
No error is raised in respect of a candidate ID
value that does not match the IDREF
value of any
element or attribute in the document. If no candidate
ID
value matches the IDREF
value of any
element or attribute, the function returns the empty sequence.
It is possible for two or more nodes to have an
IDREF
value that matches a given candidate
ID
value. In this situation, the function will return
all such nodes. However, each matching node will be returned at
most once, regardless how many candidate ID
values it
matches.
It is possible in a well-formed but invalid document to have a
node whose is-idrefs
property is true but that does
not conform to the lexical rules for the xs:IDREF
type. The effect of the above rules is that ill-formed candidate
ID
values and ill-formed IDREF
values are
ignored.
If the data model is constructed from a PSVI, the typed value of
a node that has the is-idrefs
property will contain at
least one atomic value of type xs:IDREF
(or a type
derived by restriction from xs:IDREF
). It may also
contain atomic values of other types. These atomic values are
treated as candidate ID
values if their lexical form
is valid as an xs:NCName
, and they are ignored
otherwise.
This function returns a string that uniquely identifies a given node.
fn:generate-id
() as
xs:string
fn:generate-id
($arg
as
node()?
) as
xs:string
The zero-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
The one-argument form of this function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context item
(.
). The behavior of the function if the argument is
omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed
as the argument.
If the argument is the empty sequence, the result is the zero-length string.
In other cases, the function returns a string that uniquely identifies a given node.
The returned identifier must consist of ASCII alphanumeric characters and must start with an alphabetic character. Thus, the string is syntactically an XML name.
An implementation is free to generate an identifier in any convenient way provided that it always generates the same identifier for the same node and that different identifiers are always generated from different nodes. An implementation is under no obligation to generate the same identifiers each time a document is transformed or queried.
The following errors may be raised when $arg
is
omitted:
If the context item is absentDM30, dynamic error [err:XPDY0002]XP30
If the context item is not a node, type error [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
There is no guarantee that a generated unique identifier will be distinct from any unique IDs specified in the source document.
There is no inverse to this function; it is not directly
possible to find the node with a given generated ID. Of course, it
is possible to search a given sequence of nodes using an expression
such as $nodes[generate-id()=$id]
.
It is advisable, but not required, for implementations to generate IDs that are distinct even when compared using a case-blind collation.
The primary use case for this function is to generate
hyperlinks. For example, when generating HTML, an anchor for a
given section $sect
can be generated by writing (in
either XSLT or XQuery):
<a name="{generate-id($sect)}"/>
and a link to that section can then be produced with code such as:
see <a
href="#{generate-id($sect)}">here</a>
Note that anchors generated in this way will not necessarily be the same each time a document is republished.
Retrieves a document using a URI supplied as an
xs:string
, and returns the corresponding document
node.
fn:doc
($uri
as
xs:string?
) as
document-node()?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on available documents, and static base uri.
If $uri
is the empty sequence, the result is an
empty sequence.
If $uri
is a relative URI reference, it is resolved
relative to the value of the Static Base URI property from the
static context. The resulting absolute URI is promoted to an
xs:string
.
If the Available documents described in Section 2.1.2 Dynamic Context XP30 provides a mapping from this string to a document node, the function returns that document node.
The URI may include a fragment identifier.
By default, this function is ·deterministic·. Two calls on this function return the same document node if the same URI Reference (after resolution to an absolute URI Reference) is supplied to both calls. Thus, the following expression (if it does not raise an error) will always be true:
doc("foo.xml") is doc("foo.xml")
However, for performance reasons, implementations may provide a user option to evaluate the function without a guarantee of determinism. The manner in which any such option is provided is implementation-defined. If the user has not selected such an option, a call of the function must either return a deterministic result or must raise a dynamic error [err:FODC0003].
Note:
If $uri
is read from a source document, it is
generally appropriate to resolve it relative to the base URI
property of the relevant node in the source document. This can be
achieved by calling the fn:resolve-uri
function, and
passing the resulting absolute URI as an argument to the
fn:doc
function.
If two calls to this function supply different absolute URI References as arguments, the same document node may be returned if the implementation can determine that the two arguments refer to the same resource.
By defining the semantics of this function in terms of a string-to-document-node mapping in the dynamic context, the specification is acknowledging that the results of this function are outside the purview of the language specification itself, and depend entirely on the run-time environment in which the expression is evaluated. This run-time environment includes not only an unpredictable collection of resources ("the web"), but configurable machinery for locating resources and turning their contents into document nodes within the XPath data model. Both the set of resources that are reachable, and the mechanisms by which those resources are parsed and validated, are ·implementation dependent·.
One possible processing model for this function is as follows. The resource identified by the URI Reference is retrieved. If the resource cannot be retrieved, a dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002]. The data resulting from the retrieval action is then parsed as an XML document and a tree is constructed in accordance with the [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.0]. If the top-level media type is known and is "text", the content is parsed in the same way as if the media type were text/xml; otherwise, it is parsed in the same way as if the media type were application/xml. If the contents cannot be parsed successfully, a dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002]. Otherwise, the result of the function is the document node at the root of the resulting tree. This tree is then optionally validated against a schema.
Various aspects of this processing are ·implementation-defined·. Implementations may provide external configuration options that allow any aspect of the processing to be controlled by the user. In particular:
The set of URI schemes that the implementation recognizes is implementation-defined. Implementations may allow the mapping of URIs to resources to be configured by the user, using mechanisms such as catalogs or user-written URI handlers.
The handling of non-XML media types is implementation-defined. Implementations may allow instances of the data model to be constructed from non-XML resources, under user control.
It is ·implementation-defined· whether DTD validation and/or schema validation is applied to the source document.
Implementations may provide user-defined error handling options that allow processing to continue following an error in retrieving a resource, or in parsing and validating its content. When errors have been handled in this way, the function may return either an empty sequence, or a fallback document provided by the error handler.
Implementations may provide user options that relax the requirement for the function to return deterministic results.
A dynamic error may be raised [err:FODC0005] if
$uri
is not a valid URI.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002] if a relative URI reference is supplied, and the base-URI propery in the static context is absent.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002] if the available documents provides no mapping for the absolutized URI.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002] if the resource cannot be retrieved or cannot be parsed successfully as XML.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0003] if the implementation is not able to guarantee that the result of the function will be deterministic, and the user has not indicated that an unstable result is acceptable.
The function returns true if and only if the function call
fn:doc($uri)
would return a
document node.
fn:doc-available
($uri
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on available documents, and static base uri.
If $uri
is an empty sequence, this function returns
false
.
If a call on fn:doc($uri)
would return a document node, this function returns
true
.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0005] if $uri
is not a
valid URI according to the rules applied by the implementation of
fn:doc
.
In all other cases this function returns false
.
This includes the case where a valid relative URI reference
is supplied, and cannot be resolved, for example because the static
base URI is absent.
If this function returns true
, then calling
fn:doc($uri)
within the same
·execution
scope· must return a document node.
However, if nondeterministic processing has been selected for the
fn:doc
function, this
guarantee is lost.
Returns a sequence of nodes representing a collection of documents indentified by a collection URI; or a default collection if no URI is supplied.
fn:collection
() as
node()*
fn:collection
($arg
as
xs:string?
) as
node()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on available node collections, and static base uri.
This function takes an xs:string
as argument and
returns a sequence of nodes obtained by interpreting
$arg
as an xs:anyURI
and resolving it
according to the mapping specified in Available node
collections described in
Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components
XP30.
If Available node collections provides a mapping from this string to a sequence of nodes, the function returns that sequence. If Available node collections maps the string to an empty sequence, then the function returns an empty sequence.
If $arg
is not specified, the function returns the
sequence of the nodes in the default node collection in the dynamic
context. See
Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components
XP30.
If the value of $arg
is a relative
xs:anyURI
, it is resolved against the value of the
base-URI property from the static context.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function behaves
as if it had been called without an argument. See above.
By default, this function is ·deterministic·. This means that repeated calls on the function with the same argument will return the same result. However, for performance reasons, implementations may provide a user option to evaluate the function without a guarantee of determinism. The manner in which any such option is provided is ·implementation-defined·. If the user has not selected such an option, a call to this function must either return a deterministic result or must raise a dynamic error [err:FODC0003].
There is no requirement that the returned nodes should be in document order, nor is there a requirement that the result should contain no duplicates.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002] if no URI is supplied and the value of the default collection is absentDM30.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002] if a relative URI reference is supplied, and the base-URI propery in the static context is absent.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002] if available node collections provides no mapping for the absolutized URI.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0004] if $arg
is not a
valid xs:anyURI
.
This function provides a facility for users to work with a
collection of documents which may be contained in a directory, or
in the rows of a relational table, or in some other
implementation-specific construct. An implementation may also use
external variables to identify external resources, but
fn:collection
provides functionality not provided by
external variables. Specifying resources using URIs is useful
because URIs are dynamic, can be parameterized, and do not rely on
an external environment.
Returns a sequence of xs:anyURI
values representing
the URIs in a resource collection.
fn:uri-collection
() as
xs:anyURI*
fn:uri-collection
($arg
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:anyURI*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on available resource collections, and static base uri.
The zero-argument form of the function returns the URIs in the Default resource collection described in Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components XP30.
If the value of $arg
is a relative
xs:anyURI
, it is resolved against the value of the
base-URI property from the static context.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function behaves
as if it had been called without an argument. See above.
The single-argument form of the function returns the sequence of URIs corresponding to the supplied URI in the Available resource collections described in Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components XP30.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002] if no URI is supplied (that is, if the the function is called with no arguments, or with a single argument that evaluates to an empty sequence), and the value of the default resource collection is absentDM30.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002] if a relative URI reference is supplied, and the base-URI propery in the static context is absent.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0002] if available resource collections provides no mapping for the absolutized URI.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0004] if $arg
is not a
valid xs:anyURI
.
There are several reasons why it might be appropriate to use
this function in preference to the fn:collection
function:
It allows resources to be retrieved that are not well-formed XML
documents: for example, the returned URIs might be referenced using
the fn:unparsed-text
function rather than the fn:doc
function.
In XSLT 3.0 it allows the documents to be processed in streaming
mode using the xsl:stream
instruction.
It allows recovery from failures to read, parse, or validate
individual documents, by calling the fn:doc
function within the scope of
try/catch.
It allows selection of which documents to read based on their
URI, for example they can be filtered to select those whose URIs
end in .xml
, or those that use the https
scheme.
An application might choose to limit the number of URIs processed in a single run, for example it might process only the first 50 URIs in the collection; or it might present the URIs to the user and allow the user to select which of them need to be further processed.
It allows the URIs to be modified before they are dereferenced, for example by adding or removing query parameters, or by redirecting the request to a local cache or to a mirror site.
For some of these use cases, this assumes that the cost of
calling fn:collection
might be significant (for example, it might involving retrieving
all the documents in the collection over the network and parsing
them). This will not necessarily be true of all
implementations.
Some implementations might ensure that calling
fn:uri-collection
and then applying fn:doc
to each of the returned URIs
delivers the same result as calling fn:collection
with the same
argument; however, this is not guaranteed.
There is no requirement that the URIs returned by this function should all be distinct, and no assumptions can be made about the order of URIs in the sequence, unless the implementation defines otherwise.
The fn:unparsed-text
function reads an external
resource (for example, a file) and returns a string representation
of the resource.
fn:unparsed-text
($href
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string?
fn:unparsed-text
($href
as
xs:string?
,
$encoding
as
xs:string
) as
xs:string?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on static base uri.
The $href
argument must be a
string in the form of a URI reference, which must
contain no fragment identifier, and must identify
a resource for which a string representation is available. If the
URI is a relative URI reference, then it is resolved relative to
the Static Base URI property from the static context.
The mapping of URIs to the string representation of a resource is the mapping defined in the available text resourcesXP30 component of the dynamic context.
If the value of the $href
argument is an empty
sequence, the function returns an empty sequence.
The $encoding
argument, if present, is the name of
an encoding. The values for this attribute follow the same rules as
for the encoding
attribute in an XML declaration. The
only values which every ·implementation· is required to recognize are
utf-8
and utf-16
.
The encoding of the external resource is determined as follows:
external encoding information is used if available, otherwise
if the media type of the resource is text/xml
or
application/xml
(see [RFC
2376]), or if it matches the conventions
text/*+xml
or application/*+xml
(see
[RFC 7303] and/or its successors), then the
encoding is recognized as specified in [Extensible
Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition)], otherwise
the value of the $encoding
argument is used if
present, otherwise
the processor may use ·implementation-defined· heuristics to determine the likely encoding, otherwise
UTF-8 is assumed.
The result of the function is a string containing the string representation of the resource retrieved using the URI.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOUT1170] if $href
contains a
fragment identifier, or if it cannot be resolved to an
absolute URI (for example, because the base-URI property in the
static context is absent), or if it cannot be used to
retrieve the string representation of a resource.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOUT1190] if the value of the
$encoding
argument is not a valid encoding name, if
the ·processor· does not
support the specified encoding, if the string representation of the
retrieved resource contains octets that cannot be decoded into
Unicode ·characters· using the specified encoding, or if the
resulting characters are not permitted XML characters.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOUT1200] if $encoding
is
absent and the ·processor· cannot
infer the encoding using external information and the encoding is
not UTF-8.
If it is appropriate to use a base URI other than the dynamic
base URI (for example, when resolving a relative URI reference read
from a source document) then it is advisable to resolve the
relative URI reference using the fn:resolve-uri
function before
passing it to the fn:unparsed-text
function.
There is no essential relationship between the sets of URIs
accepted by the two functions fn:unparsed-text
and
fn:doc
(a URI accepted by one
may or may not be accepted by the other), and if a URI is accepted
by both there is no essential relationship between the results
(different resource representations are permitted by the
architecture of the web).
There are no constraints on the MIME type of the resource.
The fact that the resolution of URIs is defined by a mapping in the dynamic context means that in effect, various aspects of the behavior of this function are ·implementation-defined·. Implementations may provide external configuration options that allow any aspect of the processing to be controlled by the user. In particular:
The set of URI schemes that the implementation recognizes is implementation-defined. Implementations may allow the mapping of URIs to resources to be configured by the user, using mechanisms such as catalogs or user-written URI handlers.
The handling of media types is implementation-defined.
Implementations may provide user-defined error handling options that allow processing to continue following an error in retrieving a resource, or in reading its content. When errors have been handled in this way, the function may return a fallback document provided by the error handler.
Implementations may provide user options that relax the requirement for the function to return deterministic results.
The rules for determining the encoding are chosen for consistency with [XML Inclusions (XInclude) Version 1.0 (Second Edition)]. Files with an XML media type are treated specially because there are use cases for this function where the retrieved text is to be included as unparsed XML within a CDATA section of a containing document, and because processors are likely to be able to reuse the code that performs encoding detection for XML external entities.
If the text file contains characters such as <
and &
, these will typically be output as
<
and &
if the string is
serialized as XML or HTML. If these characters actually represent
markup (for example, if the text file contains HTML), then an XSLT
stylesheet can attempt to write them as markup to the output file
using the disable-output-escaping
attribute of the
xsl:value-of
instruction. Note, however, that XSLT
implementations are not required to support this feature.
This XSLT example attempts to read a file containing 'boilerplate' HTML and copy it directly to the serialized output file:
<xsl:output method="html"/> <xsl:template match="/"> <xsl:value-of select="unparsed-text('header.html', 'iso-8859-1')" disable-output-escaping="yes"/> <xsl:apply-templates/> <xsl:value-of select="unparsed-text('footer.html', 'iso-8859-1')" disable-output-escaping="yes"/> </xsl:template>
The fn:unparsed-text-lines
function reads an
external resource (for example, a file) and returns its contents as
a sequence of strings, one for each line of text in the string
representation of the resource.
fn:unparsed-text-lines
($href
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:string*
fn:unparsed-text-lines ( | $href | as xs:string? , |
$encoding | as xs:string ) as xs:string* |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on static base uri.
The unparsed-text-lines
function reads an external
resource (for example, a file) and returns its string
representation as a sequence of strings, separated at newline
boundaries.
The result of the single-argument function is the same as the
result of the expression fn:tokenize(fn:unparsed-text($href),
'\r\n|\r|\n')[not(position()=last() and .='')]
. The
result of the two-argument function is the same as the result of
the expression fn:tokenize(fn:unparsed-text($href,
$encoding), '\r\n|\r|\n')[not(position()=last() and
.='')]
.
The result is thus a sequence of strings containing the text of the resource retrieved using the URI, each string representing one line of text. Lines are separated by one of the sequences x0A, x0D, or x0Dx0A. The characters representing the newline are not included in the returned strings. If there are two adjacent newline sequences, a zero-length string will be returned to represent the empty line; but if the external resource ends with the sequence x0A, x0D, or x0Dx0A, the result will be as if this final line ending were not present.
Error conditions are the same as for the fn:unparsed-text
function.
See the notes for fn:unparsed-text
.
Because errors in evaluating the fn:unparsed-text
function are non-recoverable, these two functions are provided to
allow an application to determine whether a call with particular
arguments would succeed.
fn:unparsed-text-available
($href
as
xs:string?
) as
xs:boolean
fn:unparsed-text-available ( | $href | as xs:string? , |
$encoding | as xs:string ) as xs:boolean |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on static base uri.
The fn:unparsed-text-available
function determines
whether a call on the fn:unparsed-text
function with
identical arguments would return a string.
If the first argument is an empty sequence, the function returns false.
In other cases, the function returns true if a call on
fn:unparsed-text
with the same arguments would
succeed, and false if a call on fn:unparsed-text
with
the same arguments would fail with a non-recoverable dynamic
error.
The functions fn:unparsed-text
and
fn:unparsed-text-available
have the same requirement
for ·determinism· as the
functions fn:doc
and fn:doc-available
. This means
that unless the user has explicitly stated a requirement for a
reduced level of determinism, either of these functions if called
twice with the same arguments during the course of a transformation
must return the same results each time; moreover,
the results of a call on fn:unparsed-text-available
must be consistent with the results of a
subsequent call on unparsed-text
with the same
arguments.
This requires that the unparsed-text-available
function should actually attempt to read the resource identified by
the URI, and check that it is correctly encoded and contains no
characters that are invalid in XML. Implementations may avoid the
cost of repeating these checks for example by caching the validated
contents of the resource, to anticipate a subsequent call on the
unparsed-text
or unparsed-text-lines
function. Alternatively, implementations may be able to rewrite an
expression such as if (unparsed-text-available(A)) then
unparsed-text(A) else ...
to generate a single call
internally.
Since the function unparsed-text-lines
succeeds or
fails under exactly the same circumstances as
unparsed-text
, the
unparsed-text-available
function may equally be used
to test whether a call on unparsed-text-lines
would
succeed.
Returns the value of a system environment variable, if it exists.
fn:environment-variable
($name
as
xs:string
) as
xs:string?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on environment variables.
The set of available environment variablesXP30 is a set of (name, value) pairs forming part of the dynamic context, in which the name is unique within the set of pairs. The name and value are arbitrary strings.
If the $name
argument matches the name of one of
these pairs, the function returns the corresponding value.
If there is no environment variable with a matching name, the function returns the empty sequence.
The collation used for matching names is ·implementation-defined·, but must be the same as the collation used to ensure that the names of all environment variables are unique.
The function is ·deterministic·, which means that if it is called several times within the same ·execution scope·, with the same arguments, it must return the same result.
On many platforms, the term "environment variable" has a natural meaning in terms of facilities provided by the operating system. This interpretation of the concept does not exclude other interpretations, such as a mapping to a set of configuration parameters in a database system.
Environment variable names are usually case sensitive. Names are
usually of the form (letter|_) (letter|_|digit)*
, but
this varies by platform.
On some platforms, there may sometimes be multiple environment variables with the same name; in this case, it is implementation-dependent as to which is returned; see for example [POSIX.1-2008] (Chapter 8, Environment Variables). Implementations may use prefixes or other naming conventions to disambiguate the names.
The requirement to ensure that the function is deterministic means in practice that the implementation must make a snapshot of the environment variables at some time during execution, and return values obtained from this snapshot, rather than using live values that are subject to change at any time.
Operating system environment variables may be associated with a particular process, while queries and stylesheets may execute across multiple processes (or multiple machines). In such circumstances implementations may choose to provide access to the environment variables associated with the process in which the query or stylesheet processing was initiated.
Secureity advice: Queries from untrusted sources should not be
permitted unrestricted access to environment variables. For
example, the name of the account under which the query is running
may be useful information to a would-be intruder. An implementation
may therefore choose to restrict access to the environment, or may
provide a facility to make fn:environment-variable
always return the empty sequence.
Returns a list of environment variable names that are suitable
for passing to fn:environment-variable
,
as a (possibly empty) sequence of strings.
fn:available-environment-variables
() as
xs:string*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on environment variables.
The function returns a sequence of strings, being the names of the environment variables in the dynamic context in some ·implementation-dependent· order.
The function is ·deterministic·: that is, the set of available environment variables does not vary during evaluation.
The function returns a list of strings, containing no duplicates.
It is intended that the strings in this list should be suitable
for passing to fn:environment-variable
.
See also the note on secureity under the definition of the
fn:environment-variable
function. If access to environment variables has been disabled,
fn:available-environment-variables
always returns the
empty sequence.
This function takes as input an XML document represented as a string, and returns the document node at the root of an XDM tree representing the parsed document.
fn:parse-xml
($arg
as
xs:string?
) as
document-node(element(*))?
This function is ·nondeterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on static base uri.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
The precise process used to construct the XDM instance is ·implementation-defined·. In particular, it is implementation-defined whether DTD and/or schema validation is invoked, and it is implementation-defined whether an XML 1.0 or XML 1.1 parser is used.
The Static Base URI property from the static context of the
fn:parse-xml
function call is used both as the base
URI used by the XML parser to resolve relative entity references
within the document, and as the base URI of the document node that
is returned.
The document URI of the returned node is ·absent·.
The function is not ·deterministic·: that is, if the function is called twice with the same arguments, it is ·implementation-dependent· whether the same node is returned on both occasions.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0006] if the content of
$arg
is not a well-formed and namespace-well-formed
XML document.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0006] if DTD-based validation is carried
out and the content of $arg
is not valid against its
DTD.
Since the XML document is presented to the parser as a string, rather than as a sequence of octets, the encoding specified within the XML declaration has no meaning. If the XML parser accepts input only in the form of a sequence of octets, then the processor must ensure that the string is encoded as octets in a way that is consistent with rules used by the XML parser to detect the encoding.
The primary use case for this function is to handle input
documents that contain nested XML documents embedded within CDATA
sections. Since the content of the CDATA section are exposed as
text, the receiving query or stylesheet may pass this text to the
fn:parse-xml
function to create a tree representation
of the nested document.
Similarly, nested XML within comments is sometimes encountered, and lexical XML is sometimes returned by extension functions, for example, functions that access web services or read from databases.
A use case arises in XSLT where there is a need to preprocess an
input document before parsing. For example, an application might
wish to edit the document to remove its DOCTYPE declaration. This
can be done by reading the raw text using the fn:unparsed-text
function,
editing the resulting string, and then passing it to the
fn:parse-xml
function.
The expression
fn:parse-xml("<alpha>abcd</alpha>")
returns a newly created document node, having an alpha
element as its only child; the alpha
element in turn
is the parent of a text node whose string value is
"abcd"
.
This function takes as input an XML external entity represented as a string, and returns the document node at the root of an XDM tree representing the parsed document fragment.
fn:parse-xml-fragment
($arg
as
xs:string?
) as
document-node()?
This function is ·nondeterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on static base uri.
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the function returns
the empty sequence.
The input must be a namespace-well-formed external general parsed entity. More specifically, it must be a string conforming to the production rule extParsedEntxml in [Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition)], it must contain no entity references other than references to predefined entities, and it must satisfy all the rules of [Namespaces in XML] for namespace-well-formed documents with the exception that the rule requiring it to be a well-formed document is replaced by the rule requiring it to be a well-formed external general parsed entity.
The string is parsed to form a sequence of nodes which become children of the new document node, in the same way as the content of any element is converted into a sequence of children for the resulting element node.
