Copyright © 2002 W3C® (MIT, INRIA, Keio), All Rights Reserved. W3C liability, trademark, document use, and software licensing rules apply.
This document defines basic operators and functions on the datatypes defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] for use in XQuery, XPath, XSLT and other related XML standards. It also discusses operators and functions on nodes and node sequences as defined in the [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model] for use in XQuery, XPath, XSLT and other related XML standards.
This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. The latest status of this document series is maintained at the W3C.
This is a Public Working Draft of this document for review by W3C Members and other interested parties. It is a draft document and may be updated, replaced, or made obsolete by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use W3C Working Drafts as reference material or to cite them as other than "work in progress". This is work in progress and does not imply endorsement by the W3C membership.
This document describes constructor functions, operators, and functions that are used in [XPath 2.0], [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language], and [XSLT 2.0] and possibly other W3C specifications.
Among the more important changes from the previous version of this document is that an error function has been added (see 3 The Error Function) and there has been some amplification of the rules for constructing simple types and for casting (see section 4 Constructor Functions and section 16 Casting Functions). This work is not yet complete and will be further elaborated in forthcoming versions of this specification. Another area currently under discussion is whether the input timezone on date and time types needs to be preserved. This also impacts the functions to add and remove timezones from date and time values that is discussed in 8.6 Timezone Functions on dateTime, date, and time.
This document has been produced following the procedures set out for the W3C Process. This document was produced through the efforts of a joint task force of the W3C XML Query Working Group and the W3C XML Schema Working Group (both part of the W3C XML Activity) and a second joint task force of the W3C XML Query Working Group and the W3C XSL Working Group (part of the W3C Style Activity). It is designed to be read in conjunction with the following documents: [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model], [XPath 2.0], [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XSLT 2.0].
The following are identified as high priority issues. Reviewers are requested to provide feedback on these issues using the address below.
[Issue 186: Preserve original timezone in date/time values.]
[Issue 185: Remove op:duration-equal]
Public comments on this document and its open issues are welcome. Comments should be sent to the W3C XPath/XQuery mailing list, public-qt-comments@w3.org (archived at http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-qt-comments/).
Patent disclosures relevant to this specification may be found on the XML Query Working Group's patent disclosure page and the XSL Working Group's patent disclosure page.
A list of current W3C Recommendations and other technical documents can be found at http://www.w3.org/TR/.
1 Introduction
1.1 Terminology
1.2 Datatypes
1.3 Syntax
1.4 Notations
1.5 Namespace Prefix
2 Accessors
2.1 fn:node-kind
2.2 fn:node-name
2.3 fn:string
2.4 fn:data
2.5 fn:base-uri
2.6 fn:unique-ID
3 The Error Function
3.1 Examples
4 Constructor Functions
4.1 Constructor Functions for XML Schema Built-in Types
4.2 Constructor Functions for User-Defined Types
5 Functions and Operators on Numerics
5.1 Numeric Types
5.2 Operators on Numeric Values
5.2.1 op:numeric-add
5.2.2 op:numeric-subtract
5.2.3 op:numeric-multiply
5.2.4 op:numeric-divide
5.2.5 op:numeric-integer-divide
5.2.6 op:numeric-mod
5.2.7 op:numeric-unary-plus
5.2.8 op:numeric-unary-minus
5.3 Comparison of Numeric Values
5.3.1 op:numeric-equal
5.3.2 op:numeric-less-than
5.3.3 op:numeric-greater-than
5.4 Functions on Numeric Values
5.4.1 fn:floor
5.4.2 fn:ceiling
5.4.3 fn:round
6 Functions on Strings
6.1 String Types
6.2 Functions to Assemble and Disassemble Strings
6.2.1 fn:codepoints-to-string
6.2.2 fn:string-to-codepoints
6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings
6.3.1 fn:compare
6.4 Functions on String Values
6.4.1 fn:concat
6.4.2 fn:string-join
6.4.3 fn:starts-with
6.4.4 fn:ends-with
6.4.5 fn:contains
6.4.6 fn:substring
6.4.7 fn:string-length
6.4.8 fn:substring-before
6.4.9 fn:substring-after
6.4.10 fn:normalize-space
6.4.11 fn:normalize-unicode
6.4.12 fn:upper-case
6.4.13 fn:lower-case
6.4.14 fn:translate
6.4.15 fn:string-pad
6.4.16 fn:matches
6.4.17 fn:replace
6.4.18 fn:tokenize
6.4.19 fn:escape-uri
7 Functions and Operators on Booleans
7.1 Boolean Constructor 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:not
8 Functions and Operators on Durations, Dates, and Times
8.1 Duration, Date, and Time Types
8.2 Two Totally Ordered Subtypes of Duration
8.2.1 yearMonthDuration
8.2.2 dayTimeDuration
8.3 Comparisons of Duration, Date and Time Values
8.3.1 op:duration-equal
8.3.2 op:yearMonthDuration-equal
8.3.3 op:yearMonthDuration-less-than
8.3.4 op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than
8.3.5 op:dayTimeDuration-equal
8.3.6 op:dayTimeDuration-less-than
