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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Extracting a part of XML File Post 302259064 by shridhard on Monday 17th of November 2008 06:41:11 AM
Old 11-17-2008
Thanks it resolved the issue

Thanks Murphy Smilie, xsltproc resolved the issue. There were two problems I faced.
One was that there was a xml tag in the beginning of the html output and second was the html and body tags were missing.

For the xml tag I used:
sed '1,1d' input_with_xml_tag.html output_without_xml_tag.html

and I was not much bothered about the html and body tag missing as the Portal takes care of that.

Thanks and Regards,
Shridhar
 

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wml::std::lang(3)						     EN Tools							 wml::std::lang(3)

NAME
wml::std::lang - Multi-Lingual Support SYNOPSIS
#use wml::std::lang <lang:new id=xx [short]> <lang:area> (xx) ... (yy) ... </lang:area> <lang:set-wildcard ...> <lang:star: ...*..> <lang:star:href: index.*.html|index.html> <lang:star:slice: index.*.html> <lang:xx>...</lang:xx> <lang:xx: ...> <xx>...</xx> <xx: ...> <lang:current> <lang:list> DESCRIPTION
This include file provides high-level multi-lingual support via Slices. Its purpose is to define the slices ``"LANG_XX"'' according to the multi-lingual selection tags. The general intend of this slice-based approach is to use the defined slices in Pass 9 (Slice) via WMLs -o option. A typical shebang-line example for the use with a webserver's content negotiation feature is: #!wml -o (ALL-LANG_*)+LANG_EN:index.html.en -o (ALL-LANG_*)+LANG_DE:index.html.de Since WML 1.7.0, the "<lang:star:slice:>" tag is an alternative to this shebang-line. Before you can use a language, you have to define the corresponding tags via "<lang:new>". For instance when you want to use the languages english and german, use: <lang:new id=en> <lang:new id=de> Then the following tags are defined: <lang:en>...</lang:en> <lang:de>...</lang:de> <lang:en: ...> <lang:de: ...> i.e. for both languages a container tag and a simple tag is defined. The container tag is more readable while the simple tag is nicer for short variants. When the names "lang:xx" are still to large for you, you can use the "short" attribute to "<lang:new>" <lang:new id=en short> <lang:new id=de short> when then leads to the defintion of the shortcut variants: <en>...</en> <de>...</de> <en: ...> <de: ...> Additionally you always have the "<lang:area>"..."</lang:area>" container tag available which provides an alternative way of selecting the language in its body. It automatically surrounds the data between `"(xx)"' start tags with the corresponding "LANG_XX" slice. The following are equal: <lang:xx: Foo><lang:yy Bar> <lang:xx>Foo</lang:xx><lang:yy>Bar</lang:yy> <lang:area>(xx)Foo(yy)Bar</lang:area> Because these three lines internally get expanded to [LANG_XX:Foo:][LANG_YY:Bar:] [LANG_XX:Foo:][LANG_YY:Bar:] [LANG_XX:Foo:][LANG_YY:Bar:] There is one additional special tag: "<lang:star:>". This tag expands its attribute line like the "<lang:xx:>" tags but multiple times. Actually as much as defined languages exists ("<lang:new>"!). And in each expansion the asterisks (=stars) in the data gets replaced by the language identifier. Is is sometimes convenient to use another wildcard, e.g. when defining navigation bars. The "<lang:set-wildcard>" tag does the job. The attribute becomes the wildcard used in future substitutions. Without attribute, the default value is restored. You may specify any regular expression, and do not forget to escape special characters (the astersisk is in fact ``\*''). <lang:set-wildcard "%"> <lang:star: index.%.html> <lang:set-wildcard> There is a more specialized variant named "<lang:star:href:>" which is similar to "<lang:star:>" but treats its attribute value as a URL part and tries to check if it already exists. If it doesn't exist the tag expands the value without the star or an alternative value which can be appended with ``|alt-value''. The "<lang:star:slice:>" is another variant to help writing multi-lingual files quickly. It must come after all occurences of "<lang:new>" tags. <lang:star:slice: index.html.*> The `%BASE' form is recognized (see wml(1)) and an empty argument is equivalent to the string `"%BASE.*.html"'. But note that the use of this tag instead of the WML shebang line prevents WMk from doing its job, because WMk can not guess output filenames in this case. For complex multi-lingual documents, you may want to know in which language text is currently processed. This is achieved with <lang:current> which always returns current language (as defined in "<lang:new>" or an empty string when outside of any language portion. The macro <lang:list> prints the newline separated list of defined languages. EXAMPLE
The following is an example of a webpage "index.wml" with a multi-lingual header and hyperlink: #use wml::std::lang #use wml::std::href <lang:new id=en short> <lang:new id=de short> <lang:star:slice: index.html.*> <h1><en: Welcome><de: Willkommen></h1> <href name="The Hyperlink" url="<lang:star: index.*.html>"> <href name="The Hyperlink" url="<lang:star:href: index2.*.html|index2.html>"> When processed via $ wml index.wml The following two output files are generated (assuming that index2.html and only index2.de.html exists): index.html.en: <h1>Welcome</h1> <a href="index.en.html">The Hyperlink</a> <a href="index2.html">The Hyperlink</a> index.html.de: <h1>Willkommen</h1> <a href="index.de.html">The Hyperlink</a> <a href="index2.de.html">The Hyperlink</a> AUTHOR
Ralf S. Engelschall rse@engelschall.com www.engelschall.com Denis Barbier barbier@engelschall.com REQUIRES
Internal: P1, P2, P6, P9 External: -- SEE ALSO
slice(1) EN Tools 2014-04-16 wml::std::lang(3)
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