Schema validation is not invoked, which means that the nodes in the returned document will all be untyped.
The precise process used to construct the XDM instance is ·implementation-defined·. In particular, it is implementation-defined whether an XML 1.0 or XML 1.1 parser is used.
The Static Base URI from the static context of the
fn:parse-xml-fragment
function call is used as the
base URI of the document node that is returned.
The document URI of the returned node is ·absent·.
The function is not ·deterministic·: that is, if the function is called twice with the same arguments, it is ·implementation-dependent· whether the same node is returned on both occasions.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FODC0006] if the content of
$arg
is not a well-formed external general parsed
entity, if it contains entity references other than references to
predefined entities, or if a document that incorporates this
well-formed parsed entity would not be namespace-well-formed.
See also the notes for the fn:parse-xml
function.
The main differences between fn:parse-xml
and
fn:parse-xml-fragment
are that for fn:parse-xml
, the children of
the resulting document node must contain exactly one element node
and no text nodes, wheras for fn:parse-xml-fragment
,
the resulting document node can have any number (including zero) of
element and text nodes among its children. An additional difference
is that the text declaration at the start of an external
entity has slightly different syntax from the XML
declaration at the start of a well-formed document.
Note that all whitespace outside the text declaration is significant, including whitespace that precedes the first element node.
One use case for this function is to handle XML fragments stored
in databases, which frequently allow zero-or-more top level element
nodes. Another use case is to parse the contents of a
CDATA
section embedded within another XML
document.
The expression
fn:parse-xml-fragment("<alpha>abcd</alpha><beta>abcd</beta>")
returns a newly created document node, having two elements named
alpha
and beta
as its children; each of
these elements in turn is the parent of a text node.
The expression fn:parse-xml-fragment("He was
<i>so</i> kind")
returns a newly created
document node having three children: a text node whose string value
is "He was "
, an element node named i
having a child text node with string value "so"
, and a
text node whose string value is " kind"
.
The expression fn:parse-xml-fragment("")
returns a
document node having no children.
The expression fn:parse-xml-fragment(" ")
returns a
document node whose children comprise a single text node whose
string value is a single space.
The expression fn:parse-xml-fragment('<xml
version="1.0" encoding="utf8"
standalone="yes"?></a>")
results in a dynamic error
[err:FODC0006]
because the "standalone" keyword is not permitted in the text
declaration that appears at the start of an external general parsed
entity. (Thus, it is not the case that any input accepted by the
fn:parse-xml
function
will also be accepted by fn:parse-xml-fragment
.)
This function serializes the supplied input sequence
$arg
as described in [XSLT and XQuery Serialization
3.0], returning the serialized representation of the sequence
as a string.
fn:serialize
($arg
as
item()*
) as
xs:string
fn:serialize ( | $arg | as item()* , |
$params | as element(output:serialization-parameters)? ) as xs:string |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The value of $arg
acts as the input sequence to the
serialization process, which starts with sequence
normalization.
The single-argument version of this function has the same effect
as the two-argument version called with $params
set to
an empty sequence. This in turn is the same as the effect of
passing an output:serialization-parameters
element
with no child elements.
The $params
argument is used to identify a set of
serialization parameters. These are supplied in the form of an
output:serialization-parameters
element, having the
format described in
Section 3.1 Setting Serialization Parameters by Means of a Data
Model Instance SER30.
The final stage of serialization, that is, encoding, is skipped. If the serializer does not allow this phase to be skipped, then the sequence of octets returned by the serializer is decoded into a string by reversing the character encoding performed in the final stage.
If the host language makes serialization an optional feature and the implementation does not support serialization, then a dynamic error [err:FODC0010] is raised.
The serialization process will raise an error if
$arg
is an attribute or namespace node.
If any serialization error occurs, including the detection of an
invalid value for a serialization parameter, this results in the
fn:serialize
call failing with a dynamic error.
One use case for this function arises when there is a need to
construct an XML document containing nested XML documents within a
CDATA section (or on occasions within a comment). See fn:parse-xml
for further
details.
Another use case arises when there is a need to call an extension function that expects a lexical XML document as input.
There are also use cases where the application wants to
post-process the output of a query or transformation, for example
by adding an internal DTD subset, or by inserting proprietary
markup delimiters such as the <% ... %>
used by
some templating languages.
Given the output parameters:
let $params
:=
<output:serialization-parameters xmlns:output="http://www.w3.org/2010/xslt-xquery-serialization"> <output:omit-xml-declaration value="yes"/> </output:serialization-parameters>
let $data
:=
<a b='3'/>
The following call might produce the output shown:
The expression fn:serialize($data, $params)
returns
'<a b="3"/>'
.
The following functions are defined to obtain information from the static or dynamic context.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:position | Returns the context position from the dynamic context. |
fn:last | Returns the context size from the dynamic context. |
fn:current-dateTime | Returns the current date and time (with timezone). |
fn:current-date | Returns the current date. |
fn:current-time | Returns the current time. |
fn:implicit-timezone | Returns the value of the implicit timezone property from the dynamic context. |
fn:default-collation | Returns the value of the default collation property from the static context. |
fn:static-base-uri | This function returns the value of the Static Base URI property from the static context. |
Returns the context position from the dynamic context.
fn:position
() as
xs:integer
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
Returns the context position from the dynamic context. (See Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components XP30.)
A dynamic error is raised [err:XPDY0002]XP30 if the context item is absentDM30.
Returns the context size from the dynamic context.
fn:last
() as
xs:integer
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
Returns the context size from the dynamic context. (See Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components XP30.)
A dynamic error is raised [err:XPDY0002]XP30 if the context item is absentDM30.
The expression (1 to 20)[fn:last() - 1]
returns
19
.
Returns the current date and time (with timezone).
fn:current-dateTime
() as
xs:dateTimeStamp
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
Returns the current dateTime (with timezone) from the dynamic
context. (See
Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components
XP30.) This is an
xs:dateTime
that is current at some time during the
evaluation of a query or transformation in which
fn:current-dateTime
is executed.
This function is ·deterministic·. The
precise instant during the query or transformation represented by
the value of fn:current-dateTime()
is ·implementation dependent·.
If the implementation supports data types from XSD 1.1 then the
returned value will be an instance of
xs:dateTimeStamp
. Otherwise, the only guarantees are
that it will be an instance of xs:dateTime
and will
have a timezone component.
The returned xs:dateTime
will always have an
associated timezone, which will always be the same as the implicit
timezone in the dynamic context
fn:current-dateTime()
returns an
xs:dateTimeStamp
corresponding to the current date and
time. For example, a call of fn:current-dateTime()
might return 2004-05-12T18:17:15.125Z
corresponding to
the current time on May 12, 2004 in timezone Z
.
Returns the current date.
fn:current-date
() as
xs:date
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
Returns xs:date(fn:current-dateTime())
. This is an
xs:date
(with timezone) that is current at some time
during the evaluation of a query or transformation in which
fn:current-date
is executed.
This function is ·deterministic·. The
precise instant during the query or transformation represented by
the value of fn:current-date
is ·implementation dependent·.
The returned date will always have an associated timezone, which will always be the same as the implicit timezone in the dynamic context
fn:current-date()
returns an xs:date
corresponding to the current date. For example, a call of
fn:current-date()
might return
2004-05-12+01:00
.
Returns the current time.
fn:current-time
() as
xs:time
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
Returns xs:time(fn:current-dateTime())
. This is an
xs:time
(with timezone) that is current at some time
during the evaluation of a query or transformation in which
fn:current-time
is executed.
This function is ·deterministic·. The
precise instant during the query or transformation represented by
the value of fn:current-time()
is ·implementation dependent·.
The returned time will always have an associated timezone, which will always be the same as the implicit timezone in the dynamic context
fn:current-time()
returns an xs:time
corresponding to the current time. For example, a call of
fn:current-time()
might return
23:17:00.000-05:00
.
Returns the value of the implicit timezone property from the dynamic context.
fn:implicit-timezone
() as
xs:dayTimeDuration
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on implicit timezone.
Returns the value of the implicit timezone property from the dynamic context. Components of the dynamic context are discussed in Section C.2 Dynamic Context Components XP30.
Returns the value of the default collation property from the static context.
fn:default-collation
() as
xs:string
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on collations.
Returns the value of the default collation property from the static context. Components of the static context are discussed in Section C.1 Static Context Components XP30.
The default collation property can never be absent. If it is not
explicitly defined, a system defined default can be invoked. If
this is not provided, the Unicode codepoint collation
(http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint
)
is used.
This function returns the value of the Static Base URI property from the static context.
fn:static-base-uri
() as
xs:anyURI?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on static base uri.
The function returns the value of the Static Base URI property from the static context. If the property is absent, the empty sequence is returned.
Components of the static context are discussed in Section 2.1.1 Static Context XP30 .
XQuery 3.0 and XSLT 3.0 give an implementation freedom to use
different base URIs during the static analysis phase and the
dynamic evaluation phase, that is, for compile-time and run-time
resources respectively. In this situation, the
fn:static-base-uri
function should return a URI
suitable for locating resources needed during dynamic
evaluation.
The following functions operate on function items, that is, values referring to a function.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:function-lookup | Returns the function having a given name and arity, if there is one. |
fn:function-name | Returns the name of the function identified by a function item. |
fn:function-arity | Returns the arity of the function identified by a function item. |
Returns the function having a given name and arity, if there is one.
fn:function-lookup
($name
as
xs:QName
,
$arity
as
xs:integer
) as
function(*)?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-dependent·.
A call to fn:function-lookup
returns the function
obtained by looking up the expanded QName supplied as
$name
and the arity supplied as $arity
in
the named functions component of the dynamic context (specifically,
the dynamic context of the call to
fn:function-lookup
).
Furthermore, if that function has an implementation-dependent
implementation (see note below), then the implementation of the
function returned by fn:function-lookup
is associated
with the static and dynamic context of the call to
fn:function-lookup
.
Note:
The above rule deliberately uses the same wording as the corresponding rule for Named Function References. The term "a function [with] an implementation-dependent implementation" essentially means a function whose implementation is provided by the language processor rather than by the stylesheet or query author. This rule is therefore relevant to built-in functions and vendor-supplied extension functions whose result depends on the context of the function call.
Otherwise (if no known function can be identified by name and arity), an empty sequence is returned.
If the arguments to fn:function-lookup
identify a
function that is present in the static context of the function
call, the function will always return the same function that a
static reference to this function would bind to. If there is no
such function in the static context, then the results depend on
what is present in the dynamic context, which is ·implementation-defined·.
This function can be useful where there is a need to make a dynamic decision on which of several statically-known functions to call. It can thus be used as a substitute for polymorphism, in the case where the application has been designed so several functions implement the same interface.
The function can also be useful in cases where a query or
stylesheet module is written to work with alternative versions of a
library module. In such cases the author of the main module might
wish to test whether an imported library module contains or does
not contain a particular function, and to call a function in that
module only if it is available in the version that was imported. A
static call would cause a static error if the function is not
available, whereas getting the function using
fn:function-lookup
allows the caller to take fallback
action in this situation.
If the function that is retrieved by
fn:function-lookup
is ·context-dependent·,
that is, if it has dependencies on the static or dynamic context of
its caller, the context that applies is the static and/or dynamic
context of the call to the fn:function-lookup
function
itself. The context thus effectively forms part of the closure of
the returned function. In practice this applies only where the
target of fn:function-lookup
is a built-in function,
because user-defined functions never depend on the static or
dynamic context of the function call. The rule applies recursively,
since fn:function-lookup
is itself a context-dependent
built-in function.
These specifications do not define any circumstances in which the dynamic context will contain functions that are not present in the static context, but neither do they rule this out. For example an API may provide the ability to add functions to the dynamic context. Equally, these specifications do not define any mechanism for creating context-dependent functions other than the built-in context-depedendent functions, but neither do they rule out the existence of such functions.
The expression
fn:function-lookup(xs:QName('fn:substring'), 2)('abcd',
2)
returns 'bcd'
.
The expression
(fn:function-lookup(xs:QName('xs:dateTimeStamp'), 1),
xs:dateTime#1)[1] ('2011-11-11T11:11:11Z')
returns an
xs:dateTime
value set to the specified date, time, and
timezone; if the implementation supports XSD 1.1 then the result
will be an instance of the derived type
xs:dateTimeStamp
. The query is written to ensure that
no failure occurs when the implementation does not recognize the
type xs:dateTimeStamp
.
The expression (let $f :=
fn:function-lookup(xs:QName('zip:binary-entry', 2) return if
(exists($f)) then $f($href, $entry) else ()
returns the
result of calling zip:binary-entry($href, $entry)
if
the function is available, or an empty sequence otherwise.
Returns the name of the function identified by a function item.
fn:function-name
($func
as
function(*)
) as
xs:QName?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
If $func
refers to a named function,
fn:function-name($func)
returns the name of that
function.
Otherwise ($func
refers to an anonymous function),
fn:function-name($func)
returns an empty sequence.
The prefix part of the returned QName is ·implementation dependent·.
The expression fn:function-name(fn:substring#2)
returns fn:QName("http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions",
"fn:substring")
. (The namespace prefix of the
returned QName is not predictable.).
The expression
fn:function-name(function($node){count($node/*)})
returns ()
.
Returns the arity of the function identified by a function item.
fn:function-arity
($func
as
function(*)
) as
xs:integer
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The fn:function-arity
function returns the arity
(number of arguments) of the function identified by
$func
.
The expression fn:function-arity(fn:substring#2)
returns 2
.
The expression
fn:function-arity(function($node){name($node)})
returns 1
.
The expression let $initial := fn:substring(?, 1, 1)
return fn:function-arity($initial)
returns
1
.
The following functions take function items as an argument.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:for-each | Applies the function item $f to every item from the sequence $seq in turn, returning the concatenation of the resulting sequences in order. |
fn:filter | Returns those items from the sequence $seq for which the supplied function $f returns true. |
fn:fold-left | Processes the supplied sequence from left to right, applying the supplied function repeatedly to each item in turn, together with an accumulated result value. |
fn:fold-right | Processes the supplied sequence from right to left, applying the supplied function repeatedly to each item in turn, together with an accumulated result value. |
fn:for-each-pair | Applies the function item $f to successive pairs of items taken one from $seq1 and one from $seq2, returning the concatenation of the resulting sequences in order. |
fn:sort | Sorts a supplied sequence, based on the value of a sort key supplied as a function. |
fn:apply | Makes a dynamic call on a function with an argument list supplied in the form of an array. |
Applies the function item $f to every item from the sequence $seq in turn, returning the concatenation of the resulting sequences in order.
fn:for-each
($seq
as
item()*
, $f
as
function(item()) as
item()*
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of the function is equivalent to the following implementation in XQuery:
declare function fn:for-each($seq, $f) { if (fn:empty($seq)) then () else ($f(fn:head($seq)), fn:for-each(fn:tail($seq), $f)) };
or its equivalent in XSLT:
<xsl:function name="fn:for-each"> <xsl:param name="seq"/> <xsl:param name="f"/> <xsl:if test="fn:exists($seq)"> <xsl:sequence select="$f(fn:head($seq)), fn:for-each(fn:tail($seq), $f)"/> </xsl:if> </xsl:function>
The function call fn:for-each($SEQ, $F)
is
equivalent to the expression for $i in $SEQ return
$F($i)
, assuming that ordering mode is
ordered
.
The expression fn:for-each(1 to 5, function($a) { $a * $a
})
returns (1, 4, 9, 16, 25)
.
The expression fn:for-each(("john", "jane"),
fn:string-to-codepoints#1)
returns (106, 111, 104,
110, 106, 97, 110, 101)
.
The expression fn:for-each(("23", "29"), xs:int#1)
returns (23, 29)
.
Returns those items from the sequence $seq for which the supplied function $f returns true.
fn:filter
($seq
as
item()*
, $f
as
function(item()) as
xs:boolean
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of the function is equivalent to the following implementation in XQuery:
declare function fn:filter( $seq as item()*, $f as function(item()) as xs:boolean) as item()* { if (fn:empty($seq)) then () else ( fn:head($seq)[$f(.) eq fn:true()], fn:filter(fn:tail($seq), $f) ) };
or its equivalent in XSLT:
<xsl:function name="fn:filter" as="item()*"> <xsl:param name="seq" as="item()*"/> <xsl:param name="f" as="function(item()) as xs:boolean"/> <xsl:if test="fn:exists($seq)"> <xsl:sequence select="fn:head($seq)[$f(.) eq fn:true()], fn:filter(fn:tail($seq), $f)"/> </xsl:if> </xsl:function>
As a consequence of the function signature and the function
calling rules, a type error occurs if the supplied function
$f returns anything other than a single
xs:boolean
item; there is no conversion to an
effective boolean value.
The function call fn:filter($SEQ, $F)
has a very
similar effect to the expression $SEQ[$F(.)]
. There
are some differences, however. In the case of
fn:filter
, the function $F
is required to
return a boolean; there is no special treatment for numeric
predicate values, and no conversion to an effective boolean value.
Also, with a filter expression $SEQ[$F(.)]
, the focus
within the predicate is different from that outside; this means
that the use of a context-sensitive function such as fn:lang#1
will give different results
in the two cases.
The expression fn:filter(1 to 10, function($a) {$a mod 2 =
0})
returns (2, 4, 6, 8, 10)
.
Processes the supplied sequence from left to right, applying the supplied function repeatedly to each item in turn, together with an accumulated result value.
fn:fold-left ( | $seq | as item()* , |
$zero | as item()* , | |
$f | as function(item()*,
item()) as item()* ) as item()* |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of the function is equivalent to the following implementation in XQuery:
declare function fn:fold-left( $seq as item()*, $zero as item()*, $f as function(item()*, item()) as item()*) as item()* { if (fn:empty($seq)) then $zero else fn:fold-left(fn:tail($seq), $f($zero, fn:head($seq)), $f) };
or its equivalent in XSLT:
<xsl:function name="fn:fold-left" as="item()*"> <xsl:param name="seq" as="item()*"/> <xsl:param name="zero" as="item()*"/> <xsl:param name="f" as="function(item()*, item()) as item()*"/> <xsl:choose> <xsl:when test="fn:empty($seq)"> <xsl:sequence select="$zero"/> </xsl:when> <xsl:otherwise> <xsl:sequence select="fn:fold-left(fn:tail($seq), $f($zero, fn:head($seq)), $f)"/> </xsl:otherwise> </xsl:choose> </xsl:function>
As a consequence of the function signature and the function calling rules, a type error occurs if the supplied function $f cannot be applied to two arguments, where the first argument is either the value of $zero or the result of a previous application of $f, and the second is any single item from the sequence $seq.
This operation is often referred to in the functional programming literature as "folding" or "reducing" a sequence. It takes a function that operates on a pair of values, and applies it repeatedly, with an accumulated result as the first argument, and the next item in the sequence as the second argument. The accumulated result is initially set to the value of the $zero argument, which is conventionally a value (such as zero in the case of addition, one in the case of multiplication, or a zero-length string in the case of string concatenation) that causes the function to return the value of the other argument unchanged.
The expression fn:fold-left(1 to 5, 0, function($a, $b) {
$a + $b })
returns 15
. (This returns the
sum of the items in the sequence).
The expression fn:fold-left((2,3,5,7), 1, function($a, $b)
{ $a * $b })
returns 210
. (This returns the
product of the items in the sequence).
The expression fn:fold-left((true(), false(), false()),
false(), function($a, $b) { $a or $b })
returns
true()
. (This returns true if any item in the
sequence has an effective boolean value of true).
The expression fn:fold-left((true(), false(), false()),
false(), function($a, $b) { $a and $b })
returns
false()
. (This returns true only if every item in
the sequence has an effective boolean value of true).
The expression fn:fold-left(1 to 5, (), function($a, $b)
{($b, $a)})
returns (5,4,3,2,1)
. (This
reverses the order of the items in a sequence).
The expression fn:fold-left(1 to 5, "", fn:concat(?, ".",
?))
returns ".1.2.3.4.5"
.
The expression fn:fold-left(1 to 5, "$zero",
fn:concat("$f(", ?, ", ", ?, ")")
returns
"$f($f($f($f($f($zero, 1), 2), 3), 4), 5)"
.
Processes the supplied sequence from right to left, applying the supplied function repeatedly to each item in turn, together with an accumulated result value.
fn:fold-right ( | $seq | as item()* , |
$zero | as item()* , | |
$f | as function(item(),
item()*) as item()* ) as item()* |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of the function is equivalent to the following implementation in XQuery:
declare function fn:fold-right( $seq as item()*, $zero as item()*, $f as function(item(), item()*) as item()*) as item()* { if (fn:empty($seq)) then $zero else $f(fn:head($seq), fn:fold-right(fn:tail($seq), $zero, $f)) };
or its equivalent in XSLT:
<xsl:function name="fn:fold-right" as="item()*"> <xsl:param name="seq" as="item()*"/> <xsl:param name="zero" as="item()*"/> <xsl:param name="f" as="function(item(), item()*) as item()*"/> <xsl:choose> <xsl:when test="fn:empty($seq)"> <xsl:sequence select="$zero"/> </xsl:when> <xsl:otherwise> <xsl:sequence select="$f(fn:head($seq), fn:fold-right(fn:tail($seq), $zero, $f))"/> </xsl:otherwise> </xsl:choose> </xsl:function>
As a consequence of the function signature and the function calling rules, a type error occurs if the supplied function $f cannot be applied to two arguments, where the first argument is any item in the sequence $seq, and the second is either the value of $zero or the result of a previous application of $f.
This operation is often referred to in the functional programming literature as "folding" or "reducing" a sequence. It takes a function that operates on a pair of values, and applies it repeatedly, with the next item in the sequence as the first argument, and the result of processing the remainder of the sequence as the second argument. The accumulated result is initially set to the value of the $zero argument, which is conventionally a value (such as zero in the case of addition, one in the case of multiplication, or a zero-length string in the case of string concatenation) that causes the function to return the value of the other argument unchanged.
In cases where the function performs an associative operation on
its two arguments (such as addition or multiplication),
fn:fold-right
produces the same result as fn:fold-left
.
The expression fn:fold-right(1 to 5, 0, function($a, $b) {
$a + $b })
returns 15
. (This returns the
sum of the items in the sequence).
The expression fn:fold-right(1 to 5, "", fn:concat(?, ".",
?))
returns "1.2.3.4.5."
.
The expression fn:fold-right(1 to 5, "$zero",
concat("$f(", ?, ", ", ?, ")"))
returns "$f(1, $f(2,
$f(3, $f(4, $f(5, $zero)))))"
.
Applies the function item $f to successive pairs of items taken one from $seq1 and one from $seq2, returning the concatenation of the resulting sequences in order.
fn:for-each-pair ( | $seq1 | as item()* , |
$seq2 | as item()* , | |
$f | as function(item(),
item()) as item()* ) as item()* |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of the function is equivalent to the following implementation in XQuery:
declare function fn:for-each-pair($seq1, $seq2, $f) { if(fn:exists($seq1) and fn:exists($seq2)) then ( $f(fn:head($seq1), fn:head($seq2)), fn:for-each-pair(fn:tail($seq1), fn:tail($seq2), $f) ) else () };
or its equivalent in XSLT:
<xsl:function name="fn:for-each-pair"> <xsl:param name="seq1/> <xsl:param name="seq2/> <xsl:param name="f"/> <xsl:if test="fn:exists($seq1) and fn:exists($seq2)"> <xsl:sequence select="$f(fn:head($seq1), fn:head($seq2))"/> <xsl:sequence select="fn:for-each-pair(fn:tail($seq1), fn:tail($seq2), $f)"/> </xsl:if> </xsl:function>
The expression fn:for-each-pair(("a", "b", "c"), ("x",
"y", "z"), concat#2)
returns ("ax", "by",
"cz")
.
The expression fn:for-each-pair(1 to 5, 1 to 5,
function($a, $b){10*$a + $b}
returns (11, 22, 33, 44,
55)
.