8.3.7 op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than
8.3.8 op:dateTime-equal
8.3.9 op:dateTime-less-than
8.3.10 op:dateTime-greater-than
8.3.11 op:date-equal
8.3.12 op:date-less-than
8.3.13 op:date-greater-than
8.3.14 op:time-equal
8.3.15 op:time-less-than
8.3.16 op:time-greater-than
8.3.17 op:gYearMonth-equal
8.3.18 op:gYear-equal
8.3.19 op:gMonthDay-equal
8.3.20 op:gMonth-equal
8.3.21 op:gDay-equal
8.4 Component Extraction Functions on Duration, Date and Time Values
8.4.1 fn:get-years-from-yearMonthDuration
8.4.2 fn:get-months-from-yearMonthDuration
8.4.3 fn:get-days-from-dayTimeDuration
8.4.4 fn:get-hours-from-dayTimeDuration
8.4.5 fn:get-minutes-from-dayTimeDuration
8.4.6 fn:get-seconds-from-dayTimeDuration
8.4.7 fn:get-year-from-dateTime
8.4.8 fn:get-month-from-dateTime
8.4.9 fn:get-day-from-dateTime
8.4.10 fn:get-hours-from-dateTime
8.4.11 fn:get-minutes-from-dateTime
8.4.12 fn:get-seconds-from-dateTime
8.4.13 fn:get-timezone-from-dateTime
8.4.14 fn:get-year-from-date
8.4.15 fn:get-month-from-date
8.4.16 fn:get-day-from-date
8.4.17 fn:get-timezone-from-date
8.4.18 fn:get-hours-from-time
8.4.19 fn:get-minutes-from-time
8.4.20 fn:get-seconds-from-time
8.4.21 fn:get-timezone-from-time
8.5 Arithmetic Functions on yearMonthDuration and dayTimeDuration
8.5.1 op:add-yearMonthDurations
8.5.2 op:subtract-yearMonthDurations
8.5.3 op:multiply-yearMonthDuration
8.5.4 op:divide-yearMonthDuration
8.5.5 op:add-dayTimeDurations
8.5.6 op:subtract-dayTimeDurations
8.5.7 op:multiply-dayTimeDuration
8.5.8 op:divide-dayTimeDuration
8.6 Timezone Functions on dateTime, date, and time
8.6.1 fn:add-timezone-to-dateTime
8.6.2 fn:remove-timezone-from-dateTime
8.6.3 fn:add-timezone-to-date
8.6.4 fn:add-timezone-to-time
8.6.5 fn:remove-timezone-from-time
8.7 Adding and Subtracting Durations From dateTime, date and time
8.7.1 fn:subtract-dateTimes-yielding-yearMonthDuration
8.7.2 fn:subtract-dateTimes-yielding-dayTimeDuration
8.7.3 op:subtract-dates
8.7.4 op:subtract-times
8.7.5 op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime
8.7.6 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime
8.7.7 op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime
8.7.8 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime
8.7.9 op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date
8.7.10 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date
8.7.11 op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date
8.7.12 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date
8.7.13 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time
8.7.14 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time
9 Functions Related to QNames
9.1 Constructor Functions for QNames
9.1.1 fn:QName-in-context
9.2 Functions Related to QNames
9.2.1 op:QName-equal
9.2.2 fn:get-local-name-from-QName
9.2.3 fn:get-namespace-from-QName
9.2.4 fn:get-namespace-uri-for-prefix
9.2.5 fn:get-in-scope-namespaces
10 Functions and Operators for anyURI
10.1 Constructor Functions for anyURI
10.1.1 fn:resolve-uri
10.2 Functions on anyURI
10.2.1 op:anyURI-equal
11 Functions and Operators on base64Binary and hexBinary
11.1 Comparisons of base64Binary and hexBinary Values
11.1.1 op:hexBinary-equal
11.1.2 op:base64Binary-equal
12 Functions and Operators on NOTATION
12.1 Functions on NOTATION
12.1.1 op:NOTATION-equal
13 Functions and Operators on Nodes
13.1 Functions and Operators on Nodes
13.1.1 fn:name
13.1.2 fn:local-name
13.1.3 fn:namespace-uri
13.1.4 fn:number
13.1.5 fn:lang
13.1.6 op:node-equal
13.1.7 fn:deep-equal
13.1.8 op:node-before
13.1.9 op:node-after
13.1.10 fn:root
14 Functions and Operators on Sequences
14.1 Constructor Functions on Sequences
14.1.1 op:to
14.2 Functions and Operators on Sequences
14.2.1 fn:boolean
14.2.2 op:concatenate
14.2.3 fn:item-at
14.2.4 fn:index-of
14.2.5 fn:empty
14.2.6 fn:exists
14.2.7 fn:distinct-nodes
14.2.8 fn:distinct-values
14.2.9 fn:insert
14.2.10 fn:remove
14.2.11 fn:subsequence
14.2.12 fn:unordered
14.3 Equals, Union, Intersection and Except
14.3.1 fn:sequence-deep-equal
14.3.2 fn:sequence-node-equal
14.3.3 op:union
14.3.4 op:intersect
14.3.5 op:except
14.4 Aggregate Functions
14.4.1 fn:count
14.4.2 fn:avg
14.4.3 fn:max
14.4.4 fn:min
14.4.5 fn:sum
14.5 Functions that Generate Sequences
14.5.1 fn:id
14.5.2 fn:idref
14.5.3 fn:document
14.5.4 fn:collection
14.5.5 fn:input
15 Context Functions
15.1 fn:context-item
15.2 fn:position
15.3 fn:last
15.4 fn:current-dateTime
15.4.1 Examples
15.5 fn:current-date
15.5.1 Examples
15.6 fn:current-time
15.6.1 Examples
15.7 fn:default-collation
15.8 fn:implicit-timezone
16 Casting Functions
16.1 Casting from primitive types to primitive types
16.2 Casting to derived types
16.3 Casting from derived types to parent types
16.4 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy
16.5 Casting across the type hierarchy
16.6 Casting from string and anySimpleType
16.7 Casting to string and anySimpleType
16.8 Casting to numeric types
16.9 Casting to duration and date and time types
16.10 Casting to boolean
16.11 Casting to base64Binary and hexBinary
16.12 Casting to anyURI
16.13 Casting to NOTATION
A References
A.1 Normative
A.2 Non-normative
B Compatibility with XPath 1.0 (Non-Normative)
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, intersect and except on sequences of values
C.2.1 eg:value-union()
C.2.2 eg:value-intersect()
C.2.3 eg:value-except()
D Functions and Operators Issues List (Non-Normative)
E ChangeLog since Last Public Version on 2002-08-16 (Non-Normative)
F Function and Operator Quick Reference (Non-Normative)
F.1 Functions and Operators by Section
F.2 Functions and Operators Alphabetically
[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] defines a number of primitive and derived datatypes, collectively known as built-in datatypes. This document defines operations on those datatypes for use in XQuery, XPath, XSLT and related XML standards. This document also discusses operators and functions on nodes and node sequences as defined in the [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model] for use in XQuery, XPath, XSLT and other related XML standards.
The terminology used to describe the functions and operators on [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] is defined in the body of this specification. The terms defined in the following list are used in building those definitions:
A feature of this specification included to ensure that implementations that use this feature remain compatible with [XPath 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 non-conformant or in error.
Possibly differing between implementations, but specified 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.
The diagram below shows the built-in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. Solid lines connect a base datatype above to a derived datatype below. Dashed lines connect a datatype created as a list of an item type above.
Diagram courtesy Asir Vedamuthu, webMethods
The purpose of this document is to catalog the functions and operators required for XPath 2.0, XML Query 1.0, and XSLT 2.0. The exact syntax used to invoke these functions and operators is specified in [XPath 2.0], [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language], and [XSLT 2.0].
In general, the above specifications do not support function overloading. Consequently, there are no overloaded functions in this document except for legacy [XPath 1.0] functions such as string()
which takes a single argument of a variety of types and concat()
which takes a variable number of string arguments. This does not apply to operators such as "+" which may be overloaded. Functions with optional arguments are allowed. If optional arguments are omitted, omissions are assumed to begin from the right.
This document defines, among other things, constructor functions and other functions that apply to one or more data types. Each function is defined by specifying its signature, a description of each of its arguments, and its semantics. For many functions, examples are included to illustrate their use.
Each function's signature is presented in a form like this:
fn:function-name
($parameter-name
as
parameter-type
, ...) as
return-type
In this notation, function-name
is the name of the function whose signature is being specified. If the function takes no parameters, then the name is followed by an empty set of parentheses: ()
; otherwise, the name is followed by a parenthesized list of parameter declarations, each declaration specifying the static type of the parameter and a non-normative name used to reference the parameter when the function's semantics are specified. If there are two or more parameter declarations, they are separated by a comma. The return-type
specifies the static type of the value returned by the function. In most cases, the dynamic type returned by the function is the same as its static type. The few exceptions to this rule are documented in specific functions.
The function name is a QName
as defined in [XML 1.0 Recommendation (Second Edition)] and must adhere to its syntactic conventions. Following [XPath 1.0], function names are composed of English words separated by hyphens,"-". If a function name contains a [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] datatype name, this may have intercapitalized spelling and is used in the function name as such. For example, fn:get-timezone-from-dateTime
.
As is customary, the parameter type name indicates that the function accepts arguments of that type, or types derived from it, in that position. This is called subtype substitution. Details of the semantics of passing parameters to functions are discussed in Appendix B of [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language].
Some functions accept the empty sequence as an argument and some may return the empty sequence. This is indicated in the function signature by following the parameter type name with a question mark:
fn:function-name
($parameter-name
as
parameter-type?
) as
return-type?
The functions and operators discussed in this document are contained in three namespaces (see [Namespaces in XML]) and referenced using a QName.
Constructor functions for the built-in datatypes defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] discussed in 4 Constructor Functions are in the
XML Schema namespace and named in this document using the xs:
prefix. The namespace prefix used in this document is fn:
for the user functions and op:
for the operator functions. The namespace prefix for these functions can vary, as long as the prefix is bound to the correct URI.
The URIs of the namespaces are:
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-datatypes
for constructors
http://www.w3.org/2002/11/xquery-operators
for operators
http://www.w3.org/2002/11/xquery-functions
for functions.