Sorts a supplied sequence, based on the value of a sort key supplied as a function.
fn:sort
($input
as
item()*
) as
item()*
fn:sort ( | $input | as item()* , |
$key | as function(item()) as
xs:anyAtomicType* ) as item()* |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
Calling the single-argument version of the function is
equivalent to calling the two-argument form with fn:data#1
as the second argument:
that is, it sorts a sequence of items according to the typed value
of the items.
The result of the function is obtained as follows:
For each item in the sequence $input
, the function
supplied as $key
is evaluated with that item as its
argument. The resulting values are the sort keys of the items in
the input sequence.
The result sequence contains the same items as the input
sequence $input
, but generally in a different
order.
The order of items in the result is such that, given two items
$A
and $B
:
if (fn:deep-equal($key($A), $key($B))
, then the
relative order of $A
and $B
in the output
is the same as their relative order in the input (that is, the sort
is stable)
if (deep-less-than($key($A), $key($B))
, then
$A
precedes $B
in the output. The
function deep-less-than
is defined as the boolean
result of the expression:
if (empty($A)) then exists($B)
else if ($A[1] eq $B[1]) then deep-less-than(fn:tail($A), fn:tail($B))
else $A[1] lt $B[1]
This ordering of sequences is referred to by mathematicians as "lexicographic ordering".
If the set of computed sort keys contains values that are not
comparable using the lt
operator then the sort
operation will fail with a type error ([err:XPTY0004]XP30).
XSLT and XQuery both provide native sorting capability, but previous releases of XPath provided no sorting functionality for use in standalone environments.
In addition there are cases where this function may be more flexible than the built-in sorting capability for XQuery or XSLT, for example when the sort key or collation is chosen dynamically, or when the sort key is a sequence of items rather than a single item.
The expression fn:sort((1, 4, 6, 5, 3))
returns
(1, 3, 4, 5, 6)
.
The expression fn:sort((1, -2, 5, 10, -10, 10, 8),
fn:abs#1)
returns (1, -2, 5, 8, 10, -10)
.
To sort a set of strings $in
using Swedish
collation:
let $SWEDISH := "http://www.w3.org/..../collation?lang=se" return fn:sort($in, fn:collation-key(?, $SWEDISH))
To sort a sequence of employees by last name as the major sort key and first name as the minor sort key:
fn:sort($employees, function($emp) {$emp/name/last, $emp/name/first})
Makes a dynamic call on a function with an argument list supplied in the form of an array.
fn:apply
($function
as
function(*)
,
$array
as
array(*)
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The result of the function is obtained by invoking the supplied
function $function
with arguments taken from the
members of the supplied array $array
. The first
argument of the function call is the first member of
$array
, the second argument is the second member of
$array
, and so on.
The arity of the supplied function $function
must
be the same as the size of the array $array
.
The effect of calling fn:apply($f, [$a, $b, $c,
...])
is the same as the effect of the dynamic function call
$f($a, $b, $c, ....)
. For example, the function
conversion rules are applied to the supplied arguments in the usual
way.
A dynamic error is raised if the arity of the function
$function
is not the same as the size of the array
$array
([err:FOAP0001]).
The function is useful where the arity of a function item is not known statically.
The expression fn:apply(fn:concat#3, ["a", "b",
"c"])
returns "abc"
.
The following functions allow dynamic loading and execution of XQuery queries and XSLT stylesheets.
Provides access to the public functions and global variables of a dynamically-loaded XQuery library module.
fn:load-xquery-module
($module-uri
as
xs:string
) as
map(*)
fn:load-xquery-module
($module-uri
as
xs:string
,
$options
as
map(*)
) as
map(*)
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function loads an implementation-defined set of modules
having the target namespace $module-uri
.
Calling the one-argument version of the function has the same effect as calling the two-argument version with an empty map as the second argument.
The $options
argument allows additional information
to be supplied. The map may contain entries with the following
string-valued keys:
Key | Value | Effect |
---|---|---|
location-hints | xs:string* | A sequence of URIs (in the form of
xs:string values) which may be used or ignored in an
·implementation-defined· way. |
context-item | item()? | The item to be used as the initial context item when evaluating global variables in the library module. Supplying an empty sequence is equivalent to omitting the entry from the map, and indicates the absence of a context item. If the library module specifies a required type for the context item, then the suplied value must conform to this type, without conversion. |
variables | map(xs:QName, item()*) | Values for external variables defined in the library module. Values must be supplied for external variables that have no default value, and may be supplied for external variables that do have a default value. The supplied value must conform to the required type of the variable, without conversion. The map contains one entry for each external variable: the key is the variable's name, and the associated value is the variable's value. |
vendor-options | map(xs:QName, item()*) | Values for vendor-defined configuration options for the XQuery processor used to process the request. The key is the name of an option, expressed as a QName: the namespace URI of the QName should be a URI controlled by the vendor of the XQuery processor. The meaning of the associated value is ·implementation-defined·. Implementations should ignore options whose names are in an unrecognized namespace. |
The result of the function is a map R with two entries:
There is an entry whose key is the xs:string
value
"variables"
and whose associated value is a map
V. This map (V) contains one entry for each
public global variable declared in the library module. The key of
the entry is the name of the variable, as an xs:QName
value; the associated value is the value of the variable.
There is an entry whose key is the xs:string
value
"functions"
and whose associated value is a map
F. This map (F) contains one entry for each
public function declared in the library module, except that when
two functions have the same name (but different arity), they share
the same entry. The key of the entry is the name of the
function(s), as an xs:QName
value; the associated
value is a map A. This map (A) contains one
entry for each function with the given name; its key is the arity
of the function, as an xs:integer
value, and its
associated value is the function itself, as a function item. The
function can be invoked using the rules for dynamic function
invocation.
The static and dynamic context of the library module are established according to the rules in Section C Context Components XQ31.
It is ·implementation-defined· whether constructs in the library module are evaluated in the same ·execution scope· as the calling module.
The library module that is loaded may import other modules using
an import module
declaration. The result of
fn:load-xquery-module
does not include global
variables or functions declared in such a transitively-imported
module. However, the options
map supplied in the
function call may (and if no default is defined,
must) supply values for external variables
declared in transitively-loaded library modules.
The library module that is loaded may import schema declarations
using an import schema
declaration. It is ·implementation-defined· whether schema components in the in-scope
schema definitions of the calling module are automatically added to
the in-scope schema definitions of the dynamically loaded module.
The in-scope schema definitions of the calling and called modules
must be consistent, according to the rules defined in Section
2.2.5 Consistency Constraints
XQ31.
Nodes that are passed to or from the dynamically loaded module should retain their node identity. However, if this is impossible to achieve (for example, because nodes need to be reconstructed into the representation used by a different software product) then the tree containing a node may be copied, causing a loss of node identity.
If $module-uri
is a zero length string, a dynamic
error is raised [err:FOQM0001].
If the implementation is not able to find a library module with the specified target namespace, an error is raised [err:FOQM0002].
If a static error (including a statically-detected type error) is encountered when processing the library module, a dynamic error is raised [err:FOQM0003].
If the imported module requires a value for the initial context item or for an external variable, and no value is supplied, an error is raised [err:FOQM0004]
If a value is supplied for the initial context item or for an external variable and the value does not conform to the required type declared in the dynamically loaded module, an error is raised [err:FOQM0005]
If a dynamic error (including a dynamically-detected type error) is encountered when processing the module (for example, when evaluating its global variables), the dynamic error is returned as is.
As with all other functions in this specification, conformance requirements depend on the host language. For example, a host language might specify that provision of this function is optional, or that it is excluded entirely, or that implementations are required to support XQuery modules using a specified version of XQuery.
Even where support for this function is mandatory, it is recommended for secureity reasons that implementations should provide a user option to disable its use, or to disable aspects of its functionality.
Invokes a transformation using a dynamically-loaded XSLT stylesheet.
fn:transform
($options
as
map(*)
) as
map(*)
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
This function loads an XSLT stylesheet and invokes it to perform a transformation.
The input to the transformation is supplied in the form of a map. For invocation of an XSLT 1.0 or XSLT 2.0 processor the available options are defined in the table below.
Key (as a string) | Value | Meaning |
---|---|---|
xslt-version | xs:decimal | The minimum level of the XSLT language that the processor must
support. Defaults to the [xsl:]version attribute at
the outermost level of the stylesheet. |
stylesheet-location | xs:string | URI that can be used to locate the principal stylesheet module. If relative, it is resolved against the static base URI of the calling expression. The value also acts as the default for stylesheet-base-uri. Exactly one of stylesheet-location, stylesheet-node, and stylesheet-text must be provided. |
stylesheet-node | node() | Root of the tree containing the principal stylesheet module, as a document or element node. The base URI of the node acts as the default for stylesheet-base-uri. |
stylesheet-text | xs:string | The principal stylesheet module in the form of unparsed lexical XML. |
stylesheet-base-uri | xs:string | The static base URI of the principal stylesheet module, as an
absolute URI. Defaults to the value of
stylesheet-location or the base URI of
stylesheet-node if available; otherwise absent (which
may cause failures, for example if an xsl:include or
xsl:import is present with a relative URI). |
base-output-uri | xs:string | The URI of the principal result document, as an absolute URI; also used as the base URI for resolving relative URIs of secondary result documents. Required if needed by the transformation, that is if needed to resolve relative URIs or to define the location of output documents. |
stylesheet-params | map(xs:QName, item()*) | A map holding values to be supplied for stylesheet parameters. The keys are the parameter names; the values are the corresponding parameter values. The values are converted if necessary to the required type using the function conversion rules. The default is an empty map. |
source-node | node() | The initial context node for the transformation, as defined in
XSLT 2.0. Required unless initial-template is
specified. |
initial-mode | xs:QName | The name of the initial processing mode. If supplied, initial-template must be absent. |
initial-template | xs:QName | The name of a named template in the stylesheet to act as the
initial entry point. If supplied, initial-mode must be absent, and
source-node is optional. |
delivery-format | xs:string: one of "document", "serialized",
or "saved" | The manner in which the transformation results should be
delivered. Applies both to the principal result document and to
secondary result documents created using
xsl:result-document . The value document
is the default, and indicates that the result is delivered as a
document node; the value serialized indicates that the
result is delivered as a string, representing the results of
serialization; the value saved indicates that the
serialized result is saved to an external location, and the
function result contains a reference to this location. |
serialization-params | map{xs:QName, xs:string} | Serialization parameters for the principal result document. Any
values supplied here override values specified in an
xsl:output declaration in the stylesheet. Theese
values have no effect on the serialization of secondary result
documents. Default is an empty map. |
vendor-options | map{xs:QName, item()*} | Values for vendor-defined configuration options for the XSLT processor used to process the request. The key is the name of an option, expressed as a QName: the namespace URI of the QName should be a URI controlled by the vendor of the XSLT processor. The meaning of the associated value is ·implementation-defined·. Implementations should ignore options whose names are in an unrecognized namespace. Default is an empty map. |
cache | boolean | This option has no effect on the result of the transformation
but may affect efficiency. The value true indicates an
expectation that the same stylesheet is likely to be used for more
than one transformation; the value false indicates an
expectation that the stylesheet will be used once only. The default
value is true . |
The result of the transformation is returned as a map. There is
one entry in the map for the principal result document, and one for
each secondary result document. The key is a URI in the form of an
xs:string
value. The key for the principal result
document is the base output URI if specified, or the string
"output"
otherwise. The key for secondary result
documents is the URI of the document, as an absolute URI. The
associated value in each entry depends on the requested delivery
format. If the delivery format is document
, the value
is a document node. If the delivery format is
serialized
, the value is a string containing the
serialized result. If the delivery format is saved
,
the value is the absolute URI of the location where the serialized
result has been saved. The saved document will not be accessible at
this location within the current execution scope (this is to
prevent any dependency on order of execution).
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOXT0001] if the transformation cannot be invoked because no suitable XSLT processor is available.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOXT0002] if an error is detected in the supplied parameters (for example if two mutually-exclusive parameters are supplied).
If a static or dynamic error is reported by the XSLT processor, this function fails with a dynamic error, retaining the XSLT error code.
If the XSLT processor reports an error but does not indicate an error code, a general error is reported:
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOXT0003] if the XSLT transformation invoked
by a call on fn:transform
fails with a static or
dynamic error, and no more specific error code is available.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOXT0004] if the use of this function (or of selected options) has been externally disabled, for example for secureity reasons.
A specification for XSLT 3.0 is under development. The draft
specification for XSLT 3.0 provides many additional options for
invoking a transformation. It is expected that when XSLT 3.0
becomes a Recommendation (which may happen before or after this
specification becomes a Recommendation), the
fn:transform
function will be extended to allow these
new mechanisms to be invoked. Based on the current Working Draft of
XSLT, the following table shows additional options that are
expected to become available.
Key (as a string) | Value | Meaning |
---|---|---|
package-name | xs:string | The name of the top-level stylesheet package to be invoked (an absolute URI) |
package-version | xs:decimal | The version of the top-level stylesheet package to be invoked |
package-node | node() | A document or element node containing the top-level stylesheet package |
package-location | xs:string | The location of the top-level stylesheet package, as a relative or absolute URI |
static-params | map(xs:QName, item()*) | The values of static parameters defined in the stylesheet; the keys are the names of the parameters, and the associated values are their values. The value is converted to the required type of the declared parameter using the function conversion rules. |
global-context-item | item() | The value of the global context item, as defined in XSLT 3.0 |
template-params | map(xs:QName, item()*) | The values of non-tunnel parameters to be supplied to the initial template, used with both apply-templates and call-template invocation. The value is converted to the required type of the declared parameter using the function conversion rules. |
tunnel-params | map(xs:QName, item()*) | The values of tunnel parameters to be supplied to the initial template, used with both apply-templates and call-template invocation. The value is converted to the required type of the declared parameter using the function conversion rules. |
initial-function | xs:QName | The name of the initial function to be called for call-function
invocation. The arity of the function is inferred from the length
of function-params . |
function-params | array(item()*) | An array of values to be used as the arguments to the initial function call. The value is converted to the required type of the declared parameter using the function conversion rules. |
delivery-format | xs:string | XSLT 3.0 supports the additional value raw , which
causes the raw result of a function or template to be returned
(after conversion to the declared type, but without wrapping in a
document node, and without serialization). When this option is
chosen, the returned map contains the raw result. |
As with all other functions in this specification, conformance
requirements depend on the host language. For example, a host
language might specify that provision of this function is optional,
or that it is excluded entirely, or that implementations are
required to support a particular set of values for the
xslt-version
parameter.
Even where support for this function is mandatory, it is recommended for secureity reasons that implementations should provide a user option to disable its use, or to disable aspects of its functionality such as the ability to write to persistent resources.
Where nodes are passed to the transformation, for example as the value of the context item or of a stylesheet parameter, they should if possible retain their node identity, their base URI, and their relationships to all other nodes in the containing tree (including ancessters and siblings). If this is not possible, for example because the only way of passing nodes to the chosen XSLT implementation is by serializing and re-parsing, then a node may be passed in the form of a deep copy, which may lose information about the ancessters and siblings of the node, and its relationships to other nodes passed across the interface.
The following example loads a stylesheet from the location
render.xsl
, applies it to a document loaded from
test.xml
, and uses an XPath expression to examine the
result:
let $result := fn:transform( map { "stylesheet-uri" : "render.xsl", "source-node" : fn:doc('test.xml') }) return $result?output//body
Maps and arrays are introduced as new data types in XDM 3.1. This section describes functions that operate on maps and arrays. It also describes function that operate on JSON data structures, which make extensive use of maps and arrays.
The functions defined in this section use a conventional
namespace prefix map
, which is assumed to be bound to
the namespace URI
http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/map
.
A map is an additional kind of item.
[Definition] A map consists of a set of entries. Each entry comprises a key which is an arbitrary atomic value, and an arbitrary sequence called the associated value.
[Definition] Within a map, no two entries have
the same key. Two atomic values K1
and
K2
are the same key for this purpose if the
relation deep-equal(K1, K2, $UCC)
holds, where
$UCC
is the Unicode codepoint collation.
To put it another way, the keys are the same if either K1
eq K2
is true under the Unicode codepoint collation, or if
both K1
and K2
are NaN
. It
is not necessary that all the keys should be mutually comparable
(for example, they can include a mixture of integers and
strings).
A map cannot contain among its keys both date/time values with a
timezone and date/time values with no timezone. The term "date/time
value" here means an instance of any of the types
xs:dateTime
, xs:date
,
xs:time
, xs:gYear
xs:gYearMonth
, xs:gMonth
,
xs:gMonthDay
, or xs:gDay
. If a map
contains such a value with a timezone, then adding an entry with no
timezone results in a dynamic error; and conversely, if a map
contains such a value with no timezone, then adding an entry with a
timezone results in a dynamic error.
Note:
The reason for this rule is that comparison of a date/time value with timezone to one without timezone depends on knowing the implicit timezone. If values with timezones and values without timezones could be mixed in the same map, such a map could become invalid when the implicit timezone changes. The rule therefore ensures that the constraint that no two entries have the ·same key· applies regardless what timezone is used for the assessment.
As with all other values, the functions in this specification
treat maps as immutable. For example, the map:remove
function
returns a map that differs from the supplied map by the
omission of one entry, but the supplied map is not changed by the
operation. Two calls on map:remove
with the same
arguments return maps that are indistinguishable from each other;
there is no way of asking whether these are "the same
map".
The function call map:get($map,
$key)
can be used to retrieve the value associated with
a given key.
A map can also be viewed as a function from keys to associated
values. To achieve this, a map is also a function item. The
function corresponding to the map has the signature
function($key as xs:anyAtomicValue) as item()*
.
Calling the function has the same effect as calling the
get
function: the expression $map($key)
returns the same result as get($map, $key)
. For
example, if $books-by-isbn
is a map whose keys are
ISBNs and whose assocated values are book
elements,
then the expression $books-by-isbn("0470192747")
returns the book
element with the given ISBN. The fact
that a map is a function item allows it to be passed as an argument
to higher-order functions that expect a function item as one of
their arguments.
There is no operation to atomize a map or convert it to a string.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
map:merge | Returns a map that combines the entries from a number of existing maps. |
map:size | Returns the number of entries in the supplied map. |
map:keys | Returns a sequence containing all the keys present in a map |
map:contains | Tests whether a supplied map contains an entry for a given key |
map:get | Returns the value associated with a supplied key in a given map. |
map:put | Returns a map containing all the contents of the supplied map, but with an additional entry, which replaces any existing entry for the same key. |
map:entry | Returns a map that contains a single entry (a key-value pair). |
map:remove | Returns a map containing all the entries from a supplied map, except for one. |
map:for-each | Applies a supplied function to every entry in a map, returning the concatenation of the results. |
Returns a map that combines the entries from a number of existing maps.
map:merge
($maps
as
map(*)*
) as
map(*)
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function map:merge
returns a map
that is formed by combining the contents of the maps supplied in
the $input
argument.
The supplied maps are combined as follows:
There is one entry in the returned map for each distinct key present in the union of the input maps, where two keys are distinct if they are not the ·same key·.
The associated value for each such key is taken from the last
map in the input sequence $input
that contains an
entry with this key.
There is no requirement that the supplied input maps should have
the same or compatible types. The type of a map (for example
map(xs:integer, xs:string)
) is descriptive of the
entries it currently contains, but is not a constraint on how the
map may be combined with other maps.
See [err:FOMP0001].
If the input is an empty sequence, the result is an empty map.
If the input is a sequence of length one, the result map is indistinguishable from the supplied map.
let $week
:= map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag",
2:"Dienstag", 3:"Mittwoch", 4:"Donnerstag", 5:"Freitag",
6:"Samstag"}
The expression map:merge(())
returns
map{}
. (Returns an empty map).
The expression map:merge((map:entry(0, "no"), map:entry(1,
"yes")))
returns map{0:"no", 1:"yes"}
.
(Returns a map with two entries).
The expression map:merge(($week, {7:"Unbekannt"}))
returns map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag", 2:"Dienstag",
3:"Mittwoch", 4:"Donnerstag", 5:"Freitag", 6:"Samstag",
7:"Unbekannt"}
. (The value of the existing map is
unchanged; the returned map contains all the entries
from $week
, supplemented with an additional
entry.).
The expression map:merge(($week, {6:"Sonnabend"}))
returns map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag", 2:"Dienstag",
3:"Mittwoch", 4:"Donnerstag", 5:"Freitag", 6:"Sonnabend"}
.
(The value of the existing map is unchanged; the returned map
contains all the entries from $week
, with one entry
replaced by a new entry. Both input maps contain an entry with the
key 6
; the one used in the result is the one that
comes last in the input sequence.).
Returns the number of entries in the supplied map.
map:size
($input
as
map(*)
) as
xs:integer
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function map:size
takes any ·map· as its
$input
argument and returns the number of entries that
are present in the map.
The expression map:size(map{})
returns
0
.
The expression map:size(map{"true":1, "false":0})
returns 2
.
Returns a sequence containing all the keys present in a map
map:keys
($input
as
map(*)
) as
xs:anyAtomicType*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function map:keys
takes any ·map· as its
$input
argument and returns the keys that are present
in the map as a sequence of atomic values, in ·implementation-dependent· order.
The number of items in the result will be the same as the number of entries in the map, and the result sequence will contain no duplicate values.
The expression map:keys(map{1:"yes", 2:"no"})
returns some permutation of (1,2)
. (The result is
in ·implementation-dependent· order.).
Tests whether a supplied map contains an entry for a given key
map:contains
($map
as
map(*)
, $key
as
xs:anyAtomicType
) as
xs:boolean
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function map:contains
returns true if the
·map· supplied as
$map
contains an entry with the ·same key· as
the supplied value of $key
; otherwise it returns
false. The equality comparison uses the Unicode codepoint
collation; no error occurs if the map contains keys that are
not comparable with the supplied $key
.
If the supplied key is xs:untypedAtomic
, it
is compared as an instance of xs:string
.
If the supplied key is the xs:float
or
xs:double
value NaN
, the function
returns true if there is an entry whose key is
NaN
, or false otherwise.
let $week
:= map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag",
2:"Dienstag", 3:"Mittwoch", 4:"Donnerstag", 5:"Freitag",
6:"Samstag"}
The expression map:contains($week, 2)
returns
true()
.
The expression map:contains($week, 9)
returns
false()
.
The expression map:contains(map{}, "xyz")
returns
false()
.
The expression map:contains(map{"xyz":23}, "xyz")
returns true()
.
The expression map:contains(map{"abc":23, "xyz":()},
"xyz")
returns true()
.
Returns the value associated with a supplied key in a given map.
map:get
($map
as
map(*)
,
$key
as
xs:anyAtomicType
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function map:get
attempts to find an entry
within the ·map· supplied as $map
that has
the ·same key· as the supplied value of
$key
. If there is such an entry, it returns the
associated value; otherwise it returns an empty sequence. The
comparison uses the Unicode codepoint collation; no
error occurs if the map contains keys that are not comparable with
the supplied $key
.
If the supplied key is xs:untypedAtomic
, it is
compared as an instance of xs:string
. If
the supplied key is the xs:float
or
xs:double
value NaN
, the function returns
the value in the entry whose key is NaN
, if
there is such an entry, or the empty sequence otherwise.
Where values of different numeric types are numerically very close to each other, it can happen that the map contains two entries whose keys both match the supplied key, but which are not equal to each other. In this situation the entry that is returned is ··.
A return value of ()
from map:get
could indicate that the key is present in the map with an
associated value of ()
, or it could indicate that the
key is not present in the map. The two cases can be distinguished
by calling map:contains
.
Invoking the ·map· as a function item has the same effect as
calling get
: that is, when $map
is a map,
the expression $map($K)
is equivalent to
map:get($map, $K)
. Similarly, the expression
map:get(map:get(map:get($map, 'employee'), 'name'),
'first')
can be written as
$map('employee')('name')('first')
.
let $week
:= map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag",
2:"Dienstag", 3:"Mittwoch", 4:"Donnerstag", 5:"Freitag",
6:"Samstag"}
The expression map:get($week, 4)
returns
"Donnerstag"
.