The functions defined with an fn:
prefix are callable by the user. Functions defined with the op:
prefix are described here to underpin the definitions of the operators in [XPath 2.0], [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language], and [XSLT 2.0]. These functions are not available directly to users, and there is no requirement that implementations should actually provide these functions. For example, multiplication is generally associated with the *
operator, but it is described as a function in this document. For example:
op:multiply
($operand1
as
numeric
, $operand2
as
numeric
) as
numeric
The [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model] describes accessors on different types of nodes and defines their semantics. Some of these accessors are exposed to the user through the functions described below.
Function | Accessor | Accepts | Returns |
---|---|---|---|
fn:node-kind
|
node-kind
| any kind of node | string |
fn:node-name
|
name
| any kind of node | zero or one QName |
fn:string
|
string-value
| item | string |
fn:data
|
typed-value
| any kind of node | a sequence of atomic values |
fn:base-uri
|
base-uri
| Element or Document node or no argument | zero or one anyURI |
fn:unique-ID
|
unique-ID
| Element node | zero or one ID |
fn:node-kind
($srcval
as
node
) as
string
This function returns a string value representing the node's kind: either "document", "element", "attribute", "text", "namespace", "processing-instruction", or "comment".
fn:node-name
($srcval
as
node
) as
QName?
This function returns an expanded-QName for node kinds that can have names. For other node kinds, it returns the empty sequence. Expanded-QName is defined in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model], and consists of a namespace URI and a local name.
fn:string
() as
string
fn:string
($srcval
as
item?
) as
string
Returns the value of $srcval
represented as a string. If no argument is supplied, $srcval
defaults to the context item (.
).
If $srcval
is the empty sequence, the zero-length string is returned.
If $srcval
is a node, the function returns the string value of the node, as obtained using the string-value accessor defined in the [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model].
If $srcval
is an atomic value, then the function returns the same string as is returned by the expression cast as xs:string ($srcval)
, except in the cases listed below:
If the type of $srcval
is xs:anyURI
, the URI is converted to a string without any escaping of special characters.
NOTE: The reason for the special rule for xs:anyURI
is that, although XML Schema strongly discourages the use of spaces within URI values, the escaping of spaces can cause problems with legacy applications (for example, this applies to spaces within fragment identifiers in many HTML browsers), and should therefore be under user control.
NOTE: The string representation of double values is not backwards-compatible with the representation of number values in [XPath 1.0]. Ordinary double values are now represented using scientific notation; the representations of positive and negative infinity are now 'INF' and '-INF' rather than 'Infinity' and '-Infinity'. (It should be observed that '+INF' is not supported as a lexical form of infinity in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] and is thus not supported by this specification; if that lexical form is added in a future version of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then it will be supported by a future version of this specification that aligns with that future version of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].) However, most expressions that would have produced a number in [XPath 1.0] will produce a decimal (or integer) in [XPath 2.0], so unless there is a loss of precision caused by numeric approximation, the result of the expression will in most simple cases be the same after conversion to a string.
fn:data
($srcval
as
node
) as
atomic value*
If $srcval
is a text node, an element node, or an attribute node, fn:data
returns the typed value of $srcval
, as defined by the accessor function dm:typed-value
defined for that kind of node in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model].
Specifically:
If $srcval
is a text node, then its typed value is equal to its string value, as an instance of xs:anySimpleType
.
If $srcval
is an attribute node with type annotation xs:anySimpleType
, then its typed value is equal to its string value, as an instance of xs:anySimpleType
. The typed value of any other attribute node is derived from its string value and type annotation in a way that is consistent with XML Schema validation, as described in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model].
If $srcval
is an element node with type annotation xs:anyType
, then its typed value is equal to its string value, as an instance of xs:anySimpleType
. The typed value of an element node with a type annotation other than xs:anyType
is derived from its string value and type annotation in a way that is consistent with XML Schema validation, as described in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. If $srcval
is an element node whose type annotation denotes a type with complex content (i.e., a type that permits subelements), fn:data
raises an error (Node has complex content).
If $srcval
is not a text node, an attribute node, or an element node, then fn:data
causes a type error.
fn:base-uri
($srcval
as
node
) as
anyURI?
For document and element nodes, this function returns the value of the base-uri property. For other kinds of node, it returns the empty sequence.
fn:base-uri
() as
anyURI?
This version of the function returns the base-uri from the static context.
fn:unique-ID
($srcval
as
node
) as
ID?
This function accepts an element node and returns the identifier (ID) which may have been assigned by the user. It corresponds to the normalized value property of the attribute information item in the attributes property that has a type ID, if one exists. If no ID attribute exists the empty sequence is returned.
In this document, as well as in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language], [XPath 2.0],and [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Formal Semantics], the phrase "an error is raised" is used whenever the semantics being described encounter an error other than a static type error. The occurrence of that phrase implicitly causes the invocation of the fn:error
function defined in this section. Whenever the raising of an error is accompanied by a specific error, the phrase "an error is raised (name-of-error)" is used, and the value name-of-error is passed as an argument to the fn:error
function invocation.
The fn:error
function may also be invoked from XQuery and XPath 2.0 applications.
fn:error
() as
none
fn:error
($srcval
as
item?
) as
none
The fn:error
function accepts any item (e.g., an atomic value or an element) as an argument. An alternate version of the function takes no arguments. The fn:error
function never returns a value.
Note that "none" is a special type defined in the [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.
[Issue 181: What are the semantics of fn:error?]
Every built-in type that is defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], except xs:QName
, as well as each of the two derived types fn:yearMonthDuration
and fn:dayTimeDuration
defined in this specification, has an associated constructor function. The form of that function for a type TYP is:
xs:TYP
($srcval
as
item
) as
TYP
For example, the signature of the constructor function corresponding to the unsignedInt
type defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] is:
xs:unsignedInt
($srcval
as
item
) as
unsignedInt
Invoking the constructor function xs:unsignedInt(12)
returns the unsignedInt
value 12. Another invocation of that constructor function that returns the same unsignedInt
value is xs:unsignedInt("12")
.
If the argument to a constructor function is a string literal, the literal must be a valid lexical form for its type, as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] and the semantics of the function are identical to XML Schema validation. Whitespace normalization is applied before validation as indicated by the value of the whitespace facet for the datatype.
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.
The semantics of the constructor function xs:TYP(item) are identical to the semantics of "cast as xs:TYP
(item
)". See 16 Casting Functions
The following constructor functions for the built-in types are supported:
xs:string
($srcval
as
item
) as
string
xs:boolean
($srcval
as
item
) as
boolean
xs:decimal
($srcval
as
item
) as
decimal
xs:float
($srcval
as
item
) as
float
xs:double
($srcval
as
item
) as
double
xs:duration
($srcval
as
item
) as
duration
xs:dateTime
($srcval
as
item
) as
dateTime
xs:time
($srcval
as
item
) as
time
xs:date
($srcval
as
item
) as
date
xs:gYearMonth
($srcval
as
item
) as
gYearMonth
xs:gYear
($srcval
as
item
) as
gYear
xs:gMonthDay
($srcval
as
item
) as
gMonthDay
xs:gDay
($srcval
as
item
) as
gDay
xs:gMonth
($srcval
as
item
) as
gMonth
xs:hexBinary
($srcval
as
item
) as
hexBinary
xs:base64Binary
($srcval
as
item
) as
base64Binary
xs:anyURI
($srcval
as
item
) as
anyURI
xs:NOTATION
($srcval
as
item
) as
NOTATION
xs:normalizedString
($srcval
as
item
) as
normalizedString
xs:token
($srcval
as
item
) as
token
xs:language
($srcval
as
item
) as
language
xs:NMTOKEN
($srcval
as
item
) as
NMTOKEN
xs:NMTOKENS
($srcval
as
item
) as
NMTOKENS
xs:Name
($srcval
as
item
) as
Name
xs:NCName
($srcval
as
item
) as
NCName
xs:ID
($srcval
as
item
) as
ID
xs:IDREF
($srcval
as
item
) as
IDREF
xs:IDREFS
($srcval
as
item
) as
IDREFS
xs:ENTITY
($srcval
as
item
) as
ENTITY
xs:ENTITIES
($srcval
as
item
) as
ENTITIES
xs:integer
($srcval
as
item
) as
integer
xs:nonPositiveInteger
($srcval
as
item
) as
nonPositiveInteger
xs:negativeInteger
($srcval
as
item
) as
negativeInteger
xs:long
($srcval
as
item
) as
long
xs:int
($srcval
as
item
) as
int
xs:short
($srcval
as
item
) as
short
xs:byte
($srcval
as
item
) as
byte
xs:nonNegativeInteger
($srcval
as
item
) as
nonNegativeInteger
xs:unsignedLong
($srcval
as
item
) as
unsignedLong
xs:unsignedInt
($srcval
as
item
) as
unsignedInt
xs:unsignedShort
($srcval
as
item
) as
unsignedShort
xs:unsignedByte
($srcval
as
item
) as
unsignedByte
xs:positiveInteger
($srcval
as
item
) as
positiveInteger
fn:yearMonthDuration
($srcval
as
item
) as
yearMonthDuration
fn:dayTimeDuration
($srcval
as
item
) as
dayTimeDuration
For every type defined in the static query context (See [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] that is derived by restriction from a primitive type, there is a construction function (whose name is the same as the type name), whose effect is to create a value of that type from the supplied argument. The rules are defined in the same way as for built-in derived types 4.1 Constructor Functions for XML Schema Built-in Types.
Consider a situation where the static context contains a type called
hatSize
defined in a schema that is bound to the prefix my
. In such a case the constructor function:
my:hatSize
($srcval
as
item
) as
hatSize
is available to users.
This section discusses arithmetic operators on the numeric datatypes defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. It uses an approach that permits lightweight operations whenever possible.
The operators described in this section are defined on the following numeric types. Each type whose name is indented is derived from the type whose name appears nearest above with one less level of indent.
decimal | |
integer | |
float | |
double |
They also apply to types derived by restriction from these types.
The following functions are defined to back up operators defined in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XPath 2.0] on these numeric types.
Operators | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
op:numeric-add
| Addition | XPath 1.0 |
op:numeric-subtract
| Subtraction | XPath 1.0 |
op:numeric-multiply
| Multiplication | XPath 1.0 |
op:numeric-divide
| Division | XPath 1.0 |
op:numeric-integer-divide
| Integer division | XPath 1.0 |
op:numeric-mod
| Modulus | XPath 1.0 |
op:numeric-unary-plus
| Unary plus | XPath 2.0 Req 1.7 Should |
op:numeric-unary-minus
| Unary minus (negation) | XPath 1.0 |
The arguments and return types for the arithmetic operators are the basic numeric types: integer
, decimal
, float
, and double
, and types derived from them. For simplicity, each operator is defined to operate on operands of the same datatype and to return the same datatype. (The one exception is op:numeric-divide
, which returns a double if called with two integer operands.) If the two operands are not of the same type, subtype substitution and type promotion may be used to obtain two operands of the same type.