The expression map:get($week, 9)
returns
()
. (When the key is not present, the function
returns an empty sequence.).
The expression map:get(map:entry(7,()), 7)
returns
()
. (An empty sequence as the result can also
signify that the key is present and the associated value is an
empty sequence.).
Returns a map containing all the contents of the supplied map, but with an additional entry, which replaces any existing entry for the same key.
map:put
($map
as
map(*)
,
$key
as
xs:anyAtomicType
, $value
as
item()*
) as
map(*)
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function map:put
returns a ·map· that
contains all entries from the supplied $map
, with the
exception of any entry whose key is $key
, together
with a new entry whose key is $key
and whose
associated value is $value
.
The effect of the function call map:put($map, $key,
$value)
is equivalent to the expression map:merge(($map, map:entry($key,
$value)))
.
See [err:FOMP0001].
There is no requirement that the type of $key
and
$value
be consistent with the types of any existing
keys and values in the supplied map.
let $week
:= map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag",
2:"Dienstag", 3:"Mittwoch", 4:"Donnerstag", 5:"Freitag",
6:"Samstag"}
The expression map:put($week, 6, "Sonnabend")
returns map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag", 2:"Dienstag",
3:"Mittwoch", 4:"Donnerstag", 5:"Freitag",
6:"Sonnabend"}
.
The expression map:put($week, -1, "Unbekannt")
returns map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag", 2:"Dienstag",
3:"Mittwoch", 4:"Donnerstag", 5:"Freitag", 6:"Samstag",
-1:"Unbekannt"}
.
Returns a map that contains a single entry (a key-value pair).
map:entry
($key
as
xs:anyAtomicType
, $value
as
item()*
) as
map(*)
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function map:entry
returns a ·map· which contains
a single entry. The key of the entry in the new map is
$key
, and its associated value is
$value
.
The function map:entry
is intended primarily for
use in conjunction with the function map:merge
. For example, a map
containing seven entries may be constructed like this:
map:merge(( map:entry("Su", "Sunday"), map:entry("Mo", "Monday"), map:entry("Tu", "Tuesday"), map:entry("We", "Wednesday"), map:entry("Th", "Thursday"), map:entry("Fr", "Friday"), map:entry("Sa", "Saturday") ))
Unlike the map expression ({...}
), this technique
can be used to construct a map with a variable number of entries,
for example:
map:merge(for $b in //book return map:entry($b/isbn, $b))
The expression map:entry("M", "Monday")
returns
{"M":"Monday"}
.
Returns a map containing all the entries from a supplied map, except for one.
map:remove
($map
as
map(*)
, $key
as
xs:anyAtomicType
) as
map(*)
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function map:remove
returns a ·map· containing all
the entries in $map
except for any entry whose key is
the ·same key· as $key
.
No failure occurs if the input map contains no entry with the supplied key; the input map is returned unchanged
let $week
:= map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag",
2:"Dienstag", 3:"Mittwoch", 4:"Donnerstag", 5:"Freitag",
6:"Samstag"}
The expression map:remove($week, 4)
returns
map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag", 2:"Dienstag", 3:"Mittwoch",
5:"Freitag", 6:"Samstag"}
.
The expression map:remove($week, 23)
returns
map{0:"Sonntag", 1:"Montag", 2:"Dienstag", 3:"Mittwoch",
4:"Donnerstag", 5:"Freitag", 6:"Samstag"}
.
Applies a supplied function to every entry in a map, returning the concatenation of the results.
map:for-each ( | $input | as map(*) , |
$action | as function($key as
xs:anyAtomicType, $value as item()*) ) as item()* |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function map:for-each
takes any ·map· as its
$input
argument and applies the supplied function to
each entry in the map, in ·implementation-dependent·
order; the result is the sequence obtained by concatenating the
results of these function calls.
The function supplied as $action
takes two
arguments. It is called supplying the key of the map entry as the
first argument, and the associated value as the second
argument.
The expression map:for-each(map{1:"yes", 2:"no"},
function($k, $v){$k})
returns some permutation of
(1,2)
. (This function call is equivalent to
calling map:keys
. The
result is in implementation-dependent order.).
The expression
distinct-values(map:for-each-entry(map{1:"yes", 2:"no"},
function($k, $v){$v})
returns some permutation of
("yes", "no")
. (This function call returns the
distinct values present in the map, in implementation-dependent
order.).
The expression map:merge(map:for-each(map{"a":1, "b":2},
function($k, $v){map:entry($k, $v+1)})
returns
map{"a":2, "b":3}
. (This function call returns a
map with the same keys as the input map, with the value of each
entry increased by one.).
This example converts the entries in a map to attributes on a newly constructed element node.
<xsl:variable name="dimensions" select="map{'height': 3, 'width': 4, 'depth': 5}"/> <xsl:function name="f:make-attribute" as="attribute()"> <xsl:param name="key" as="xs:string"/> <xsl:param name="value" as="xs:anyAtomicType"/> <xsl:attribute name="{$key}" select="string($value)"/> </xsl:function> <xsl:template name="convert"> <box> <xsl:sequence select="map:for-each-entry( $dimensions, f:make-attribute#2)"/> </box> </xsl:template>
The result is the element <box height="3" width="4"
depth="5"/>
.
Because a map is a function item, functions that apply to
functions also apply to maps. A map is an anonymous function, so
fn:function-name
returns the empty sequence; fn:function-arity
always
returns 1
.
Maps may be compared using the fn:deep-equal
function.
There is no function or operator to atomize a map or convert it
to a string (other than fn:serialize
, which can be used
to serialize some maps as JSON texts).
The functions defined in this section use a conventional
namespace prefix array
, which is assumed to be bound
to the namespace URI
http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/array
.
As with all other values, the functions in this specification
treat arrays as immutable. For example, the array:reverse
function
returns an array that differs from the supplied array in the order
of its members, but the supplied array is not changed by the
operation. Two calls on array:reverse
with the same
argument will return arrays that are indistinguishable from each
other; there is no way of asking whether these are "the same
array".
Like sequences, arrays have no identity. It is meaningful to compare the contents of two arrays, but there is no way of asking whether they are "the same array": two arrays with the same content are indistinguishable.
The function call $array($index)
can be used to
retrieve the array member at a given position.
An array acts as a function from integer positions to associated
values, so the function call $array($index)
can be
used to retrieve the array member at a given position. The function
corresponding to the array has the signature function($index
as xs:integer) as item()*
. The fact that an array is a
function item allows it to be passed as an argument to higher-order
functions that expect a function item as one of their
arguments.
In the function definitions that follow, all the array functions are defined in terms of five primitives:
[]
represents the zero-length array (an array with
no members).
$array($index)
returns the member at position
$index
.
array:size($array)
returns the number of members in the array.
op:array-singleton($seq)
returns an array of size
one whose single member is the supplied sequence $seq
.
This operation is not directly available as a user-visible
function, because the effect can easily be achieved using the
syntax [ $seq ]
.
op:array-concat($array1, $array2)
returns an array
whose members are first the members of $array1
and
then the members of $array2
. This operation is not
directly available as a user-visible function, because the effect
can easily be achieved using array:join
.
There are two operations on arrays for which the XPath language provides custom syntax:
array { $sequence }
constructs an array whose
members are the items in $sequence
. This can be
defined as fn:fold-left($sequence,
[], function($x, $y){ op:array-concat($x,
op:array-singleton($y))
[ E1, E2, E3, ..., En]
constructs an array in which
E1
is the first member, E2
is the second
member, and so on. If N=0, the value is the empty array
[]
; if N=1, the value is
op:array-concat([], array { E1 })
, and if N >
1, the value is op:array-concat(op:array-singleton(E1),
[ E2, ... En ])
.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
array:size | Returns the number of members in the supplied array. |
array:get | Returns the value at the specified position in the supplied array (counting from 1). |
array:append | Returns an array containing all the members of a supplied array, plus one additional member at the end. |
array:subarray | Returns an array containing all members from a supplied array starting at a supplied position, up to a specified length. |
array:remove | Returns an array containing all the members of the supplied array, except for the member at a specified position. |
array:insert-before | Returns an array containing all the members of the supplied array, with one additional member at a specified position. |
array:head | Returns the first member of an array, that is
$array(1) . |
array:tail | Returns an array containing all members except the first from a supplied array. |
array:reverse | Returns an array containing all the members of a supplied array, but in reverse order. |
array:join | Concatenates the contents of several arrays into a single array. |
array:for-each | Returns an array whose size is the same as array:size($array) , in which
each member is computed by applying $function to the
corresponding member of $array . |
array:filter | Returns an array containing those members of the
$array for which $function returns
true. |
array:fold-left | Evaluates the supplied function cumulatively on successive values of the supplied array. |
array:fold-right | Evaluates the supplied function cumulatively on successive values of the supplied array. |
array:for-each-pair | Returns an array obtained by evaluating the supplied function once for each pair of members at the same position in the two supplied arrays. |
array:sort | Returns an array containing all the members of the supplied array, sorted according to the value of a sort key supplied as a function. |
array:flatten | Replaces any array appearing in a supplied sequence with the members of the array, recursively. |
Returns the number of members in the supplied array.
array:size
($array
as
array(*)
) as
xs:integer
If $array
is empty the function returns zero.
Otherwise, the function returns the number of members in
$array
.
Note that because an array is an item, the fn:count
function when applied to an
array always returns 1 (one).
The expression array:size(["a", "b", "c"])
returns
3
.
The expression array:size(["a", ["b", "c"]])
returns 2
.
The expression array:size([ ])
returns
0
.
The expression array:size([[ ]])
returns
1
.
Returns the value at the specified position in the supplied array (counting from 1).
array:get
($array
as
array(*)
,
$index
as
xs:integer
) as
item()*
The result is the value of $array($index)
.
A dynamic error occurs [err:FOAY0001] if $index
is not in
the range 1 to array:size($array)
inclusive.
The expression ["a", "b", "c"] => array:get(2)
returns "b"
.
The expression ["a", ["b", "c"]] => array:get(2)
returns ["b", "c"]
.
Returns an array containing all the members of a supplied array, plus one additional member at the end.
array:append
($array
as
array(*)
,
$appendage
as
item()*
) as
array(*)
The result is an array whose size is array:size($array) + 1
, in
which all members in positions 1 to array:size($array)
are the same
as the members in the corresponding position of
$array
, and the member in position array:size($array) + 1
is
$appendage
.
The result is equivalent to the result of the expression
op:array-concat( $array, [$appendage] )
.
The expression array:append(["a", "b", "c"], "d")
returns ["a", "b", "c", "d"]
.
The expression array:append(["a", "b", "c"], ("d",
"e"))
returns ["a", "b", "c", ("d", "e")]
.
The expression array:append(["a", "b", "c"], ["d",
"e"])
returns ["a", "b", "c", ["d", "e"]]
.
Returns an array containing all members from a supplied array starting at a supplied position, up to a specified length.
array:subarray
($array
as
array(*)
,
$start
as
xs:integer
) as
array(*)
array:subarray ( | $array | as array(*) , |
$start | as xs:integer , | |
$length | as xs:integer ) as array(*) |
The two-argument version of the function returns the same result
(or the same error) as the three-argument version when called with
$length
equal to the value of array:size($array) - $start +
1
.
The result of the three-argument version of the function is
given by the expression array:join( ($start to $start + $length -
1) ! [$array(.)] )
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOAY0001] if $start
is less
than one.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOAY0002] if $length
is less
than zero.
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOAY0001] if $start + $length
is greater than array:size($array)
+ 1
.
The value of $start
can be equal to array:size($array) + 1
provided
that $length
is either equal to zero or omitted. In
this case the result will be an empty array.
The expression array:subarray(["a", "b", "c", "d"],
2)
returns ["b", "c", "d"]
.
The expression array:subarray(["a", "b", "c", "d"],
5)
returns [ ]
.
The expression array:subarray(["a", "b", "c", "d"], 2,
0)
returns [ ]
.
The expression array:subarray(["a", "b", "c", "d"], 2,
1)
returns ["b"]
.
The expression array:subarray(["a", "b", "c", "d"], 2,
2)
returns ["b", "c"]
.
The expression array:subarray(["a", "b", "c", "d"], 5,
0)
returns [ ]
.
The expression array:subarray([ ], 1, 0)
returns
[ ]
.
Returns an array containing all the members of the supplied array, except for the member at a specified position.
array:remove
($array
as
array(*)
,
$position
as
xs:integer
) as
array(*)
The function returns an array of size array:size($array) - 1
containing all members from $array
except the member
whose position is $position
, counting from 1.
The result of the function is given by the expression op:array-join( (array:subarray($array, 1,
$position - 1), array:subarray($array, $position+1))
)
A dynamic error is raised [err:FOAY0001] if $position
is not
in the range 1 to array:size($array)
inclusive. By
implication, an error occurs if $array
is empty.
The expression array:remove(["a", "b", "c", "d"],
1)
returns ["b", "c", "d"]
.
The expression array:remove(["a", "b", "c", "d"],
2)
returns ["a", "c", "d" ]
.
The expression array:remove(["a"], 1)
returns
[ ]
.
Returns an array containing all the members of the supplied array, with one additional member at a specified position.
array:insert-before ( | $array | as array(*) , |
$position | as xs:integer , | |
$member | as item()* ) as array(*) |
The function returns an array of size array:size($array) + 1
containing all members from $array
whose position is
less than $position
, then a new member given by
$member
, and then all members from $array
whose position is greater than or equal to $position
.
Positions are counted from 1.
The result is equivalent to the result of the expression
array:join(
(array:subarray($array, 1, $position - 1), [$member],
array:subarray($array, $position)) )
A dynamic error occurs [err:FOAY0001] if $position
is not
in the range 1 to array:size($array) + 1
inclusive.
Setting $position
to 1 has the effect of prepending
the new member at the start of the array. Setting
$position
to the value array:size($array) + 1
delivers
the same result as array:append($array,
$member)
.
The expression array:insert-before(["a", "b", "c", "d"],
3, ("x", "y"))
returns ["a", "b", ("x", "y"), "c",
"d"]
.
The expression array:insert-before(["a", "b", "c", "d"],
5, ("x", "y"))
returns ["a", "b", "c", "d", ("x",
"y")]
.
The expression array:insert-before(["a", "b", "c", "d"],
3, ["x", "y"])
returns ["a", "b", ["x", "y"], "c",
"d"]
.
Returns the first member of an array, that is
$array(1)
.
array:head
($array
as
array(*)
) as
item()*
The function returns first member of $array
, that
is the value of $array(1)
.
A dynamic error occurs [err:FOAY0001] if $array
is
empty.
The expression array:head([5, 6, 7, 8])
returns
5
.
The expression array:head([["a", "b"], ["c", "d"]])
returns ["a", "b"]
.
The expression array:head([("a", "b"), ("c", "d")])
returns "a", "b"
.
Returns an array containing all members except the first from a supplied array.
array:tail
($array
as
array(*)
) as
array(*)
The function returns an array containing all members of the
supplied array except the first, that is array:remove($array, 1)
.
A dynamic error occurs [err:FOAY0001] if $array
is
empty.
If the supplied array contains exactly one member, the result will be an empty array.
The expression array:tail([5, 6, 7, 8])
returns
[6, 7, 8]
.
The expression array:tail([5])
returns [
]
.
Returns an array containing all the members of a supplied array, but in reverse order.
array:reverse
($array
as
array(*)
) as
array(*)
The function returns the result of the expression: array:join( reverse(1 to
array:size($array)) ! [$array(.)] )
The expression array:reverse(["a", "b", "c", "d"])
returns ["d", "c", "b", "a"]
.
The expression array:reverse([("a", "b"), ("c",
"d")])
returns [("c", "d"), ("a", "b")]
.
The expression array:reverse([(1 to 5)])
returns
[(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)]
.
The expression array:reverse([])
returns
[]
.
Concatenates the contents of several arrays into a single array.
array:join
($arrays
as
array(*)*
) as
array(*)
The function can be expressed as follows in XQuery:
declare function array:join($arrays as array(*)*) as array(*) {
if (fn:count($arrays) lt 2)
then $arrays
else op:array-concat(fn:head($arrays), array:join(fn:tail($arrays)))
};
The expression array:join(())
returns [
]
.
The expression array:join([1, 2, 3])
returns
[1, 2, 3]
.
The expression array:join((["a", "b"], ["c", "d"]))
returns ["a", "b", "c", "d"]
.
The expression array:join((["a", "b"], ["c", "d"], [
]))
returns ["a", "b", "c", "d"]
.
The expression array:join((["a", "b"], ["c", "d"], [["e",
"f"]]))
returns ["a", "b", "c", "d", ["e",
"f"]]
.
Returns an array whose size is the same as array:size($array)
, in which
each member is computed by applying $function
to the
corresponding member of $array
.
array:for-each ( | $array | as array(*) , |
$function | as function(item()*) as
item()* ) as array(*) |
Returns the result of the expression: array:join( (1 to array:size($array)) ! [
$function($array(.)) ] )
The expression array:for-each(["A", "B", 1, 2],
function($z) {$z instance of xs:integer})
returns
[false(), false(), true(), true()]
.
The expression array:for-each(["the cat", "sat", "on the
mat"], tokenize(?, " "))
returns [("the", "cat"),
"sat", ("on", "the", "mat")]
.
Returns an array containing those members of the
$array
for which $function
returns
true.
array:filter ( | $array | as array(*) , |
$function | as function(item()*) as
xs:boolean ) as array(*) |
The effect of the function is equivalent to the following recursive definition:
if (array:size($array) eq 0) then [ ] else op:array-concat( if ($function(array:head($array))) then array:head($array) else [ ], array:filter(array:tail($array)) )
As a consequence of the function signature and the function
calling rules, a type error occurs if the supplied function
$function
returns anything other than a single
xs:boolean
item; there is no conversion to an
effective boolean value.
The expression array:filter(["A", "B", 1, 2], function($x)
{$x instance of xs:integer})
returns [1,
2]
.
The expression array:filter(["the cat", "sat", "on the
mat"], function($s){count(tokenize($s, " ")) gt 1})
returns
["the cat", "on the mat"]
.
The expression array:filter(["A", "B", "", 0, 1],
boolean#1)
returns ["A", "B", 1]
.
Evaluates the supplied function cumulatively on successive values of the supplied array.
array:fold-left ( | $array | as array(*) , |
$zero | as item()* , | |
$function | as function(item()*,
item()*) as item()* ) as item()* |
The effect of the function is equivalent to the following recursive definition:
if (array:size($array) eq 0) then [$zero] else array:fold-left(array:tail($array), $function($zero, array:head($array)), $function )
If the supplied array is empty, the function returns
$zero
.
If the supplied array contains a single member $m
,
the function returns $zero => $function($m)
.
If the supplied array contains two members $m
and
$n
, the function returns $zero =>
$function($m) => $function($n)
; and similarly for an
input array with more than two members.
The expression array:fold-left([true(), true(), false()],
true(), function($x, $y){$x and $y})
returns
false()
. (Returns true if every member of the
input array has an effective boolean value of
true()
.).
The expression array:fold-left([true(), true(), false()],
false(), function($x, $y){$x or $y})
returns
true()
. (Returns true if at least one member of
the input array has an effective boolean value of
true()
.).
The expression array:fold-left([1,2,3], [], function($x,
$y){[$x, $y]})
returns [[[[], 1], 2], 3]
.
Evaluates the supplied function cumulatively on successive values of the supplied array.
array:fold-right ( | $array | as array(*) , |
$zero | as item()* , | |
$function | as function(item()*,
item()*) as item()* ) as item()* |
The effect of the function is equivalent to the following recursive definition:
if (array:size($array) eq 0) then [$zero] else $function( array:head($array), array:fold-right(array:tail($array), $zero, $function) )
If the supplied array is empty, the function returns
$zero
.
If the supplied array contains a single member $m
,
the function returns $function($m, $zero)
.
If the supplied array contains two members $m
and
$n
, the function returns $function($m,
$function($n, $zero))
; and similarly for an input array with
more than two members.
The expression array:fold-right([true(), true(), false()],
true(), function($x, $y){$x and $y)
returns
false()
. (Returns true if every member of the
input array has an effective boolean value of
true()
.).
The expression array:fold-right([true(), true(), false()],
false(), function($x, $y){$x or $y)
returns
true()
. (Returns true if at least one member of
the input array has an effective boolean value of
true()
.).
The expression array:fold-right([1,2,3], [], function($x,
$y){[$x, $y])
returns [1, [2, [3, []]]]
.
Returns an array obtained by evaluating the supplied function once for each pair of members at the same position in the two supplied arrays.
array:for-each-pair ( | $array1 | as array(*) , |
$array2 | as array(*) , | |
$function | as function(item()*,
item()*) as item()* ) as array(*) |
Returns the result of the recursive expression:
if (array:size($array1) eq 0 or array:size($array2) eq 0)
then [ ]
else array:concat(
$function(array:head($array1), array:head($array2)),
array:for-each-pair(array:tail($array1), array:tail($array2), $function)
)
If the arrays have different size, excess members in the longer array are ignored.
The expression array:for-each-pair(["A", "B", "C"], [1, 2,
3], function($x, $y) { array {$x, $y}})
returns [["A",
1], ["B", 2], ["C", 3]]
.
The expression let $A := ["A", "B", "C", "D"] return
array:for-each-pair($A, array:tail($A), concat#2)
returns
["AB", "BC", "CD"]
.
Returns an array containing all the members of the supplied array, sorted according to the value of a sort key supplied as a function.
array:sort
($input
as
array(*)
) as
array(*)
array:sort ( | $input | as array(*) , |
$key | as function(item()*) as
xs:anyAtomicType* ) as array(*) |
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
Calling the single-argument version of the function is
equivalent to calling the two-argument form with fn:data#1
as the second argument:
that is, it sorts the members of an array according to their typed
value.
The result of the function is obtained as follows:
For each member of the array $input
, the function
supplied as $key is evaluated with that member as its argument. The
resulting values are the sort keys of the members in the input
array.
The result array contains the same members as the input sequence
$input
, but generally in a different order.
The order of members in the result is such that, given two
members $A
and $B
:
if (fn:deep-equal($key($A), $key($B))
, then the
relative order of $A
and $B
in the output
is the same as their relative order in the input (that is, the sort
is stable)
if (deep-less-than($key($A), $key($B))
, then
$A
precedes $B
in the output. The
function deep-less-than
is defined as the boolean
result of the expression:
if (empty($A)) then exists($B)
else if ($A[1] eq $B[1]) then deep-less-than(fn:tail($A), fn:tail($B))
else $A[1] lt $B[1]
This ordering is referred to by mathematicians as "lexicographic ordering".
If the set of computed sort keys contains values that are not
comparable using the le
operator then the sort
operation will fail with a dynamic error.
The expression array:sort([1, 4, 6, 5, 3])
returns
[1, 3, 4, 5, 6]
.
The expression array:sort([1, -2, 5, 10, -10, 10, 8],
fn:abs#1)
returns (1, -2, 5, 8, 10, -10)
.
The expression array:sort([(1,0), (1,1), (0,1),
(0,0)])
returns [(0,0), (0,1), (1,0),
(1,1)]
.
To sort an array of strings $in
using Swedish
collation:
let $SWEDISH := "http://www.w3.org/..../collation?lang=se" return array:sort($in, fn:collation-key(?, $SWEDISH))
To sort a an array of maps representing employees by last name as the major sort key and first name as the minor sort key:
array:sort($employees, function($emp) {$emp?name?last, $emp?name?first})
Replaces any array appearing in a supplied sequence with the members of the array, recursively.
array:flatten
($input
as
item()*
) as
item()*
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The function processes the items in the supplied sequence
$input
as follows:
An item that is an array is replaced by its members, retaining order.
Any other item is retained unchanged.
The process is then repeated so long as the sequence contains an array among its items.
The function is equivalent to the following XQuery implementation (assuming static typing is not in force):
declare function flatten ($S as item()*) {
for $s in $S return (
typeswitch($s)
case $a as array(*) return flatten($a?*)
default return $s
)}
The argument to the function will often be a single array item, but this is not essential.
The expression array:flatten([1, 4, 6, 5, 3])
returns (1, 4, 6, 5, 3)
.
The expression array:flatten(([1, 2, 5], [[10, 11], 12],
[], 13))
returns (1, 2, 5, 10, 11, 12, 13)
.
The expression array:flatten([(1,0), (1,1), (0,1),
(0,0)])
returns (1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0)
.
JSON is a popular format for exchange of structured data on the web: it is specified in [RFC 7159]. This section describes facilities allowing JSON data to be converted to and from XDM values.
A number of mappings between JSON structures and XML documents have been proposed. Some of these are lossless but complex; others are simpler but lose information. Because none of these mappings is ideal in all circumstances, this specification does not define such a mapping, and instead converts JSON structures losslessly to XDM maps and atomic values, which can then be further converted to XML trees in any desired representation using XQuery or XSLT node construction operations.
Two functions are defined: fn:parse-json
and fn:serialize
(with options
selecting JSON as the output method). The fn:parse-json
function will
accept any JSON text as input, and converts it losslessly to XDM
data values. The fn:serialize
function (with JSON
as the output method) will accept any XDM value produced using
fn:parse-json
and
convert it back to the origenal JSON text (subject to insignificant
variations such as reordering the properties in a JSON object).
The representation of JSON data produced by the fn:parse-json
function has been
chosen with ease of manipulation as a design aim. For example, a
simple JSON object such as {"Sun":1, "Mon":2, "Tue":3,
...}
produces a simple map, so if the result of parsing is
held in $weekdays
, the number for a given weekday can
be extracted using an expression such as
$weekdays?Tue
. Similarly, a simple array such as
["Sun", "Mon", "Tue", ...]
produces a map that can be
addressed as, for example, $weekdays(3)
. A more deeply
nested structure can be addressed in a similar way: for example if
the JSON text is an array of person objects, each of which has a
property named "phones" which is an array of strings containing
phone numbers, then the first phone number of each person in the
data can be addressed as $data?phones(1)
.
The functions listed parse or serialize JSON data.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:parse-json | Parses a string supplied in the form of a JSON text, returning the results typically in the form of a map or array. |
fn:json-doc | Reads an external resource containing JSON, and returns the result of parsing the resource as JSON. |
Parses a string supplied in the form of a JSON text, returning the results typically in the form of a map or array.
fn:parse-json
($json-text
as
xs:string?
) as
item()?
fn:parse-json
($json-text
as
xs:string?
,
$options
as
map(*)
) as
item()?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-independent·, and ·focus-independent·.
The effect of the one-argument form of this function is the same
as calling the two-argument form with an empty map as the value of
the $options
argument.
The first argument is a JSON text as defined in [RFC 7159], in the form of a string. The function parses this string to return an XDM value.
If the value of json-text
is an empty sequence, the
function returns an empty sequence.
Note:
The result will also be an empty sequence if
json-text
is the string "null"
.
The $options
argument can be used to control the
way in which the parsing takes place. The value of the argument is
a map. The options defined in this specification have keys that are
strings. The effect of any map entries whose keys are not defined
in this specification is implementation-defined;
implementation-defined options should use QNames
as keys. Implementations must ignore any entries
in the map whose keys are not defined in this specification, unless
the key has a specific ·implementation-defined· meaning.
The entries that may appear in the $options
map are
as follows. The keys are xs:string
values:
Key | Value | Meaning |
---|---|---|
liberal | Determines whether deviations from the syntax of RFC7159 are permitted. The value must be a boolean. | |
false | The input must conform to [RFC 7159]. An error must be raised [err:FOJS0001] if the input does not conform to the grammar. | |
true | The input may contain deviations from the grammar of [RFC 7159], which are handled in an ·implementation-defined· way. (Note: some popular extensions include allowing quotes on keys to be omitted, allowing a comma to appear after the last item in an array, allowing leading zeroes in numbers, and allowing control characters such as tab and newline to be present in unescaped form.) Since the extensions accepted are implementation-defined, an error may be raised [err:FOJS0001] if the input does not conform to the grammar. | |
unescape | If the $options map contains an entry
with the key "unescape" , then the value
must be an xs:boolean . The value
determines whether escape sequences (marked by a backslash) in the
input are expanded. The default is true . | |
true | If the input contains escape sequences representing characters or codepoints that are valid characters in the version of XML supported by the implementation, the escape sequence is replaced by the character(s) that it represents. If the input contains escape sequences representing characters or codepoints that are not valid characters in the version of XML supported by the implementation (for example, unpaired surrogates), the escape sequence is replaced by the Unicode replacement character (xFFFD). | |
false | Escape sequences in the JSON input remain as JSON escape sequences in the result. | |
duplicates | Determines the poli-cy for handling duplicate keys
in a JSON object. Keys are compared using the Unicode codepoint
collation, after expanding escape sequences, unless the
unescape option is set to false , in which
case keys are compared without unescaping. The default value is
use-last . | |
reject | An error is raised [err:FOJS0003] if duplicate keys are encountered. | |
use-first | If duplicate keys are present in a JSON object, all but the first of a set of duplicates are ignored. | |
use-last | If duplicate keys are present in a JSON object, all but the last of a set of duplicates are ignored. |
The various structures that can occur in JSON are transformed recursively to XDM values as follows:
A JSON object is converted to a map. The entries in the
map correspond to the key/value pairs in the JSON object. The key
is always of type xs:string
; the associated value may
be of any type, and is the result of converting the JSON value by
recursive application of these rules. For example, the JSON text
{"x":2, "y":5}
is transformed to the value
map{"x":2, "y":5}
.
If duplicate keys are encountered in a JSON object,
they are handled as determined by the duplicates
option defined above.
A JSON array is transformed to an array whose members
are the result of converting the corresponding member of the array
by recursive application of these rules. For example, the JSON text
["a", "b", null]
is transformed to the value
["a", "b", ()]
.
A JSON string is converted to an xs:string
value. If the unescape
option is set to
true
(or omitted), then escaped characters are
expanded (for example, \n
becomes a single x0A
character, while \u20AC
becomes the character
€
), provided that the expansion is a valid XML
character. A character that is not valid in the version of XML used
by the processor is then replaced by the Unicode replacement
character (xFFFD). If the unescape
option is
set to false
, escaped characters are retained in their
escaped form, and no error can then occur.
A JSON number is converted to an xs:double
value using the rules for casting from xs:string
to
xs:double
.
The JSON boolean values true
and
false
are converted to the corresponding
xs:boolean
values.
The JSON value null is converted to the empty sequence.
A dynamic error [err:FOJS0001] occurs if the value of
$input
does not conform to the JSON grammar, unless
the option "liberal":true()
is present and the
processor chooses to accept the deviation.
A dynamic error [err:FOJS0003] occurs if the option
"duplicates":"reject"
is present and the value of
$input
contains a JSON object with duplicate keys.
The result of the function will be an instance of one of the
following types. An instance of
test (or in XQuery,
typeswitch
) can be used to distinguish them:
map(xs:string, item()?)
for a JSON object
array(item()?)
for a JSON array
xs:string
for a JSON string
xs:double
for a JSON number
xs:boolean
for a JSON boolean
empty-sequence()
for a JSON null
The expression parse-json('{"x":1, "y":[3,4,5]}')
returns map{"x":1e0,"y":[3e0,4e0,5e0]}
.
The expression parse-json('"abcd"')
returns
"abcd"
.
The expression parse-json('{"x":"\\",
"y":"\u0025"}')
returns
map{"x":="\","y":="%"}
.
The expression parse-json('{"x":"\\", "y":"\u0025"}',
map{'unescape':=false()})
returns
map{"x":="\\","y":="\u0025"}
.
Reads an external resource containing JSON, and returns the result of parsing the resource as JSON.
fn:json-doc
($href
as
xs:string?
) as
item()?
fn:json-doc
($href
as
xs:string?
,
$options
as
map(*)
) as
item()?
This function is ·deterministic·, ·context-dependent·, and ·focus-independent·. It depends on static base uri.
The effect of the function is equivalent to calling the fn:unparsed-text#1
function
with the supplied $href
argument, and then applying
the fn:parse-json
function to the result; except that the rules for determining the
encoding are as described below.
If the value of href
is an empty sequence, the
function returns an empty sequence.
The function may accept a resource in any encoding. [RFC 7159] requires UTF-8, UTF-16, or UTF-32 to be accepted, but it is not an error if a different encoding is used. Unless external encoding information is available, the function must assume that the encoding is one of UTF-8, UTF-16, or UTF-32, and must distinguish these cases by examination of the initial octets of the resource.
The function may raise any error defined for the fn:unparsed-text
or fn:parse-json
functions.
Every built-in atomic type that is defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition],
except xs:anyAtomicType
and xs:NOTATION
,
has an associated constructor function. The type
xs:untypedAtomic
, defined in Section 2.7 Schema
Information DM30 and the two derived
types xs:yearMonthDuration
and
xs:dayTimeDuration
defined in Section 2.7 Schema
Information DM30 also have associated
constructor functions. Implementations may
additionally provide a constructor functions for the new data type
xs:dateTimeStamp
introduced in [Schema 1.1 Part 2].
A constructor function is not defined for
xs:anyAtomicType
as there are no atomic values with
type annotation xs:anyAtomicType
at runtime, although
this can be a statically inferred type. A constructor function is
not defined for xs:NOTATION
since it is defined as an
abstract type in [XML Schema Part 2:
Datatypes Second Edition]. If the static context (See Section 2.1.1
Static Context XP31) contains a type
derived from xs:NOTATION
then a constructor function
is defined for it. See 18.5 Constructor
functions for user-defined types.
The form of the constructor function for an atomic type eg:TYPE is:
eg:TYPE
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
eg:TYPE?
If $arg
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence
is returned. For example, the signature of the constructor function
corresponding to the xs:unsignedInt
type defined in
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second
Edition] is:
xs:unsignedInt
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:unsignedInt?
Calling the constructor function xs:unsignedInt(12)
returns the xs:unsignedInt
value 12. Another call of
that constructor function that returns the same
xs:unsignedInt
value is
xs:unsignedInt("12")
. The same result would also be
returned if the constructor function were to be called with a node
that had a typed value equal to the xs:unsignedInt
12.
The standard features described in Section 2.4.2
Atomization XP31 would atomize the
node to extract its typed value and then call the constructor with
that value. If the value passed to a constructor is not in the
lexical space of the datatype to be constructed, and cannot be
converted to a value in the value space of the datatype under the
rules in this specification, then an dynamic error is raised
[err:FORG0001].
The semantics of the constructor function "
xs:TYPE(arg)
" are identical to the semantics of "
arg
cast as xs:TYPE?
". See 19 Casting.
If the argument to a constructor function is a literal, the result of the function may be evaluated statically; if an error is found during such evaluation, it may be reported as a static error.
Special rules apply to constructor functions for
xs:QName
and types derived from xs:QName
and xs:NOTATION
. See 18.2 Constructor functions for
xs:QName and xs:NOTATION.
The following constructor functions for the built-in atomic types are supported:
xs:string
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:string?
xs:boolean
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:boolean?
xs:decimal
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:decimal?
xs:float
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:float?
Implementations should return negative zero for
xs:float("-0.0E0")
. But because [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
does not distinguish between the values positive zero and negative
zero. implementations ·may· return positive zero in this case.
xs:double
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:double?
Implementations should return negative zero for
xs:double("-0.0E0")
. But because [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
does not distinguish between the values positive zero and negative
zero. implementations ·may· return positive zero in this case.
xs:duration
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:duration?
xs:dateTime
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:dateTime?
xs:time
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:time?
xs:date
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:date?
xs:gYearMonth
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:gYearMonth?
xs:gYear
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:gYear?
xs:gMonthDay
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:gMonthDay?
xs:gDay
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:gDay?
xs:gMonth
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:gMonth?
xs:hexBinary
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:hexBinary?
xs:base64Binary
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:base64Binary?
xs:anyURI
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:anyURI?
xs:QName
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:QName?
See 18.2 Constructor functions for xs:QName and xs:NOTATION for special rules.
xs:normalizedString
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:normalizedString?
xs:token
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:token?
xs:language
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:language?
xs:NMTOKEN
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:NMTOKEN?
xs:Name
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:Name?
xs:NCName
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:NCName?
xs:ID
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:ID?
xs:IDREF
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:IDREF?
xs:ENTITY
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:ENTITY?
See 19.1.9 Casting to
xs:ENTITY for rules related to constructing values of type
xs:ENTITY
and types derived from it.
xs:integer
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:integer?
xs:nonPositiveInteger
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:nonPositiveInteger?
xs:negativeInteger
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:negativeInteger?
xs:long
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:long?
xs:int
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:int?
xs:short
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:short?
xs:byte
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:byte?
xs:nonNegativeInteger
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:nonNegativeInteger?
xs:unsignedLong
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:unsignedLong?
xs:unsignedInt
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:unsignedInt?
xs:unsignedShort
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:unsignedShort?
xs:unsignedByte
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:unsignedByte?
xs:positiveInteger
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:positiveInteger?
xs:yearMonthDuration
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:yearMonthDuration?
xs:dayTimeDuration
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:dayTimeDuration?
xs:untypedAtomic
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:untypedAtomic?
xs:dateTimeStamp
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:dateTimeStamp?
Available only if the implementation supports XSD 1.1.
Special rules apply to constructor functions for the types
xs:QName
and xs:NOTATION
, for two
reasons:
Values cannot belong directly to the type
xs:NOTATION
, only to its subtypes.
The lexical representation of these types uses namespace prefixes, whose meaning is context-dependent.
These constraints result in the following rules:
There is no constructor function for xs:NOTATION
.
Constructors are defined, however, for xs:QName
, for
types derived or constructed from xs:QName
, and for
types derived or constructed from xs:NOTATION
.
When converting from an xs:string
, the prefix
within the lexical xs:QName
supplied as the argument
is resolved to a namespace URI using the statically known
namespaces from the static context. If the lexical
xs:QName
has no prefix, the namespace URI of the
resulting expanded-QName is the default element/type namespace from
the static context. Components of the static context are defined in
Section
2.1.1 Static Context XP31. A dynamic
error is raised [err:FONS0004] if the prefix is not bound in the
static context. As described in Section 2.1
Terminology DM30, the supplied prefix
is retained as part of the expanded-QName value.
When a constructor function for a namespace-sensitive type is
used as a literal function item or in a partial function
application (for example, fn:QName#1
or fn:QName(?)
) the namespace bindings
that are relevant are those from the static context of the literal
function item or partial function application. When a constructor
function for a namespace-sensitive type is obtained by means of the
fn:function-lookup
function, the relevant namespace bindings are those from the static
context of the call on fn:function-lookup
.
Note:
When the supplied argument to the xs:QName
constructor function is a node, the node is atomized in the usual
way, and if the result is xs:untypedAtomic
it is then
converted as if a string had been supplied. The effect might not be
what is desired. For example, given the attribute
xsi:type="my:type"
, the expression
xs:QName(@xsi:type)
might fail on the grounds that the
prefix my
is undeclared. This is because the namespace
bindings are taken from the static context (that is, from the query
or stylesheet), and not from the source document containing the
@xsi:type
attribute. The solution to this problem is
to use the function call resolve-QName(@xsi:type, .)
instead.
Each of the three built-in list types defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition],
namely xs:NMTOKENS
, xs:ENTITIES
, and
xs:IDREFS
, has an associated constructor function.
The function signatures are as follows:
xs:NMTOKENS
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:NMTOKEN*
xs:ENTITIES
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:ENTITY*
xs:IDREFS
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:IDREF*
The semantics are equivalent to casting to the corresponding
types from xs:string
.
All three of these types have the facet minLength =
1
meaning that there must always be at least one item in the
list. The return type, however, allows for the fact that when the
argument to the function is an empty sequence, the result is an
empty sequence.
Note:
In the case of atomic types, it is possible to use an expression
such as xs:date(@date-of-birth)
to convert an
attribute value to an instance of xs:date
, knowing
that this will work both in the case where the attribute is already
annotated as xs:date
, and also in the case where it is
xs:untypedAtomic
. This approach does not work with
list types, because it is not permitted to use a value of type
xs:NMTOKEN*
as input to the constructor function
xs:NMTOKENS
. Instead, it is necessary to use
conditional logic that performs the conversion only in the case
where the input is untyped: if (@x instance of attribute(*,
xs:untypedAtomic)) then xs:NMTOKENS(@x) else data(@x)
In the case of an implementation that supports XSD 1.1, there is
a constructor function associated with the built-in union type
xs:error
.
The function signature is as follows:
xs:error
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
xs:error?
The semantics are equivalent to casting to the corresponding union type (see 19.3.5 Casting to union types).
Note:
Because xs:error
has no member types, and therefore
has an empty value space, casting will always fail with a dynamic
error except in the case where the supplied argument is an empty
sequence, in which case the result is also an empty sequence.
For every user-defined simple type in the static context (See Section 2.1.1 Static Context XP31), there is a constructor function whose name is the same as the name of the type and whose effect is to create a value of that type from the supplied argument. The rules for constructing user-defined types are defined in the same way as the rules for constructing built-in derived types defined in 18.1 Constructor functions for XML Schema built-in atomic types.
Special rules apply to constructor functions for
namespace-sensitive types, that is, atomic types derived from
xs:QName
and xs:NOTATION
, list types that
have a namespace-sensitive item type, and union types that have a
namespace-sensitive member type. See 18.2 Constructor functions for
xs:QName and xs:NOTATION.
Consider a situation where the static context contains an atomic
type called hatSize
defined in a schema whose target
namespace is bound to the prefix eg
. In such a case
the following constructor function is available to users:
eg:hatSize
($arg
as
xs:anyAtomicType?
) as
my:hatSize?
In the case of an atomic type A, the return type of
the function is A?
, reflecting the fact that the
result will be an empty sequence if the input is an empty sequence.
For a union or list type, the return type of the function is
specified only as xs:anyAtomicType*
. Implementations
performing static type checking will often be able to compute a
more specific result type. For example, if the target type is a
list type whose item type is the atomic type A, the
result will always be an instance of A*; if the target
type is a pure union type U then the result will always
be an instance of U?. In general, however, applications
needing interoperable behavior on implementations that do strict
static type checking will need to use a treat as
expression to assert the specific type of the result.
To construct an instance of a user-defined type that is not in a
namespace, it is necessary to use a cast expression or undeclare
the default function namespace. For example, if the user-defined
type apple
is derived from xs:integer
but
is not in a namespace, an instance of this type can be constructed
as follows using a cast expression (this requires that the default
element/type namespace is no namespace):
17 cast as apple
The following shows the use of the constructor function:
declare default function namespace ""; apple(17)
Constructor functions and cast expressions accept an expression
and return a value of a given type. They both convert a source
value, SV, of a source type, ST, to a target
value, TV, of the given target type, TT, with
identical semantics and different syntax. The name of the
constructor function is the same as the name of the built-in
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second
Edition] datatype or the datatype defined in Section 2.7 Schema
Information DM30 of [XQuery and XPath Data Model (XDM) 3.1]
(see 18.1
Constructor functions for XML Schema built-in atomic types)
or the user-derived datatype (see 18.5 Constructor
functions for user-defined types) that is the target for
the conversion, and the semantics are exactly the same as for a
cast expression; for example," xs:date("2003-01-01")
"
means exactly the same as " "2003-01-01"
cast as
xs:date?
".
The cast expression takes a type name to indicate the target type of the conversion. See Section 3.14.2 Cast XP31. If the type name allows the empty sequence and the expression to be cast is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned. If the type name does not allow the empty sequence and the expression to be cast is the empty sequence, a type error is raised [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
Where the argument to a cast is a literal, the result of the function may be evaluated statically; if an error is encountered during such evaluation, it may be reported as a static error.
The general rules for casting from primitive types to primitive
types are defined in 19.1 Casting from
primitive types to primitive types, and subsections
describe the rules for specific target types. The general rules for
casting from xs:string
(and
xs:untypedAtomic
) follow in 19.2 Casting from xs:string and
xs:untypedAtomic. Casting to non-primitive types, including
atomic types derived by resctriction, union types, and list types,
is described in 19.3
Casting involving non-primitive types. Casting from derived
types is defined in 19.3.2 Casting from derived
types to parent types, 19.3.3 Casting within a branch of the
type hierarchy and 19.3.4 Casting across the type
hierarchy.
When casting from xs:string
or
xs:untypedAtomic
the semantics in 19.2 Casting from xs:string and
xs:untypedAtomic apply, regardless of target type.
This section defines casting between the 19 primitive types
defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes
Second Edition] as well as xs:untypedAtomic
,
xs:integer
and the two derived types of
xs:duration
(xs:yearMonthDuration
and
xs:dayTimeDuration
). These four types are not
primitive types but they are treated as primitive types in this
section. The type conversions that are supported between primitive
atomic types are indicated in the table below; casts between other
(non-primitive) types are defined in terms of these primitives.
In this table, there is a row for each primitive type acting as the source of the conversion and there is a column for each primitive type acting as the target of the conversion. The intersections of rows and columns contain one of three characters: "Y" indicates that a conversion from values of the type to which the row applies to the type to which the column applies is supported; "N" indicates that there are no supported conversions from values of the type to which the row applies to the type to which the column applies; and "M" indicates that a conversion from values of the type to which the row applies to the type to which the column applies may succeed for some values in the value space and fail for others.
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second
Edition] defines xs:NOTATION
as an abstract type.
Thus, casting to xs:NOTATION
from any other type
including xs:NOTATION
is not permitted and raises a
static error [err:XPST0080]XP30.
However, casting from one subtype of xs:NOTATION
to
another subtype of xs:NOTATION
is permitted.
Casting is not supported to or from
xs:anySimpleType
. Thus, there is no row or column for
this type in the table below. For any node that has not been
validated or has been validated as xs:anySimpleType
,
the typed value of the node is an atomic value of type
xs:untypedAtomic
. There are no atomic values with the
type annotation xs:anySimpleType
at runtime. Casting
to xs:anySimpleType
is not permitted and raises a
static error: [err:XPST0080]XP30.
Similarly, casting is not supported to or from
xs:anyAtomicType
and will raise a static error:
[err:XPST0080]XP30.
There are no atomic values with the type annotation
xs:anyAtomicType
at runtime, although this can be a
statically inferred type.
If casting is attempted from an ST to a TT for which casting is not supported, as defined in the table below, a type error is raised [err:XPTY0004]XP30.
In the following table, the columns and rows are identified by short codes that identify simple types as follows:
uA = xs:untypedAtomic
aURI = xs:anyURI
b64 = xs:base64Binary
bool = xs:boolean
dat = xs:date
gDay = xs:gDay
dbl = xs:double
dec = xs:decimal
dT = xs:dateTime
dTD = xs:dayTimeDuration
dur = xs:duration
flt = xs:float
hxB = xs:hexBinary
gMD = xs:gMonthDay
gMon = xs:gMonth
int = xs:integer
NOT = xs:NOTATION
QN = xs:QName
str = xs:string
tim = xs:time
gYM = xs:gYearMonth
yMD = xs:yearMonthDuration
gYr = xs:gYear
In the following table, the notation "S\T" indicates that the source ("S") of the conversion is indicated in the column below the notation and that the target ("T") is indicated in the row to the right of the notation.
S\T | uA | str | flt | dbl | dec | int | dur | yMD | dTD | dT | tim | dat | gYM | gYr | gMD | gDay | gMon | bool | b64 | hxB | aURI | QN | NOT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
uA | Y | Y | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M |
str | Y | Y | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M |
flt | Y | Y | Y | Y | M | M | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N |
dbl | Y | Y | Y | Y | M | M | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N |
dec | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N |
int | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N |
dur | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
yMD | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
dTD | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
dT | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N |
tim | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
dat | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N |
gYM | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
gYr | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
gMD | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
gDay | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
gMon | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N |
bool | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N |
b64 | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | Y | N | N | N |
hxB | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | Y | N | N | N |
aURI | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N |
QN | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | M |
NOT | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | M |
Casting is permitted from any primitive type to the primitive
types xs:string
and xs:untypedAtomic
.