Appendix B of [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] describes the semantics of these operations in detail.
Subtype substitution: A derived type may substitute for its base type. In particular, integer
may be used where decimal
is expected.
Type promotion:
decimal
may be promoted to float
, and float
may be promoted to double
.
The result type of operations depends on their argument datatypes and is defined in the following table:
Operator | Returns |
---|---|
op:operation(integer, integer)
| integer (except for op:numeric-divide(integer, integer) , which returns a double) |
op:operation(decimal, decimal)
| decimal |
op:operation(float, float)
| float |
op:operation(double, double)
| double |
op:operation(integer)
| integer |
op:operation(decimal)
| decimal |
op:operation(float)
| float |
op:operation(double)
| double |
These rules define any operation on any pair of arithmetic types. Consider the following example:
op:operation(int, double) => op:operation(double, double)
For this operation, int
must be converted to double
. This can be done, since by the rules above: int
can be substitutued for integer
, integer
can be promoted to decimal
, decimal
can be promoted to float
, and float
can be promoted to double
. As far as possible, the promotions should be done in a single step. Specifically, when a decimal is promoted to a double, it must not be converted to a float and then to double as this will lose precision.
As another example, a user may define height
as a derived type of integer
with a minimum value of 20 and a maximum value of 100. He may then derive oddHeight
using a pattern to restrict the value to odd integers.
op:operation(oddHeight, integer) => op:operation(integer, integer)
oddHeight
can be substituted for its base type height
and height
can be substitutued for its base type integer
.
[Issue 177: Must overflow and underflow always be reported?]
Overflow and underflow behavior is ·implementation-defined·. See [ISO 10967]. That is, implementations may determine that, when overflow or underflow is detected in any of the above operations, an error is raised ("overflow or underflow error"). However, implementations are not required to catch or report such errors.
Finally, consider some examples involving special IEEE 754 numerics.
If either argument is "NaN", the result is "NaN".
If neither argument is "NaN", but either argument is "INF", the result is "INF".
If neither argument is "NaN" or "INF", but either argument is "-INF", the result is "-INF".
Note that in some cases such as subtraction, multiplication and division, "INF" may become "-INF", and vice versa, as appropriate.
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: integer, decimal, float, or 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.
op:numeric-add
($operand1
as
numeric
, $operand2
as
numeric
) as
numeric
Backs up the "+" operator and returns the arithmetic sum of its operands: ($operand1 + $operand2
).
op:numeric-subtract
($operand1
as
numeric
, $operand2
as
numeric
) as
numeric
Backs up the "-" operator and returns the arithmetic difference of its operands: ($operand1 - $operand2
).
op:numeric-multiply
($operand1
as
numeric
, $operand2
as
numeric
) as
numeric
Backs up the "*" operator and returns the arithmetic product of its operands: ($operand1 * $operand2
).
op:numeric-divide
($operand1
as
numeric
, $operand2
as
numeric
) as
numeric
Backs up the "div" operator and returns the arithmetic quotient of its operands: ($operand1 div $operand2
).
Note:
For compatibility with [XPath 1.0], if the types of both $operand1
and $operand2
are xs:integer
, then the return type is xs:double
.
For xs:decimal
and xs:integer
operands, if the divisor is 0
, then an error is raised ("Division by zero"). For xs:float
and xs:double
operands, performs floating point division as specified in [IEEE 754-1985].
op:numeric-integer-divide ( | $operand1 | as integer , |
$operand2 | as integer ) as integer |
Backs up the "idiv" operator and returns the arithmetic quotient of its operands: ($operand1 idiv $operand2
). If the numerator is not evenly divided by the divisor, then the quotient is the integer value obtained, ignoring any remainder that results from the division (that is, no rounding is performed).
If the divisor is 0
, then an error is raised ("Division by zero").
op:numeric-mod
($operand1
as
numeric
, $operand2
as
numeric
) as
numeric
Backs up the "mod" operator and returns the remainder after dividing the first operand by the second operand: ($operand1 mod $operand2
). The result is of the same type as the operands after type promotion. The following rules apply:
For xs:decimal
and xs:integer
operands, if the divisor is 0
, then an error is raised ("Division by zero").
For xs:float
and xs:double
operands:
If either operand is NaN, the result is NaN.
If the dividend is positive or negative infinity, or the divisor is positive or negative zero (0), or both, the result is NaN.
If not NaN, the sign of the result equals the sign of the dividend.
If the dividend is finite and the divisor is an infinity, the result equals the dividend.
If the dividend is positive or negative zero and the divisor is finite, the result is the same as the dividend.
In the remaining cases, where neither positive or negative infinity, nor positive or negative zero, nor NaN is involved, the float or double remainder r from a dividend n and a divisor d is defined by the mathematical relation r = n-(d * q) where q is an integer that is negative only if n/d is negative and positive only if n/d is positive, and whose magnitude is as large as possible without exceeding the magnitude of the true mathematical quotient of n and d. This is truncating division, analogous to integer division, not [IEEE 754-1985] rounding division.