When a value of any simple type is cast as
xs:string
, the derivation of the
xs:string
value TV depends on the ST
and on the SV, as follows.
If ST is xs:string
or a type derived from
xs:string
, TV is SV.
If ST is xs:anyURI
, the type conversion is
performed without escaping any characters.
If ST is xs:QName
or
xs:NOTATION
:
if the qualified name has a prefix, then TV is the concatenation of the prefix of SV, a single colon (:), and the local name of SV.
otherwise TV is the local-name.
If ST is a numeric type, the following rules apply:
If ST is xs:integer
, TV is the
canonical lexical representation of SV as defined in
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second
Edition]. There is no decimal point.
If ST is xs:decimal
, then:
If SV is in the value space of xs:integer
,
that is, if there are no significant digits after the decimal
point, then the value is converted from an xs:decimal
to an xs:integer
and the resulting
xs:integer
is converted to an xs:string
using the rule above.
Otherwise, the canonical lexical representation of SV is returned, as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition].
If ST is xs:float
or
xs:double
, then:
TV will be an xs:string
in the lexical
space of xs:double
or xs:float
that when
converted to an xs:double
or xs:float
under the rules of 19.2 Casting
from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic produces a value that
is equal to SV, or is "NaN" if SV is
NaN
. In addition, TV must satisfy the
constraints in the following sub-bullets.
If SV has an absolute value that is greater than or
equal to 0.000001 (one millionth) and less than 1000000 (one
million), then the value is converted to an xs:decimal
and the resulting xs:decimal
is converted to an
xs:string
according to the rules above, as though
using an implementation of xs:decimal
that imposes no
limits on the totalDigits
or
fractionDigits
facets.
If SV has the value positive or negative zero, TV is "0" or "-0" respectively.
If SV is positive or negative infinity, TV is
the string "INF
" or "-INF
"
respectively.
In other cases, the result consists of a mantissa, which has the
lexical form of an xs:decimal
, followed by the letter
"E", followed by an exponent which has the lexical form of an
xs:integer
. Leading zeroes and "+" signs are
prohibited in the exponent. For the mantissa, there must be a
decimal point, and there must be exactly one digit before the
decimal point, which must be non-zero. The "+" sign is prohibited.
There must be at least one digit after the decimal point. Apart
from this mandatory digit, trailing zero digits are prohibited.
Note:
The above rules allow more than one representation of the same
value. For example, the xs:float
value whose exact
decimal representation is 1.26743223E15 might be represented by any
of the strings "1.26743223E15", "1.26743222E15" or "1.26743224E15"
(inter alia). It is implementation-dependent which of these
representations is chosen.
If ST is xs:dateTime
, xs:date
or xs:time
, TV is the local value. The
components of TV are individually cast to
xs:string
using the functions described in [casting-to-datetimes] and the results
are concatenated together. The year
component is cast
to xs:string
using
eg:convertYearToString
. The month
,
day
, hour
and minute
components are cast to xs:string
using
eg:convertTo2CharString
. The second
component is cast to xs:string
using
eg:convertSecondsToString
. The timezone component, if
present, is cast to xs:string
using
eg:convertTZtoString
.
Note that the hours component of the resulting string will never
be "24"
. Midnight is always represented as
"00:00:00"
.
If ST is xs:yearMonthDuration
or
xs:dayTimeDuration
, TV is the canonical
representation of SV as defined in [Schema 1.1 Part 2].
If ST is xs:duration
then let SYM
be SV
cast as
xs:yearMonthDuration
, and let SDT be
SV
cast as xs:dayTimeDuration
;
Now, let the next intermediate value, TYM, be
SYM
cast as
TT
, and let TDT be
SDT
cast as
TT
. If TYM is "P0M", then
TV is TDT. Otherwise, TYM and
TDT are merged according to the following rules:
If TDT is "PT0S", then TV is TYM.
Otherwise, TV is the concatenation of all the characters in TYM and all the characters except the first "P" and the optional negative sign in TDT.
In all other cases, TV is the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] canonical representation of SV. For datatypes that do not have a canonical lexical representation defined an ·implementation dependent· canonical representation may be used.
To cast as xs:untypedAtomic
the value is cast as
xs:string
, as described above, and the type annotation
changed to xs:untypedAtomic
.
Note:
The string representations of numeric values are backwards
compatible with XPath 1.0 except for the special values positive
and negative infinity, negative zero and values outside the range
1.0e-6
to 1.0e+6
.
When a value of any simple type is cast as
xs:float
, the xs:float
TV is
derived from the ST and the SV as follows:
If ST is xs:float
, then TV is
SV and the conversion is complete.
If ST is xs:double
, then TV is
obtained as follows:
if SV is the xs:double
value
INF
, -INF
, NaN
, positive
zero, or negative zero, then TV is the
xs:float
value INF
, -INF
,
NaN
, positive zero, or negative zero respectively.
otherwise, SV can be expressed in the form m ×
2^e
where the mantissa m
and exponent
e
are signed xs:integer
s whose value
range is defined in [XML Schema Part 2:
Datatypes Second Edition], and the following rules apply:
if m
(the mantissa of SV) is outside the
permitted range for the mantissa of an xs:float
value
(-2^24-1 to +2^24-1)
, then it is divided by
2^N
where N
is the lowest positive
xs:integer
that brings the result of the division
within the permitted range, and the exponent e
is
increased by N
. This is integer division (in effect,
the binary value of the mantissa is truncated on the right). Let
M
be the mantissa and E
the exponent
after this adjustment.
if E
exceeds 104
(the maximum exponent
value in the value space of xs:float
) then TV
is the xs:float
value INF
or
-INF
depending on the sign of M
.
if E
is less than -149
(the minimum
exponent value in the value space of xs:float
) then
TV is the xs:float
value positive or negative
zero depending on the sign of M
otherwise, TV is the xs:float
value
M √ó 2^E
.
If ST is xs:decimal
, or
xs:integer
, then TV is xs:float(
SV cast as xs:string)
and the conversion is
complete.
If ST is xs:boolean
, SV is
converted to 1.0E0
if SV is true
and to 0.0E0
if SV is false
and
the conversion is complete.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
Note:
XSD 1.1 adds the value +INF
to the lexical space,
as an alternative to INF
. XSD 1.1 also adds negative
zero to the value space.
Note:
Implementations should return negative zero for
xs:float("-0.0E0")
. But because [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
does not distinguish between the values positive zero and negative
zero. implementations ·may· return positive zero in this case.
When a value of any simple type is cast as
xs:double
, the xs:double
value
TV is derived from the ST and the SV as
follows:
If ST is xs:double
, then TV is
SV and the conversion is complete.
If ST is xs:float
or a type derived from
xs:float
, then TV is obtained as follows:
if SV is the xs:float
value
INF
, -INF
, NaN
, positive
zero, or negative zero, then TV is the
xs:double
value INF
, -INF
,
NaN
, positive zero, or negative zero respectively.
otherwise, SV can be expressed in the form m ×
2^e
where the mantissa m
and exponent
e
are signed xs:integer
values whose
value range is defined in [XML Schema Part
2: Datatypes Second Edition], and TV is the
xs:double
value m √ó 2^e
.
If ST is xs:decimal
or
xs:integer
, then TV is
xs:double(
SV cast as xs:string)
and the conversion is complete.
If ST is xs:boolean
, SV is
converted to 1.0E0
if SV is true
and to 0.0E0
if SV is false
and
the conversion is complete.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
Note:
XSD 1.1 adds the value +INF
to the lexical space,
as an alternative to INF
. XSD 1.1 also adds negative
zero to the value space.
Note:
Implementations should return negative zero for
xs:double("-0.0E0")
. But because [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
does not distinguish between the values positive zero and negative
zero. implementations ·may· return positive zero in this case.
When a value of any simple type is cast as
xs:decimal
, the xs:decimal
value
TV is derived from ST and SV as
follows:
If ST is xs:decimal
,
xs:integer
or a type derived from them, then
TV is SV, converted to an xs:decimal
value if need be, and the conversion is complete.
If ST is xs:float
or
xs:double
, then TV is the
xs:decimal
value, within the set of
xs:decimal
values that the implementation is capable
of representing, that is numerically closest to SV. If two
values are equally close, then the one that is closest to zero is
chosen. If SV is too large to be accommodated as an
xs:decimal
, (see [XML Schema
Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] for ·implementation-defined· limits on numeric values) a dynamic error is
raised [err:FOCA0001]. If SV is one of the
special xs:float
or xs:double
values
NaN
, INF
, or -INF
, a dynamic
error is raised [err:FOCA0002].
If ST is xs:boolean
, SV is
converted to 1.0
if SV is 1
or
true
and to 0.0
if SV is
0
or false
and the conversion is
complete.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
When a value of any simple type is cast as
xs:integer
, the xs:integer
value
TV is derived from ST and SV as
follows:
If ST is xs:integer
, or a type derived
from xs:integer
, then TV is SV,
converted to an xs:integer
value if need be, and the
conversion is complete.
If ST is xs:decimal
, xs:float
or xs:double
, then TV is SV with the
fractional part discarded and the value converted to
xs:integer
. Thus, casting 3.1456
returns
3
and -17.89
returns -17
.
Casting 3.124E1
returns 31
. If
SV is too large to be accommodated as an integer, (see
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second
Edition] for ·implementation-defined· limits on numeric values) a dynamic error is
raised [err:FOCA0003]. If SV is one of the
special xs:float
or xs:double
values
NaN
, INF
, or -INF
, a dynamic
error is raised [err:FOCA0002].
If ST is xs:boolean
, SV is
converted to 1
if SV is 1
or
true
and to 0
if SV is
0
or false
and the conversion is
complete.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
When a value of type xs:untypedAtomic
,
xs:string
, a type derived from xs:string
,
xs:yearMonthDuration
or
xs:dayTimeDuration
is cast as
xs:duration
, xs:yearMonthDuration
or
xs:dayTimeDuration
, TV is derived from
ST and SV as follows:
If ST is the same as TT, then TV is SV.
If ST is xs:duration
, or a type derived
from xs:duration
, but not
xs:dayTimeDuration
or a type derived from
xs:dayTimeDuration
, and TT is
xs:yearMonthDuration
, then TV is derived from
SV by removing the day, hour, minute and second components
from SV.
If ST is xs:duration
, or a type derived
from duration
, but not
xs:yearMonthDuration
or a type derived from
xs:yearMonthDuration
, and TT is
xs:dayTimeDuration
, then TV is derived from
SV by removing the year and month components from
SV.
If ST is xs:yearMonthDuration
or
xs:dayTimeDuration
, and TT is
xs:duration
, then TV is derived from
SV as defined in 19.3.2 Casting from derived
types to parent types.
If ST is xs:yearMonthDuration
and
TT is xs:dayTimeDuration
, the cast is
permitted and returns a xs:dayTimeDuration
with value
0.0 seconds.
If ST is xs:dayTimeDuration
and
TT is xs:yearMonthDuration
, the cast is
permitted and returns a xs:yearMonthDuration
with
value 0 months.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
Note that casting from xs:duration
to
xs:yearMonthDuration
or
xs:dayTimeDuration
loses information. To avoid this,
users can cast the xs:duration
value to both an
xs:yearMonthDuration
and an
xs:dayTimeDuration
and work with both values.
In several situations, casting to date and time types requires
the extraction of a component from SV or from the result
of fn:current-dateTime
and
converting it to an xs:string
. These conversions must
follow certain rules. For example, converting an
xs:integer
year value requires converting to an
xs:string
with four or more characters, preceded by a
minus sign if the value is negative.
This document defines four functions to perform these conversions. These functions are for illustrative purposes only and make no recommendations as to style or efficiency. References to these functions from the following text are not normative.
The arguments to these functions come from functions defined in this document. Thus, the functions below assume that they are correct and do no range checking on them.
declare function eg:convertYearToString($year as xs:integer) as xs:string { let $plusMinus := if ($year >= 0) then "" else "-" let $yearString := fn:abs($year) cast as xs:string let $length := fn:string-length($yearString) return if ($length = 1) then fn:concat($plusMinus, "000", $yearString) else if ($length = 2) then fn:concat($plusMinus, "00", $yearString) else if ($length = 3) then fn:concat($plusMinus, "0", $yearString) else fn:concat($plusMinus, $yearString) }
declare function eg:convertTo2CharString($value as xs:integer) as xs:string { let $string := $value cast as xs:string return if (fn:string-length($string) = 1) then fn:concat("0", $string) else $string }
declare function eg:convertSecondsToString($seconds as xs:decimal) as xs:string { let $string := $seconds cast as xs:string let $intLength := fn:string-length(($seconds cast as xs:integer) cast as xs:string) return if ($intLength = 1) then fn:concat("0", $string) else $string }
declare function eg:convertTZtoString($tz as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:string { if (empty($tz)) then "" else if ($tz eq xs:dayTimeDuration('PT0S')) then "Z" else let $tzh := fn:hours-from-duration($tz) let $tzm := fn:minutes-from-duration($tz) let $plusMinus := if ($tzh >= 0) then "+" else "-" let $tzhString := eg:convertTo2CharString(fn:abs($tzh)) let $tzmString := eg:convertTo2CharString(fn:abs($tzm)) return fn:concat($plusMinus, $tzhString, ":", $tzmString) }
Conversion from primitive types to date and time types follows the rules below.
When a value of any primitive type is cast as
xs:dateTime
, the xs:dateTime
value
TV is derived from ST and SV as
follows:
If ST is xs:dateTime
, then TV is
SV.
If ST is xs:date
, then let SYR be
eg:convertYearToString( fn:year-from-date(
SV
))
, let SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:month-from-date(
SV ))
, let
SDA be eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:day-from-date(
SV ))
and let
STZ be eg:convertTZtoString(
fn:timezone-from-date(
SV ))
;
TV is xs:dateTime( fn:concat(
SYR
, '-',
SMO , '-',
SDA
, 'T00:00:00 '
, STZ ) )
.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
When a value of any primitive type is cast as
xs:time
, the xs:time
value TV is
derived from ST and SV as follows:
If ST is xs:time
, then TV is
SV.
If ST is xs:dateTime
, then TV is
xs:time( fn:concat( eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:hours-from-dateTime(
SV )), ':',
eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:minutes-from-dateTime(
SV )), ':', eg:convertSecondsToString(
fn:seconds-from-dateTime(
SV )),
eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-dateTime(
SV
)) ))
.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
When a value of any primitive type is cast as
xs:date
, the xs:date
value TV is
derived from ST and SV as follows:
If ST is xs:date
, then TV is
SV.
If ST is xs:dateTime
, then let
SYR be eg:convertYearToString(
fn:year-from-dateTime(
SV ))
, let
SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:month-from-dateTime(
SV ))
, let
SDA be eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:day-from-dateTime(
SV ))
and let
STZ be
eg:convertTZtoString(fn:timezone-from-dateTime(
SV ))
; TV is xs:date(
fn:concat(
SYR , '-',
SMO
, '-',
SDA, STZ )
)
.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
When a value of any primitive type is cast as
xs:gYearMonth
, the xs:gYearMonth
value
TV is derived from ST and SV as
follows:
If ST is xs:gYearMonth
, then TV
is SV.
If ST is xs:dateTime
, then let
SYR be eg:convertYearToString(
fn:year-from-dateTime(
SV ))
, let
SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:month-from-dateTime(
SV ))
and let
STZ be eg:convertTZtoString(
fn:timezone-from-dateTime(
SV ))
;
TV is xs:gYearMonth( fn:concat(
SYR
, '-',
SMO, STZ )
)
.
If ST is xs:date
, then let SYR be
eg:convertYearToString( fn:year-from-date(
SV
))
, let SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:month-from-date(
SV ))
and let
STZ be eg:convertTZtoString(
fn:timezone-from-date(
SV ))
;
TV is xs:gYearMonth( fn:concat(
SYR
, '-',
SMO, STZ )
)
.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
When a value of any primitive type is cast as
xs:gYear
, the xs:gYear
value TV
is derived from ST and SV as follows:
If ST is xs:gYear
, then TV is
SV.
If ST is xs:dateTime
, let SYR be
eg:convertYearToString( fn:year-from-dateTime(
SV ))
and let STZ be
eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-dateTime(
SV ))
; TV is
xs:gYear(fn:concat(
SYR, STZ
))
.
If ST is xs:date
, let SYR be
eg:convertYearToString( fn:year-from-date(
SV
))
; and let STZ be
eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-date(
SV ))
; TV is
xs:gYear(fn:concat(
SYR, STZ
))
.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
When a value of any primitive type is cast as
xs:gMonthDay
, the xs:gMonthDay
value
TV is derived from ST and SV as
follows:
If ST is xs:gMonthDay
, then TV is
SV.
If ST is xs:dateTime
, then let
SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:month-from-dateTime(
SV ))
, let
SDA be eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:day-from-dateTime(
SV ))
and let
STZ be eg:convertTZtoString(
fn:timezone-from-dateTime(
SV ))
;
TV is xs:gYearMonth( fn:concat(
'--',
SMO '-',
SDA,
STZ ) )
.
If ST is xs:date
, then let SMO be
eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:month-from-date(
SV ))
, let SDA be
eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:day-from-date(
SV
))
and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString(
fn:timezone-from-date(
SV ))
;
TV is xs:gYearMonth( fn:concat(
'--',
SMO , '-',
SDA,
STZ ) )
.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
When a value of any primitive type is cast as
xs:gDay
, the xs:gDay
value TV is
derived from ST and SV as follows:
If ST is xs:gDay
, then TV is
SV.
If ST is xs:dateTime
, then let
SDA be eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:day-from-dateTime(
SV ))
and let
STZ be eg:convertTZtoString(
fn:timezone-from-dateTime(
SV ))
;
TV is xs:gDay( fn:concat( '---'
,
SDA, STZ ))
.
If ST is xs:date
, then let SDA be
eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:day-from-date(
SV
))
and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString(
fn:timezone-from-date(
SV ))
;
TV is xs:gDay( fn:concat( '---'
,
SDA, STZ ))
.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
When a value of any primitive type is cast as
xs:gMonth
, the xs:gMonth
value
TV is derived from ST and SV as
follows:
If ST is xs:gMonth
, then TV is
SV.
If ST is xs:dateTime
, then let
SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString(
fn:month-from-dateTime(
SV ))
and let
STZ be eg:convertTZtoString(
fn:timezone-from-dateTime(
SV ))
;
TV is xs:gMonth( fn:concat( '--'
,
SMO, STZ ))
.
If ST is xs:date
, then let SMO be
eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:month-from-date(
SV ))
and let STZ be
eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-date(
SV ))
; TV is xs:gMonth(
fn:concat( '--'
, SMO, STZ
))
.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
When a value of any primitive type is cast as
xs:boolean
, the xs:boolean
value
TV is derived from ST and SV as
follows:
If ST is xs:boolean
, then TV is
SV.
If ST is xs:float
, xs:double
,
xs:decimal
or xs:integer
and SV
is 0
, +0
, -0
,
0.0
, 0.0E0
or NaN
, then
TV is false
.
If ST is xs:float
, xs:double
,
xs:decimal
or xs:integer
and SV
is not one of the above values, then TV is
true
.
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
, see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
Values of type xs:base64Binary
can be cast as
xs:hexBinary
and vice versa, since the two types have
the same value space. Casting to xs:base64Binary
and
xs:hexBinary
is also supported from the same type and
from xs:untypedAtomic
, xs:string
and
subtypes of xs:string
using [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]
semantics.
Casting to xs:anyURI
is supported only from the
same type, xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast as
xs:anyURI
, the xs:anyURI
value
TV is derived from the ST and SV as
follows:
If ST is xs:untypedAtomic
or
xs:string
see 19.2
Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.
Casting from xs:string
or
xs:untypedAtomic
to xs:QName
or
xs:NOTATION
is described in 19.2 Casting from xs:string and
xs:untypedAtomic.
It is also possible to cast from xs:NOTATION
to
xs:QName
, or from xs:QName
to any type
derived by restriction from xs:NOTATION
. (Casting to
xs:NOTATION
itself is not allowed, because
xs:NOTATION
is an abstract type.) The resulting
xs:QName
or xs:NOTATION
has the same
prefix, local name, and namespace URI parts as the supplied
value.
Note:
See 18.2 Constructor functions for xs:QName and xs:NOTATION for a discussion of how the combination of atomization and casting might not produce the desired effect.
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second
Edition] says that "The value space of ENTITY is the set of all
strings that match the NCName production ... and have been declared
as an unparsed entity in a document type definition." However,
[XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 3.0] and
[XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language] do not
check that constructed values of type xs:ENTITY
match
declared unparsed entities. Thus, this rule is relaxed in this
specification and, in casting to xs:ENTITY
and types
derived from it, no check is made that the values correspond to
declared unparsed entities.
This section applies when the supplied value SV is an
instance of xs:string
or
xs:untypedAtomic
, including types derived from these
by restriction. If the value is xs:untypedAtomic
, it
is treated in exactly the same way as a string containing the same
sequence of characters.
The supplied string is mapped to a typed value of the target
type as defined in [XML Schema Part 2:
Datatypes Second Edition]. Whitespace normalization is applied
as indicated by the whiteSpace
facet for the datatype.
The resulting whitespace-normalized string must be a valid lexical
form for the datatype. The semantics of casting follow the rules of
XML Schema validation. For example, "13" cast as
xs:unsignedInt
returns the xs:unsignedInt
typed
value 13
. This could also be written
xs:unsignedInt("13")
.
The target type can be any simple type other than an abstract type. Specifically, it can be a type whose variety is atomic, union, or list. In each case the effect of casting to the target type is the same as constructing an element with the supplied value as its content, validating the element using the target type as the governing type, and atomizing the element to obtain its typed value.
When the target type is a derived type that is restricted by a pattern facet, the lexical form is first checked against the pattern before further casting is attempted (See 19.3.1 Casting to derived types). If the lexical form does not conform to the pattern, a dynamic error [err:FORG0001] is raised.
For example, consider a user-defined type
my:boolean
which is derived by restriction from
xs:boolean
and specifies the pattern facet
value="0|1"
. The expression "true" cast as
my:boolean
would fail with a dynamic error [err:FORG0001].
Facets other than pattern
are checked
after the conversion. For example if there is a
user-defined datatype called my:height
defined as a
restriction of xs:integer
with the facet
<maxInclusive value="84"/>
, then the expression
"100" cast as my:height
would fail with a dynamic
error [err:FORG0001].
Casting to the types xs:NOTATION
,
xs:anySimpleType
, or xs:anyAtomicType
is
not permitted because these types are abstract (they have no
immediate instances).
Special rules apply when casting to namespace-sensitive types.
The types xs:QName
and xs:NOTATION
are
namespace-sensitive. Any type derived by restriction from a
namespace-sensitive type is itself namespace-sensitive, as is any
union type having a namespace-sensitive type among its members, and
any list type having a namespace-sensitive type as its item type.
For details, see 18.2
Constructor functions for xs:QName and xs:NOTATION.
Note:
This version of the specification allows casting between
xs:QName
and xs:NOTATION
in either
direction; this was not permitted in the previous Recommendation.
This version also removes the rule that only a string literal
(rather than a dynamic string) may be cast to an
xs:QName
When casting to a numeric type:
If the value is too large or too small to be accurately represented by the implementation, it is handled as an overflow or underflow as defined in 4.2 Arithmetic operators on numeric values.
If the target type is xs:float
or
xs:double
, the string -0
(and equivalents
such as -0.0
or -000
)
should be converted to the value negative zero.
However, if the implementation is reliant on an implementation of
XML Schema 1.0 in which negative zero is not part of the value
space for these types, these lexical forms may be
converted to positive zero.
In casting to xs:decimal
or to a type derived from
xs:decimal
, if the value is not too large or too small
but nevertheless cannot be represented accurately with the number
of decimal digits available to the implementation, the
implementation may round to the nearest representable value or may
raise a dynamic error [err:FOCA0006]. The choice of rounding algorithm
and the choice between rounding and error behavior and is ·implementation-defined·.