We define the following comparison operators on numeric values. Comparisons take two arguments of the same type. If the arguments are of different types, one argument is promoted to the type of the other. Each comparison operator returns a boolean value. If either, or both, operands are "NaN", false
is returned.
Operator | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
op:numeric-equal
| Equality comparison | XPath 1.0 |
op:numeric-less-than
| Less-than comparison | XPath 1.0 |
op:numeric-greater-than
| Greater-than comparison | XPath 1.0 |
op:numeric-equal
($operand1
as
numeric
, $operand2
as
numeric
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is exactly equal to $operand2
. For xs:float
and xs:double
values, 0
(zero), +0
(positive zero), and -0
(negative zero) all compare equal. NaN
does not equal itself.
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on numeric values.
op:numeric-less-than
($operand1
as
numeric
, $operand2
as
numeric
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is less than $operand2
. For xs:float
and xs:double
values, positive infinity is greater than all other non-NaN values; negative infinity is less than all other non-NaN values. NaN is not comparable with (neither greater than nor less than) any other value including itself.
This function backs up the "lt" and "ge" operators on numeric values.
op:numeric-greater-than
($operand1
as
numeric
, $operand2
as
numeric
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is greater than $operand2
. For xs:float
and xs:double
values, positive infinity is greater than all other non-NaN values; negative infinity is less than all other non-NaN values. NaN is not comparable with (neither greater than nor less than) any other value including itself.
This function backs up the "gt" and "le" operators on numeric values.
The following functions are defined on these numeric types. Each function returns an integer except:
If the argument is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
If the argument is "NaN", "NaN" is returned.
If the argument is positive or negative infinity, positive or negative infinity is returned.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:floor
| Returns the largest integer less than or equal to the argument | XPath 1.0 |
fn:ceiling
| Returns the smallest integer greater than or equal to the argument | XPath 1.0 |
fn:round
| Rounds to the nearest integer | XPath 1.0 |
[Issue 79: How many digits of precision (etc.) are returned from certain functions?]
[Issue 142: Should floor ceiling and round return the same type as their argument? ]
[Issue 179: What is the appropriate return type for fn:floor, fn:celing, and fn:round?]
fn:floor
($srcval
as
double?
) as
double?
Returns the largest (closest to positive infinity) integer that is not greater than the value of $srcval
. If the argument is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:ceiling
($srcval
as
double?
) as
double?
Returns the smallest (closest to negative infinity) integer that is not smaller than the value of $srcval
. If the argument is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:round
($srcval
as
double?
) as
double?
Returns the number that is closest to the argument. If there are two such numbers, then the one that is closest to positive infinity is returned. More formally, fn:round(x)
produces the same result as fn:floor(x+0.5)
. If the argument is NaN, then NaN is returned. If the argument is positive infinity, then positive infinity is returned. If the argument is negative infinity, then negative infinity is returned. If the argument is positive zero (+0), then positive zero (+0) is returned. If the argument is negative zero (-0), then negative zero (-0) is returned. If the argument is less than zero (0), but greater than or equal to -0.5, then negative zero (-0) is returned. If the argument is the empty sequence, then the empty sequence is returned.
This section discusses functions and operators on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] string datatype and the datatypes derived from string.
The operators described in this section are defined on the following string types. Each type whose name is indented is derived from the type whose name appears nearest above with one less level of indent.
string | |||||
normalizedString | |||||
token | |||||
language | |||||
NMTOKEN | |||||
Name | |||||
NCName | |||||
ID | |||||
IDREF | |||||
ENTITY |
They also apply to user-defined types derived by restriction from these types.
NOTE: This document uses the term "code point" as a synonym for "Unicode scalar value". [The Unicode Standard] sometimes spells this term "codepoint". Code points range from #x0000 to #x10FFFF inclusive. The use of the word 'character' in this document is in the sense of production [2] of [XML 1.0 Recommendation (Second Edition)].
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:codepoints-to-string
| Creates a string from a sequence of codepoints. |
fn:string-to-codepoints
| Returns the sequence of codepoints that constitute a string. |
When values whose type is string or some type derived from string are compared (or, equivalently, sorted), the comparisons are inherently performed according to some collation (even if that collation is defined entirely on code point values or on the binary representations of the characters of the string). The [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0] 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 some characters that are rendered differently are, in fact equal for collation purpose (e.g., "uve" and "uwe" are considered equivalent in some European languages). Strings can be compared character-by-character or in a logical 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. Instead, it assumes that the collation argument to the various functions below is a tailored and named collation. A specific collation with a distinguished name, http://www.w3.org/2002/11/query-operators/collation/codepoint, provides the ability to compare strings based on code point values. Every implementation of XQuery must support the collation based on code point values.
While the [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0] recommends that all strings be subjected to early Unicode normalization, it is not possible to guarantee that all strings in all XML documents are, in fact, normalized, or that they are normalized in the same manner. In order to maximize interoperable results of operations on XML documents in general, there may be collations that operate on unnormalized strings, other collations that raise runtime errors when unnormalized strings are encountered, and still other collations that implicitly normalize strings for the purposes of collating them. For alignment with the [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0], applications may choose collations that treat unnormalized strings as though they were normalized (that is, that implicitly normalize the strings). Note that collations based on the Unicode collation algorithm produce equivalent results regardless of a string's normalization.