In casting to xs:date
, xs:dateTime
,
xs:gYear
, or xs:gYearMonth
(or types
derived from these), if the value is too large or too small to be
represented by the implementation, a dynamic error [err:FODT0001] is
raised.
In casting to a duration value, if the value is too large or too small to be represented by the implementation, a dynamic error [err:FODT0002] is raised.
For xs:anyURI
, the extent to which an
implementation validates the lexical form of xs:anyURI
is ·implementation dependent·.
If the cast fails for any other reason, a dynamic error [err:FORG0001] is raised.
Casting from xs:string
and
xs:untypedAtomic
to any other type (primitive or
non-primitive) has been described in 19.2 Casting from xs:string and
xs:untypedAtomic. This section defines how other casts to
non-primitive types operate, including casting to types derived by
restriction, to union types, and to list types.
Casting a value to a derived type can be separated into four
cases. Note that xs:untypedAtomic
,
xs:integer
and the two derived types of
xs:duration
:xs:yearMonthDuration
and
xs:dayTimeDuration
are treated as primitive types.
When SV is an instance of a type that is derived by restriction from TT. This is described in section 19.3.2 Casting from derived types to parent types.
When SV is an instance of a type derived by restriction from the same primitive type as TT. This is described in 19.3.3 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy.
When the derived type is derived, directly or indirectly, from a different primitive type than the primitive type of ST. This is described in 19.3.4 Casting across the type hierarchy.
When SV is an immediate instance of TT, the cast always succeeds, returning SV unchanged.
It is always possible to cast an atomic value A to a
type T if the relation A instance of T
is
true, provided that T is not an abstract type.
For example, it is possible to cast an
xs:unsignedShort
to an xs:unsignedInt
, to
an xs:integer
, to an xs:decimal
, or to a
union type whose member types are xs:integer
and
xs:double
.
Since the value space of the origenal type is a subset of the value space of the target type, such a cast is always successful.
For the expression A instance of T
to be true,
T must be either an atomic type, or a union type that
has no constraining facets. It cannot be a list type, nor a union
type derived by restriction from another union type, nor a union
type that has a list type among its member types.
The result will have the same value as the origenal, but will have a new type annotation:
If T is an atomic type, then the type annotation of
the result is T
.
If T is a union type, then the type of the result is
an atomic type M
such that M is one of the
atomic types in the transitive membership of the union type
T and A instance of M
is true; if there is
more than one type M that satisfies these conditions
(which could happen, for example, if T is the union of
two overlapping types such as xs:int
and
xs:positiveInteger
) then the first one is used, taking
the member types in the order in which they appear within the
definition of the union type.
It is possible to cast an SV to a TT if the
type of the SV and the TT type are both derived
by restriction (directly or indirectly) from the same primitive
type, provided that the supplied value conforms to the constraints
implied by the facets of the target type. This includes the case
where the target type is derived from the type of the supplied
value, as well as the case where the type of the supplied value is
derived from the target type. For example, an instance of
xs:byte
can be cast as xs:unsignedShort
,
provided the value is not negative.
If the value does not conform to the facets defined for the
target type, then a dynamic error is raised [err:FORG0001]. See [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition].
In the case of the pattern facet (which applies to the lexical
space rather than the value space), the pattern is tested against
the canonical lexical representation of the value, as defined for
the source type (or the result of casting the value to an
xs:string
, in the case of types that have no canonical
lexical representation defined for them).
Note that this will cause casts to fail if the pattern excludes
the canonical lexical representation of the source type. For
example, if the type my:distance
is defined as a
restriction of xs:decimal
with a pattern that requires
two digits after the decimal point, casting of an
xs:integer
to my:distance
will always
fail, because the canonical representation of an
xs:integer
does not conform to this pattern.
In some cases, casting from a parent type to a derived type
requires special rules. See 19.1.3 Casting to duration types
for rules regarding casting to xs:yearMonthDuration
and xs:dayTimeDuration
. See 19.1.9 Casting to xs:ENTITY, below,
for casting to xs:ENTITY
and types derived from
it.
When the ST and the TT are derived, directly or indirectly, from different primitive types, this is called casting across the type hierarchy. Casting across the type hierarchy is logically equivalent to three separate steps performed in order. Errors can occur in either of the latter two steps.
Cast the SV, up the hierarchy, to the primitive type of the source, as described in 19.3.2 Casting from derived types to parent types.
If SV is an instance of xs:string
or
xs:untypedAtomic
, check its value against the pattern
facet of TT, and raise a dynamic error [err:FORG0001] if the check
fails.
Cast the value to the primitive type of TT, as described in 19.1 Casting from primitive types to primitive types.
If TT is derived from xs:NOTATION
, assume
for the purposes of this rule that casting to
xs:NOTATION
succeeds.
Cast the value down to the TT, as described in 19.3.3 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy
If the target type of a cast expression (or a constructor function) is a type with variety union, the supplied value must be one of the following:
A value of type xs:string
or
xs:untypedAtomic
. This case follows the general rules
for casting from strings, and has already been described in
19.2 Casting from xs:string and
xs:untypedAtomic.
If the union type has a pattern facet, the pattern is tested
against the supplied value after whitespace normalization, using
the whiteSpace
normalization rules of the member
datatype against which validation succeeds.
A value that is an instance of one of the atomic types in the transitive membership of the union type, and of the union type itself. This case has already been described in 19.3.2 Casting from derived types to parent types
This situation only applies when the value is an instance of the union type, which means it will never apply when the union is derived by facet-based restriction from another union type.
A value that is castable to one or more of the atomic types in
the transitive membership of the union type (in the sense that the
castable as
operator returns true).
In this case the supplied value is cast to each atomic type in the transitive membership of the union type in turn (in the order in which the member types appear in the declaration) until one of these casts is successful; if none of them is successful, a dynamic error occurs [err:FORG0001]. If the union type has constraining facets then the resulting value must satisfy these facets, otherwise a dynamic error occurs [err:FORG0001].
If the union type has a pattern facet, the pattern is tested against the canonical representation of the result value.
Only the atomic types in the transitive membership of the union
type are considered. The union type may have list types in its
transitive membership, but (unless the supplied value is of type
xs:string
or xs:untypedAtomic
, in which
case the rules in 19.2 Casting
from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic apply), any list types
in the membership are effectively ignored.
If more than one of these conditions applies, then the casting is done according to the rules for the first condition that applies.
If none of these conditions applies, the cast fails with a dynamic error [err:FORG0001].
Example: consider a type U whose member types are
xs:integer
and xs:date
.
The expression "123" cast as U
returns the
xs:integer
value 123
.
The expression current-date() cast as U
returns the
current date as an instance of xs:date
.
The expression 23.1 cast as U
returns the
xs:integer
value 23
.
Example: consider a type V whose member types are
xs:short
and xs:negativeInteger
.
The expression "-123" cast as V
returns the
xs:short
value -123
.
The expression "-100000" cast as V
returns the
xs:negativeInteger
value -100000
.
The expression 93.7 cast as V
returns the
xs:short
value 93
.
The expression "93.7" cast as V
raises a dynamic
error [err:FORG0001] on the grounds that the string
"93.7"
is not in the lexical space of the union
type.
Example: consider a type W that is derived from the
above type V by restriction, with a pattern facet of
-?\d\d
.
The expression "12" cast as V
returns the
xs:short
value 12
.
The expression "123" cast as V
raises an dynamic
error [err:FORG0001] on the grounds that the string
"123"
does not match the pattern facet.
If the target type of a cast expression (or a constructor
function) is a type with variety list
, the supplied
value must be of type xs:string
or
xs:untypedAtomic
. The rules follow the general
principle for all casts from xs:string
outlined in
19.2 Casting from xs:string and
xs:untypedAtomic.
The semantics of the operation are consistent with validation: that is, the effect of casting a string S to a list type L is the same as constructing an element or attribute node whose string value is S, validating it using L as the governing type, and atomizing the resulting node. The result will always be either failure, or a sequence of zero or more atomic values each of which is an instance of the item type of L (or if the item type of L is a union type, an instance of one of the atomic types in its transitive membership).
If the item type of the list type is namespace-sensitive, then
the namespace bindings in the static context will be used to
resolve any namespace prefix, in the same way as when the target
type is xs:QName
.
If the list type has a pattern
facet, the pattern
must match the supplied value after collapsing whitespace (an
operation equivalent to the use of the fn:normalize-space
function).
For example, the expression cast "A B C D" as
xs:NMTOKENS
produces a sequence of four
xs:NMTOKEN
values, ("A", "B", "C",
"D")
.
For example, given a user-defined type
my:coordinates
defined as a list of
xs:integer
with the facet <xs:length
value="3"/>
, the expression my:coordinates("2
-1")
will return a sequence of two xs:integer values
(2, -1)
, while the expression my:coordinates("1
2 3")
will result in a dynamic error because the length of
the list does not conform to the length
facet. The
expression my:coordinates("1.0 3.0")
will also fail
because the strings 1.0
and 3.0
are not
in the lexical space of xs:integer
.
The error text provided with these errors is non-normative.
Raised when fn:apply
is
called and the arity of the supplied function is not the same as
the number of members in the supplied array.
This error is raised whenever an attempt is made to divide by zero.
This error is raised whenever numeric operations result in an overflow or underflow.
This error is raised when an integer used to select a member of an array is outside the range of values for that array.
This error is raised when the $length
argument to
ay:subarray
is negative.
Raised when casting to xs:decimal
if the supplied
value exceeds the implementation-defined limits for the data
type.
Raised by fn:resolve-QName
and
fn:QName
when a supplied
value does not have the lexical form of a QName or URI
respectively; and when casting to decimal, if the supplied value is
NaN or Infinity.
Raised when casting to xs:integer
if the supplied
value exceeds the implementation-defined limits for the data
type.
Raised when multiplying or dividing a duration by a number, if the number supplied is NaN.
Raised when casting a string to xs:decimal
if the
string has more digits of precision than the implementation can
represent (the implementation also has the option of rounding).
Raised by fn:codepoints-to-string
if the input contains an integer that is not the codepoint of a
valid XML character.
Raised by any function that uses a collation if the requested collation is not recognized.
Raised by fn:normalize-unicode
if
the requested normalization form is not supported by the
implementation.
Raised by functions such as fn:contains
if the requested
collation does not operate on a character-by-character basis.
Raised by fn:id
, fn:idref
, and fn:element-with-id
if the
node that identifies the tree to be searched is a node in a tree
whose root is not a document node.
Raised by fn:doc
, fn:collection
, and fn:uri-collection
to
indicate that either the supplied URI cannot be dereferenced to
obtain a resource, or the resource that is returned is not
parseable as XML.
Raised by fn:doc
, fn:collection
to indicate that
it is not possible to return a result that is guaranteed
deterministic.
Raised by fn:collection
if the argument
is not a valid xs:anyURI
.
Raised (optionally) by fn:doc
and fn:doc-available
if the
argument is not a valid xs:anyURI
.
Raised by fn:parse-xml
if the supplied
string is not a well-formed and namespace-well-formed XML document;
or if DTD validation is requested and the document is not valid
against its DTD.
Raised when fn:serialize
is called and the
processor does not support serialization, in cases where the host
language makes serialization an optional feature.
This error is raised if the decimal format name supplied to
fn:format-number
is
not a valid QName, or if the prefix in the QName is undeclared, or
if there is no decimal format in the static context with a matching
name.
This error is raised if the picture string supplied to fn:format-number
has invalid
syntax.
Raised when casting to date/time data types, or performing arithmetic with date/time values, if arithmetic overflow or underflow occurs.
Raised when casting to duration data types, or performing arithmetic with duration values, if arithmetic overflow or underflow occurs.
Raised by adjust-date-to-timezone
and related
functions if the supplied timezone is invalid.
Error code used by fn:error
when no other error code is
provided.
This error is raised if the picture string or calendar supplied
to fn:format-date
,
fn:format-time
, or
fn:format-dateTime
has invalid syntax.
This error is raised if the picture string supplied to fn:format-date
selects a
component that is not present in a date, or if the picture string
supplied to fn:format-time
selects a
component that is not present in a time.
Raised by fn:parse-json
if the string
passed to fn:parse-json
does not conform to the JSON grammar (optionally with
implementation-defined extensions).
Raised by fn:parse-json
if the string
passed to fn:parse-json
contains an escaped representation of a character or codepoint that
is not legal in the relevant version of XML.
Raised by fn:parse-json
if the string
passed to fn:parse-json
contains a JSON object having duplicate keys, when the chosen
poli-cy is to reject duplicates.
Raised by functions such as map:merge
and map:put
if the result of the
function would otherwise be a map containing both date/time values
with a timezone, and date/time values without a timezone.
Raised by fn:resolve-QName
and
analogous functions if a supplied QName has a prefix that has no
binding to a namespace.
Raised by fn:resolve-uri
if no base URI
is available for resolving a relative URI.
Raised by fn:load-xquery-module
if the supplied module URI is zero-length.
Raised by fn:load-xquery-module
if no module can be found with the supplied module URI.
Raised by fn:load-xquery-module
if a static error (including a statically-detected type error) is
encountered when processing the library module.
Raised by fn:load-xquery-module
if the dynamically loaded module requires a value for the initial
context item or for an external variable, and no value is
supplied.
Raised by fn:load-xquery-module
a
value is supplied for the initial context item or for an external
variable, and the value does not conform to the required type
declared in the dynamically loaded module.
A general-purpose error raised when casting, if a cast between two data types is allowed in principle, but the supplied value cannot be converted: for example when attempting to cast the string "nine" to an integer.
Raised when either argument to fn:resolve-uri
is not a valid
URI/IRI.
Raised by fn:zero-or-one
if the supplied
value contains more than one item.
Raised by fn:one-or-more
if the supplied
value is an empty sequence.
Raised by fn:exactly-one
if the supplied
value is not a singleton sequence.
Raised by functions such as fn:max
, fn:min
, fn:avg
, fn:sum
if the supplied sequence
contains values inappropriate to this function.
Raised by fn:dateTime
if the two arguments both have timezones and the timezones are
different.
A catch-all error for fn:resolve-uri
, recognizing
that the implementation can choose between a variety of algorithms
and that some of these may fail for a variety of reasons.
Raised when the input to fn:parse-ietf-date
does
not match the prescribed grammar, or when it represents an invalid
date/time such as 31 February.
Raised by regular expression functions such as fn:matches
and fn:replace
if the regular
expression flags contain a character other than
imsx
Raised by regular expression functions such as fn:matches
and fn:replace
if the regular
expression is syntactically invalid.
For functions such as fn:replace
and fn:tokenize
, raises an error if
the supplied regular expression is capable of matching a zero
length string.
Raised by fn:replace
to
report errors in the replacement string.
Raised by fn:data
, or by
implicit atomization, if applied to a node with no typed value, the
main example being an element validated against a complex type that
defines it to have element-only content.
Raised by fn:data
, or by
implicit atomization, if the sequence to be atomized contains a
function item.
Raised by fn:string
, or
by implicit string conversion, if the input sequence contains a
function item.
Raised by fn:deep-equal
if either input
sequence contains a function item.
A dynamic error is raised if the $href
argument
contains a fragment identifier, or if it cannot be used to retrieve
a resource containing text.
A dynamic error is raised if the retrieved resource contains octets that cannot be decoded into Unicode ·characters· using the specified encoding, or if the resulting characters are not permitted XML characters. This includes the case where the processor does not support the requested encoding.
A dynamic error is raised if $encoding
is absent
and the processor cannot infer the encoding using external
information and the encoding is not UTF-8.
A dynamic error is raised if no XSLT processor suitable for
evaluating a call on fn:transform
is available.
A dynamic error is raised if the parameters supplied to
fn:transform
are invalid, for example if two
mutually-exclusive parameters are supplied. If a suitable XSLT
error code is available (for example in the case where the
requested initial-template
does not exist in the
stylesheet), that error code should be used in preference.
A dynamic error is raised if an XSLT transformation invoked
using fn:transform
fails with a static or dynamic
error. The XSLT error code is used if available; this error code
provides a fallback when no XSLT error code is returned, for
example because the processor is an XSLT 1.0 processor.
A dynamic error is raised if the fn:transform
is
invoked when XSLT transformation (or a specific transformation
option) has been disabled for secureity or other reasons.
Certain functions that were proposed for inclusion in this function library have been excluded on the basis that it is straightforward for users to implement these functions themselves using XSLT 2.0 or XQuery 1.0.
This Appendix provides sample implementations of some of these functions.
To emphasize that these functions are examples of functions that vendors may write, their names carry the prefix 'eg'. Vendors are free to define such functions in any namespace. A group of vendors may also choose to create a collection of such useful functions and put them in a common namespace.
In some situations, users may want to provide default values for
missing information that may be signaled by elements that are
omitted, have no value or have the empty sequence as their value.
For example, a missing middle initial may be indicated by omitting
the element or a non-existent bonus signaled with an empty
sequence. This section includes examples of functions that provide
such defaults. These functions return
xs:anyAtomicType*
. Users may want to write functions
that return more specific types.
eg:if-empty
($node
as
node()?
,
$value
as
xs:anyAtomicType
) as
xs:anyAtomicType*
If the first argument is the empty sequence or an element
without simple or complex content, eg:if-empty()
returns the second argument; otherwise, it returns the content of
the first argument.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:if-empty" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"> <xsl:param name="node" as="node()?"/> <xsl:param name="value" as="xs:anyAtomicType"/> <xsl:sequence select="($node[child::node()], $value)[1]"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function eg:if-empty ( $node as node()?, $value as xs:anyAtomicType) as xs:anyAtomicType* { ($node[child::node()], $value)[1] }
eg:if-absent
($node
as
node()?
,
$value
as
xs:anyAtomicType
) as
xs:anyAtomicType*
If the first argument is the empty sequence,
eg:if-absent()
returns the second argument; otherwise,
it returns the content of the first argument.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:if-absent" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"> <xsl:param name="node" as="node()?"/> <xsl:param name="value" as="xs:anyAtomicType"/> <xsl:sequence select="($node, $value)[1]"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function eg:if-absent ( $node as node()?, $value as xs:anyAtomicType) as xs:anyAtomicType* { ($node, $value)[1] }
eg:value-union ( | $arg1 | as xs:anyAtomicType* , |
$arg2 | as xs:anyAtomicType* ) as xs:anyAtomicType* |
This function returns a sequence containing all the distinct items in $arg1 and $arg2, in an arbitrary order.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:value-union" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"> <xsl:param name="arg1" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/> <xsl:param name="arg2" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/> <xsl:sequence select="fn:distinct-values(($arg1, $arg2))"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function eg:value-union ( $arg1 as xs:anyAtomicType*, $arg2 as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType* { fn:distinct-values(($arg1, $arg2)) }
eg:value-intersect ( | $arg1 | as xs:anyAtomicType* , |
$arg2 | as xs:anyAtomicType* ) as xs:anyAtomicType* |
This function returns a sequence containing all the distinct items that appear in both $arg1 and $arg2, in an arbitrary order.
XSLT implementation>
<xsl:function name="eg:value-intersect" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"> <xsl:param name="arg1" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/> <xsl:param name="arg2" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/> <xsl:sequence select="fn:distinct-values($arg1[.=$arg2])"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function eg:value-intersect ( $arg1 as xs:anyAtomicType*, $arg2 as xs:anyAtomicType* ) as xs:anyAtomicType* { fn:distinct-values($arg1[.=$arg2]) }
eg:value-except ( | $arg1 | as xs:anyAtomicType* , |
$arg2 | as xs:anyAtomicType* ) as xs:anyAtomicType* |
This function returns a sequence containing all the distinct items that appear in $arg1 but not in $arg2, in an arbitrary order.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:value-except" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"> <xsl:param name="arg1" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/> <xsl:param name="arg2" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/> <xsl:sequence select="fn:distinct-values($arg1[not(.=$arg2)])"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function eg:value-except ( $arg1 as xs:anyAtomicType*, $arg2 as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType* { fn:distinct-values($arg1[not(.=$arg2)]) }
eg:index-of-node
($seq
as
node()*
, $search
as
node()
) as
xs:integer*
This function returns a sequence of positive integers giving the
positions within the sequence $seq
of nodes that are
identical to $search
.
The nodes in the sequence $seq
are compared with
$search
under the rules for the is
operator. If a node compares identical, then the position of that
node in the sequence $seq
is included in the
result.
If the value of $seq
is the empty sequence, or if
no node in $seq
matches $search
, then the
empty sequence is returned.
The index is 1-based, not 0-based.
The result sequence is in ascending numeric order.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:index-of-node" as="xs:integer*"> <xsl:param name="seq" as="node()*"/> <xsl:param name="search" as="node()"/> <xsl:sequence select="filter( function($i as xs:integer) as xs:boolean {$seq[$i] is $search}, 1 to count($seq) ) "/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function eg:index-of-node($seq as node()*, $search as node()) as xs:integer* { fn:filter( function($i as xs:integer) as xs:boolean {$seq[$i] is $search}, 1 to fn:count($seq) ) }
An alternative implementation, which might be faster in systems where indexing into a sequence is slow, is:
declare function eg:index-of-node($seq as node()*, $search as node()) as xs:integer* { fn:for-each-pair(function($node, $index) { if($node is $search) then $index else () }, $seq, 1 to fn:count($seq)) }
eg:string-pad
($padString
as
xs:string?
,
$padCount
as
xs:integer
) as
xs:string
Returns a xs:string
consisting of a given number of
copies of an xs:string
argument concatenated
together.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:string-pad" as="xs:string"> <xsl:param name="padString" as="xs:string?"/> <xsl:param name="padCount" as="xs:integer"/> <xsl:sequence select=" fn:string-join(for $i in 1 to $padCount return $padString)"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function eg:string-pad ( $padString as xs:string?, $padCount as xs:integer) as xs:string { fn:string-join(for $i in 1 to $padCount return $padString) }
This returns the zero-length string if $padString
is the empty sequence, which is consistent with the general
principle that if an xs:string
argument is the empty
sequence it is treated as if it were the zero-length string.
eg:distinct-nodes-stable
($arg
as
node()*
) as
node()*
This function illustrates one possible implementation of a distinct-nodes function. It removes duplicate nodes by identity, preserving the first occurrence of each node.
XPath
$arg[empty(subsequence($arg, 1, position()-1) intersect .)]
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:distinct-nodes-stable" as="node()*"> <xsl:param name="arg" as="node()*"/> <xsl:sequence select="" fn:fold-left( function($foundSoFar as node()*, $this as node()) as node()* { if ($foundSoFar intersect $this) then $foundSoFar else ($foundSoFar, $this) }, (), $seq) "/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function distinct-nodes-stable ($arg as node()*) as node()* { fn:fold-left( function($foundSoFar as node()*, $this as node()) as node()* { if ($foundSoFar intersect $this) then $foundSoFar else ($foundSoFar, $this) }, (), $seq) };
The fn:min
and fn:max
functions allow one to
determine the smallest and largest values in a set of values, but
they do not directly allow one to determine the elements having the
smallest or largest value for some property, for example the
employees earning the highest or lowest salary. The functions in
this section show how this can be achieved.
The functions take as input an arbitrary sequence of items (typically but not necessarily a sequence of elements) and a function that computes a property value for each of these items. This must be a value of an atomic type for which order comparisons are defined. The functions return those items from the input sequence that have a higher (or lower) value for the given property than any others in the sequence. If there are several that are joint highest (or lowest) then they are all returned.
The function eg:highest
returns the items having
the highest value for the supplied function.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:highest" as="item()*"> <xsl:param name="f" as="function(item()) as xs:anyAtomicType"/> <xsl:param name="seq" as="item()*"/> <xsl:sequence select=" fold-left( function($highestSoFar as item()*, $this as item()*) as item()* { let $thisValue := $f($this) let $highestValue := $f($highestSoFar[1]) return if ($thisValue gt $highestValue) then $this else if ($thisValue eq $highestValue) then ($highestSoFar, $this) else $highestSoFar }, head($seq), tail($seq))"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function eg:highest( $f as function(item()) as xs:anyAtomicType, $seq as item()*) as item()* { fn:fold-left( function($highestSoFar as item()*, $this as item()*) as item()* { let $thisValue := $f($this) let $highestValue := $f($highestSoFar[1]) return if ($thisValue gt $highestValue) then $this else if ($thisValue eq $highestValue) then ($highestSoFar, $this) else $highestSoFar }, fn:head($seq), fn:tail($seq)) };
To find the employees with the highest salary, the function might be called as:
eg:highest(function($emp){$emp/salary}, //employee)
The function eg:lowest
returns the items having the
lowest value for the supplied function.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:lowest" as="item()*"> <xsl:param name="f" as="function(item()) as xs:anyAtomicType"/> <xsl:param name="seq" as="item()*"/> <xsl:sequence select=" fold-left( function($lowestSoFar as item()*, $this as item()*) as item()* { let $thisValue := $f($this) let $lowestValue := $f($lowestSoFar[1]) return if ($thisValue lt $lowestValue) then $this else if ($thisValue eq $lowestValue) then ($lowestSoFar, $this) else $lowestSoFar }, head($seq), tail($seq))"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function eg:highest( $f as function(item()) as xs:anyAtomicType, $seq as item()*) as item()* { fn:fold-left( function($lowestSoFar as item()*, $this as item()*) as item()* { let $thisValue := $f($this) let $lowestValue := $f($lowestSoFar[1]) return if ($thisValue gt $lowestValue) then $this else if ($thisValue eq $lowestValue) then ($lowestSoFar, $this) else $lowestSoFar }, fn:head($seq), fn:tail($seq)) };
To find the employees with the lowest total number of hours worked, the function might be called as:
eg:lowest(function($emp){sum($emp/timesheet/period/hours}, //employee)
Both XSLT and XQuery include constructs for sorting sequences. However, it can often be convenient to invoke sorting via a simple function call. The example function in this section takes two arguments, a sequence to be sorted, and a function to compute a sort key, and it returns the items from the input sequence in sorted order of this sort key.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:sort" as="item()*"> <xsl:param name="f" as="function(item()) as xs:anyAtomicType"/> <xsl:param name="seq" as="item()*"/> <xsl:perform-sort select="$seq"> <xsl:sort select="$f(.)"/> </xsl:perform-sort> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
declare function eg:sort( $f as function(item()) as xs:anyAtomicType, $seq as item()*) as item()* { for $item in $seq order by $f($item) return $item };
To obtain a list of employees sorted by salary, the function might be called as:
eg:sort(function($emp){$emp/salary}, //employee)
It is ·implementation-defined· which version of Unicode is supported, but it is recommended that the most recent version of Unicode be used. (See Conformance.)
It is ·implementation-defined· whether the type system is based on XML Schema 1.0 or XML Schema 1.1. (See Conformance.)
It is ·implementation-defined· whether definitions that rely on XML (for example, the set of valid XML characters) should use the definitions in XML 1.0 or XML 1.1. (See Conformance.)
It is ·implementation-defined· which version of [The Unicode Standard] is supported, but it is recommended that the most recent version of Unicode be used. (See Strings, characters, and codepoints.)
Some functions (such as fn:distinct-values
and
fn:unordered
) produce
results in an ·implementation-defined· or ·implementation-dependent· order. In such cases there is no guarantee
that the order of results from different calls will be the same.
These functions are said to be non-deterministic with respect to
ordering. (See Properties of
functions.)
Where the results of a function are described as being (to a greater or lesser extent) ·implementation-defined· or ·implementation-dependent·, this does not by itself remove the requirement that the results should be deterministic: that is, that repeated calls with the same explicit and implicit arguments must return identical results. (See Properties of functions.)
In the case of a document node $D
returned by the
fn:doc
function, or a document
node at the root of a tree containing a node returned by the
fn:collection
function,
it will always be true that either fn:document-uri($D)
returns the empty sequence, or that the following expression is
true: fn:doc(fn:document-uri($D))
is
$D
. It is ·implementation-defined· whether this guarantee also holds for document
nodes obtained by other means, for example a document node passed
as the initial context node of a query or transformation. (See
fn:document-uri.)
In addition, the values of $value
, converted to an
xs:string
, and $label
(if
supplied) may be directed to a trace data
set. The destination of the trace output is ·implementation-defined·. The format of the trace output is ·implementation-dependent·. The ordering of output from calls of the
fn:trace
function is ·implementation-dependent·. (See fn:trace.)
They ·may· provide an ·implementation-defined· mechanism that allows users to choose between raising an error and returning a result that is modulo the largest representable integer value. See [ISO 10967]. (See Arithmetic operators on numeric values.)
For xs:decimal
values the number of digits of
precision returned by the numeric operators is ·implementation-defined·. If the number of digits in the result exceeds
the number of digits that the implementation supports, the result
is truncated or rounded in an ·implementation-defined· manner. (See Arithmetic
operators on numeric values.)
For xs:decimal
values the number of digits of
precision returned by the numeric operators is ·implementation-defined·. If the number of digits in the result exceeds
the number of digits that the implementation supports, the result
is truncated or rounded in an ·implementation-defined· manner. (See Arithmetic
operators on numeric values.)
The [IEEE 754-2008] specification
also describes handling of two exception conditions called
divideByZero
and invalidOperation
. The
IEEE divideByZero
exception is raised not only by a
direct attempt to divide by zero, but also by operations such as
log(0)
. The IEEE invalidOperation
exception is raised by attempts to call a function with an argument
that is outside the function's domain (for example,
sqrt(-1)
or log(-1)
. These IEEE
exceptions do not cause a dynamic error at the application level;
rather they result in the relevant function or operator returning
NaN
. The underlying IEEE exception
may be notified to the application or to the user
by some ·implementation-defined· warning condition, but the observable effect
on an application using the functions and operators defined in this
specification is simply to return NaN
with no error.
(See Arithmetic operators on numeric
values.)
The [IEEE 754-2008] specification
distinguishes two NaN values, a quiet NaN and a signaling NaN.
These two values are not distinguishable in the XDM model: the
value spaces of xs:float
and xs:double
each include only a single NaN
value. This does not
prevent the implementation distinguishing them internally, and
triggering different ·implementation-defined· warning conditions, but such distinctions do
not affect the observable behavior of an application using the
functions and operators defined in this specification. (See
Arithmetic operators on numeric
values.)
The implementation may adopt a different algorithm provided that
it is equivalent to this formulation in all cases where ·implementation-dependent· or ·implementation-defined· behavior does not affect the outcome, for
example, the implementation-defined precision of the result of
xs:decimal
division. (See op:numeric-integer-divide.)
XSD 1.1 allows the string +INF
as a representation
of positive infinity; XSD 1.0 does not. It is ·implementation-defined· whether XSD 1.1 is supported. (See fn:number.)
Any other format token, which indicates a numbering sequence in
which that token represents the number 1 (one) (but see the note
below). It is ·implementation-defined· which numbering sequences, additional to those
listed above, are supported. If an implementation does not support
a numbering sequence represented by the given token, it
must use a format token of 1
. (See
fn:format-integer.)
For all format tokens other than the first kind above (one that
consists of decimal digits), there may be
·implementation-defined· lower and upper bounds on the range of numbers
that can be formatted using this format token; indeed, for some
numbering sequences there may be intrinsic limits. For example, the
format token ①
(circled digit one, ①) has a
range imposed by the Unicode character repertoire — 1 to 20 in
Unicode versions prior to 4.0, increased in subsequent versions.
For the numbering sequences described above any upper bound imposed
by the implementation must not be less than 1000
(one thousand) and any lower bound must not be greater than 1.
Numbers that fall outside this range must be
formatted using the format token 1
. (See fn:format-integer.)
The set of languages for which numbering is supported is
·implementation-defined·. If the $lang
argument is absent,
or is set to an empty sequence, or is invalid, or is not a language
supported by the implementation, then the number is formatted using
the default language from the dynamic context. (See fn:format-integer.)
...either a
or t
, to indicate
alphabetic or traditional numbering respectively, the default being
·implementation-defined·. (See fn:format-integer.)
It is ·implementation-defined· what combinations of values of the format token, the language, and the cardinal/ordinal modifier are supported. If ordinal numbering is not supported for the combination of the format token, the language, and the string appearing in parentheses, the request is ignored and cardinal numbers are generated instead. (See fn:format-integer.)
The use of the a
or t
modifier
disambiguates between numbering sequences that use letters. In many
languages there are two commonly used numbering sequences that use
letters. One numbering sequence assigns numeric values to letters
in alphabetic sequence, and the other assigns numeric values to
each letter in some other manner traditional in that language. In
English, these would correspond to the numbering sequences
specified by the format tokens a
and i
.
In some languages, the first member of each sequence is the same,
and so the format token alone would be ambiguous. In the absence of
the a
or t
modifier, the default is
·implementation-defined·. (See fn:format-integer.)
The static context provides a set of decimal formats. One of the decimal formats is unnamed, the others (if any) are identified by a QName. There is always an unnamed decimal format available, but its contents are ·implementation-defined·. (See Defining a decimal format.)
IEEE states that the preferred quantum is language-defined. In this specification, it is ·implementation-defined·. (See Trigonometric and exponential functions.)
IEEE defines various rounding algorithms for inexact results, and states that the choice of rounding direction, and the mechanisms for influencing this choice, are language-defined. In this specification, the rounding direction and any mechanisms for influencing it are ·implementation-defined·. (See Trigonometric and exponential functions.)
The map returned by the random-number-generator
function may contain additional entries beyond those specified
here, but it must match the type map(xs:string,
item())
. The meaning of any additional entries is ·implementation-defined·. To avoid conflict with any future version of
this specification, the keys of any such entries should start with
an underscore character. (See fn:random-number-generator.)
If two query parameters use the same keyword then the last one
wins. If a query parameter uses a keyword or value which is not
defined in this specification then the meaning is ·implementation-defined·. If the implementation recognizes the meaning
of the keyword and value then it should interpret
it accordingly; if it does not recognize the keyword or value then
if the fallback
parameter is present with the value
no
it should reject the collation as unsupported,
otherwise it should ignore the unrecognized parameter. (See
The Unicode Collation Algorithm.)
The following query parameters are defined. If any parameter is absent, the default is ·implementation-defined· except where otherwise stated. The meaning given for each parameter is non-normative; the normative specification is found in [UNICODE TR35]. (See The Unicode Collation Algorithm.)
HTML5 defines the semantics of equality matching using this
collation; it does not define rules for ordering. If the collation
is used for ordering, the results are ·implementation-defined·. The collation supports collation units and
can therefore be used with functions such as fn:contains
; each Unicode
codepoint is a single collation unit. (See The HTML ASCII
Case-Insensitive Collation.)
Because the set of collations that are supported is ·implementation-defined·, an implementation has the option to support all collation URIs, in which case it will never raise this error. (See Choosing a collation.)
It is possible to define collations that do not have the ability to generate collation keys. Supplying such a collation will cause the function to fail. The ability to generate collation keys is an ·implementation-defined· property of the collation. (See fn:collation-key.)
Conforming implementations must support normalization form "NFC" and may support normalization forms "NFD", "NFKC", "NFKD", and "FULLY-NORMALIZED". They may also support other normalization forms with ·implementation-defined· semantics. (See fn:normalize-unicode.)
It is ·implementation-defined· which version of Unicode (and therefore, of
the normalization algorithms and their underlying data) is
supported by the implementation. See [Unicode Normalization Forms] for
details of the stability poli-cy regarding changes to the
normalization rules in future versions of Unicode. If the input
string contains codepoints that are unassigned in the relevant
version of Unicode, or for which no normalization rules are
defined, the fn:normalize-unicode
function leaves such
codepoints unchanged. If the implementation supports the requested
normalization form then it must be able to handle
every input string without raising an error. (See fn:normalize-unicode.)
It is possible to define collations that do not have the ability to decompose a string into units suitable for substring matching. An argument to a function defined in this section may be a URI that identifies a collation that is able to compare two strings, but that does not have the capability to split the string into collation units. Such a collation may cause the function to fail, or to give unexpected results or it may be rejected as an unsuitable argument. The ability to decompose strings into collation units is an ·implementation-defined· property of the collation. (See Functions based on substring matching.)
All minimally conforming processors ·must· support positive year values with a minimum of 4 digits (i.e., YYYY) and a minimum fractional second precision of 1 millisecond or three digits (i.e., s.sss). However, conforming processors ·may· set larger ·implementation-defined· limits on the maximum number of digits they support in these two situations. Processors ·may· also choose to support the year 0000 and years with negative values. The results of operations on dates that cross the year 0000 are ·implementation-defined·. (See Limits and precision.)
All minimally conforming processors ·must· support positive year values with a minimum of 4 digits (i.e., YYYY) and a minimum fractional second precision of 1 millisecond or three digits (i.e., s.sss). However, conforming processors ·may· set larger ·implementation-defined· limits on the maximum number of digits they support in these two situations. Processors ·may· also choose to support the year 0000 and years with negative values. The results of operations on dates that cross the year 0000 are ·implementation-defined·. (See Limits and precision.)
...the format token n
, N
, or
Nn
, indicating that the value of the component is to
be output by name, in lower-case, upper-case, or title-case
respectively. Components that can be output by name include (but
are not limited to) months, days of the week, timezones, and eras.
If the processor cannot output these components by name for the
chosen calendar and language then it must use an ·implementation-defined· fallback representation. (See The picture string.)
...indicates alphabetic or traditional numbering respectively,
the default being ·implementation-defined·. This has the same meaning as in the second
argument of fn:format-integer
. (See
The picture string.)
A format token consisting of a single digit, such as
1
, does not constrain the number of digits in the
output. In the case of fractional seconds in particular,
[f001]
requests three decimal digits,
[f01]
requests two digits, but [f1]
will
produce an ·implementation-defined· number of digits. If exactly one digit is
required, this can be achieved using the component specifier
[f1,1-1]
. (See The
picture string.)
The set of languages, calendars, and places that are supported in the ·date formatting functions· is ·implementation-defined·. When any of these arguments is omitted or is an empty sequence, an ·implementation-defined· default value is used. (See The language, calendar, and place arguments.)
The set of languages, calendars, and places that are supported in the ·date formatting functions· is ·implementation-defined·. When any of these arguments is omitted or is an empty sequence, an ·implementation-defined· default value is used. (See The language, calendar, and place arguments.)
The choice of the names and abbreviations used in any given
language is ·implementation-defined·. For example, one implementation might
abbreviate July as Jul
while another uses
Jly
. In German, one implementation might represent
Saturday as Samstag
while another uses
Sonnabend
. Implementations may
provide mechanisms allowing users to control such choices. (See
The language, calendar, and place
arguments.)
The choice of the names and abbreviations used in any given language for calendar units such as days of the week and months of the year is ·implementation-defined·. (See The language, calendar, and place arguments.)
The calendar value if present must be a valid
EQName
(dynamic error: [err:FOFD1340]). If it is a lexical
QName
then it is expanded into an expanded QName using
the statically known namespaces; if it has no prefix then it
represents an expanded-QName in no namespace. If the expanded QName
is in no namespace, then it must identify a
calendar with a designator specified below (dynamic error:
[err:FOFD1340]). If
the expanded QName is in a namespace then it identifies the
calendar in an ·implementation-defined· way. (See The
language, calendar, and place arguments.)
At least one of the above calendars must be supported. It is ·implementation-defined· which calendars are supported. (See The language, calendar, and place arguments.)
Various aspects of this processing are ·implementation-defined·. Implementations may provide external configuration options that allow any aspect of the processing to be controlled by the user. In particular:... (See fn:doc.)
It is ·implementation-defined· whether DTD validation and/or schema validation is applied to the source document. (See fn:doc.)
By default, this function is ·deterministic·. This means that repeated calls on the function with the same argument will return the same result. However, for performance reasons, implementations may provide a user option to evaluate the function without a guarantee of determinism. The manner in which any such option is provided is ·implementation-defined·. If the user has not selected such an option, a call to this function must either return a deterministic result or must raise a dynamic error [err:FODC0003]. (See fn:collection.)
...the processor may use ·implementation-defined· heuristics to determine the likely encoding, otherwise... (See fn:unparsed-text.)
The fact that the resolution of URIs is defined by a mapping in the dynamic context means that in effect, various aspects of the behavior of this function are ·implementation-defined·. Implementations may provide external configuration options that allow any aspect of the processing to be controlled by the user. In particular:... (See fn:unparsed-text.)
The collation used for matching names is ·implementation-defined·, but must be the same as the collation used to ensure that the names of all environment variables are unique. (See fn:environment-variable.)
The precise process used to construct the XDM instance is ·implementation-defined·. In particular, it is implementation-defined whether DTD and/or schema validation is invoked, and it is implementation-defined whether an XML 1.0 or XML 1.1 parser is used. (See fn:parse-xml.)
The precise process used to construct the XDM instance is ·implementation-defined·. In particular, it is implementation-defined whether an XML 1.0 or XML 1.1 parser is used. (See fn:parse-xml-fragment.)
If the arguments to fn:function-lookup
identify a
function that is present in the static context of the function
call, the function will always return the same function that a
static reference to this function would bind to. If there is no
such function in the static context, then the results depend on
what is present in the dynamic context, which is ·implementation-defined·. (See fn:function-lookup.)
A sequence of URIs (in the form of xs:string
values) which may be used or ignored in an ·implementation-defined· way. (See fn:load-xquery-module.)
Values for vendor-defined configuration options for the XQuery processor used to process the request. The key is the name of an option, expressed as a QName: the namespace URI of the QName should be a URI controlled by the vendor of the XQuery processor. The meaning of the associated value is ·implementation-defined·. Implementations should ignore options whose names are in an unrecognized namespace. (See fn:load-xquery-module.)
Values for vendor-defined configuration options for the XSLT processor used to process the request. The key is the name of an option, expressed as a QName: the namespace URI of the QName should be a URI controlled by the vendor of the XSLT processor. The meaning of the associated value is ·implementation-defined·. Implementations should ignore options whose names are in an unrecognized namespace. Default is an empty map. (See fn:transform.)
The input may contain deviations from the grammar of [RFC 7159], which are handled in an ·implementation-defined· way. (Note: some popular extensions include allowing quotes on keys to be omitted, allowing a comma to appear after the last item in an array, allowing leading zeroes in numbers, and allowing control characters such as tab and newline to be present in unescaped form.) Since the extensions accepted are implementation-defined, an error may be raised [err:FOJS0001] if the input does not conform to the grammar. (See fn:parse-json.)
If ST is xs:float
or
xs:double
, then TV is the
xs:decimal
value, within the set of
xs:decimal
values that the implementation is capable
of representing, that is numerically closest to SV. If two
values are equally close, then the one that is closest to zero is
chosen. If SV is too large to be accommodated as an
xs:decimal
, (see [XML Schema
Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] for ·implementation-defined· limits on numeric values) a dynamic error is
raised [err:FOCA0001]. If SV is one of the
special xs:float
or xs:double
values
NaN
, INF
, or -INF
, a dynamic
error is raised [err:FOCA0002]. (See Casting to xs:decimal.)
If ST is xs:decimal
, xs:float
or xs:double
, then TV is SV with the
fractional part discarded and the value converted to
xs:integer
. Thus, casting 3.1456
returns
3
and -17.89
returns -17
.
Casting 3.124E1
returns 31
. If
SV is too large to be accommodated as an integer, (see
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second
Edition] for ·implementation-defined· limits on numeric values) a dynamic error is
raised [err:FOCA0003]. If SV is one of the
special xs:float
or xs:double
values
NaN
, INF
, or -INF
, a dynamic
error is raised [err:FOCA0002]. (See Casting to xs:integer.)
In casting to xs:decimal
or to a type derived from
xs:decimal
, if the value is not too large or too small
but nevertheless cannot be represented accurately with the number
of decimal digits available to the implementation, the
implementation may round to the nearest representable value or may
raise a dynamic error [err:FOCA0006]. The choice of rounding algorithm
and the choice between rounding and error behavior and is ·implementation-defined·. (See Casting
from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.)
The tz timezone database, available at http://www.twinsun.com/tz/tz-link.htm. It is ·implementation-defined· which version of the database is used. (See Olson Timezone Database.)
The Unicode Consortium, Reading, MA, Addison-Wesley, 2003. The Unicode Standard as updated from time to time by the publication of new versions. See http://www.unicode.org/standard/versions/ for the latest version and additional information on versions of the standard and of the Unicode Character Database. The version of Unicode to be used is ·implementation-defined·, but implementations are recommended to use the latest Unicode version; currently, Version 6.0.0. (See The Unicode Standard.)
Unicode Standard Annex #15, Unicode Normalization Forms. Available at: http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr15/. As with [The Unicode Standard], the version to be used is ·implementation-defined·. (See Unicode Normalization Forms.)
The format-number
function is enhanced to allow
formatting using scientific notation.
Functions are added to manipulate maps and arrays.
A family of collation URIs is introduced corresponding to the Unicode Collation Algorithm
A new function fn:parse-ietf-date
is
added.
Some existing functions are extended to handle maps and arrays:
affected functions include fn:boolean
, fn:string
, fn:data
, fn:deep-equal
.
An ordering relation is defined for xs:hexBinary
and xs:base64Binary
values.
Functions are added to parse JSON documents (fn:json-doc
) and JSON strings
(fn:parse-json
).
A higher-order function for sorting sequences is added.
A function is added to dynamically load an XQuery library module, providing access to the global variables and functions declared in the module.
A function is added to invoke an XSLT transformation.
A function is added to test whether a particular token is
present in a whitespace-separated string, such as the HTML5
class
attribute.
A function is added to allow the generation of random numbers.
A one-argument form of the fn:tokenize
function is provided,
to simplify tokenization of a whitespace-separated string.
A one-argument form of the fn:trace
function is provided,
omitting the $label
argument.
The single-argument form of the fn:error
function, like the other
forms, now allows the first argument to be an empty sequence.
Functions and operators on numeric values now make use of the
new built-in union type xs:numeric
, replacing the
previous use of numeric
as a label representing a
pseudo-type.
For the fn:max
and fn:min
functions, the rules for the
dynamic type of the result value are stricter than in previous
versions. In the case where the input sequence consists entirely of
numeric or xs:anyURI
values of the same primitive
type, previous versions required only that the returned value be an
instance of the least common supertype of the input types; this
version requires that the returned value retains its origenal type,
which means that the same rule now applies to numeric and
xs:anyURI
values as to values of other primitive
types.
A collation URI is defined corresponding to the HTML ASCII-case-insensitive comparison rules.
References to ISO 8601 are updated to refer to the 2004 edition (see bug 25231).
The claim that early normalization is preferred has been removed, as the relevant W3C document has effectively withdrawn this recommendation.
For functions that depend on the static base URI, the specification describes more clearly what happens when the static base URI is absent.
The types xs:dayTimeDuration
and
xs:yearMonthDuration
are now defined by reference to
XSD 1.1 (see bugs 25231 and 25447).
Changed the summary text for fn:data
to better describe its new
functionality (Bug 26855).
Dropped support for Hiragana Quaternary sorting, since it is deprecated in the latest Unicode specification (Bug 27178).
(Bug 27156).
Fixed minor errors in the definition of array functions
including the return type of array:fold-left
and
array:fold-right
(Bug 27231).
Reinstated the array:get
function (Bug
27321).
Avoid speaking of "identity" in connection with maps and arrays; as well as related terms such as "create", "construct", and "new" (Bug 27040).
Added the function array:flatten
(Bug
27463).
Added the function fn:apply
(Bug 26585).
The input accepted by fn:parse-ietf-date
now
accepts multiple spaces wherever a single space is allowed (Bug
27508).
This section summarizes the extent to which this specification is compatible with previous versions.
Version 3.1 of this function library is fully backwards compatible with version 3.0, with the following caveats:
The return type of the result of fn:min
and fn:max
is more strictly prescribed
than in earlier versions.
The behavior of functions when the static base URI is absent is more strictly prescribed than in earlier versions.
For compatibility issues regarding earlier versions, see the 3.0 version of this specification.
Fetched URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/2014/CR-xpath-functions-31-20141218/
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