This document assumes that collations are named and that the collation name may be provided as an argument to string comparison functions. Functions that allow specification of a collation do so with an argument whose type is anyURI. This document also defines the manner in which a default collation is determined when the collation argument is not specified in invocations of the functions that allow it to be omitted.
The XQuery/XPath static context includes provision for a default collation that can be used for string comparisons (including ordering operations). However, the static context is not required to have a default collation specified; an implementation might choose to provide a default collation only under certain circumstances, or not at all. The static context default collation, if provided, is determined by ·implementation-defined· means. Such means might include determination from the host operating system environment, determination during XQuery/XPath installation, determination when the XQuery/XPath implementation was created, determination from the locale of some user environment, or even ·implementation-defined· language through which the user can specify that collation.
The decision of what collation to use for a given comparison or ordering operation is determined by the following algorithm:
If the operation specifies an explicit collation CollationA (e.g., if the optional collation argument is specified in an invocation of the fn:compare()
function), then:
If CollationA is supported by the implementation, then CollationA is used.
Otherwise, an error is raised ("Unsupported collation").
If no collation is explicitly specified for the operation and the XQuery/XPath static context specifies a collation CollationB, then:
If CollationB is supported by the implementation, then CollationB is used.
Otherwise, an error is raised ("Unsupported collation").
NOTE: There might be several ways in which a collation might be specified in the XQuery/XPath static context. For example, XQuery might provide syntax that specifies a default collation as part of the query prolog.
Otherwise, the Unicode codepoint collation (http://www.w3.org/2002/11/query-operators/collation/codepoint) is used.
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, in part because collations should be determined by the user of the data, not (normally) the data itself, and 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.
NOTE: Some data management environments allow collations to be associated with the definition of string items (that is, with the metadata that describes items whose type is string). While such association may be appropriate for use in environments in which data is held in a repository tightly bound to its descriptive metadata, it is not appropriate in the XML environment in which different documents being processed by a single query may be described by differing schemas.
NOTE: 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() and fn:starts-with(), the collation needs to support an additional property: it must decompose the string into a sequence of units, each unit consisting of one or more characters, such that two strings can be compared by pairwise
comparison of these units. The functions fn:contains(), fn:starts-with(), and
fn:ends-with() first use the collation to decompose the string provided in the
first argument into such a sequence of units, then examine this sequence to
determine if there is a subsequence that matches the units obtained by
decomposing the string supplied in the second argument. Substrings might not
be matched if they start or end in the middle of a unit. For example, if a
collation treats "Jaeger" and "Jäger" [ed note, second character is "a with
umlaut"] as equal, then it is probably treating "ae" as one unit, which
means that under this collation, the expression contains("Jaeger",
"eg")
is likely to return false.
It is possible to define collations that do not have this property, for example a collation that attempts to sort "ISO 8859" before "ISO 10646", or "January" before "February". Such collations may fail, or give unexpected results, when used with functions such as fn:contains().
[Issue 44: Collations: URIs and URI references or short names?]
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:compare
| Compares two character strings; a collation may optionally be specified | XSLT 2.0, Req. 2.13 (Could) |
[Issue 73: Is a "between" function needed?]
fn:compare
($comparand1
as
string?
, $comparand2
as
string?
) as
integer?
fn:compare ( | $comparand1 | as string? , |
$comparand2 | as string? , | |
$collationLiteral | as anyURI ) as integer? |
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 the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
If the value of $comparand2
begins with a string that is equal to the value of $comparand1
(according to the collation that is used) and has additional characters following that beginning string, then the result is -1. If the value of $comparand1
begins with a string that is equal to the value of $comparand2
(according to the collation that is used) and has additional characters following that beginning string, then the result is 1.
If either argument is the empty sequence, the result is the empty sequence.
This function backs up the "eq", "ne", "gt", "lt", "le" and "ge" operators on string values.
fn:compare('abc', 'abc')
returns 0.
fn:compare('Strasse', 'Straße')
returns 0 if and only if 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.)
fn:compare('Strasse', 'Straße', anyURI('deutsch'))
returns 0 if and only if the collation identified by the relative URI constructed from the string
value "deutsch" includes provisions that equate "ss" and the (German) character "ß" ("sharp-s"). (Otherwise, the returned value depends on the semantics of that collation.)
fn:compare('Strassen', 'Straße')
returns 1 if and only if the default collation includes provisions that equate "ss" and the (German) character "ß" ("sharp-s"). (Since the value of $comparand1
has an additional character, an "n", following the string that is equal to "Straße", it is greater than the value of $comparand2
.)
The following functions are defined on these string types. Several of these function use a collation. See 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings for a discussion of collations.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:concat
| Concatenates two or more character strings. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:string-join
| Accepts a sequence of strings and returns the strings concatenated together with an optional separator. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:starts-with
| Indicates whether the value of one string begins with the characters of the value of another string. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:ends-with
| Indicates whether the value of one string ends with the characters of the value of another string. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:contains
| Indicates whether the value of one string contains the characters of the value of another string. A collation may optionally be specified. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:substring
| Returns a string located at a specified place in the value of a string. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:string-length
| Returns the length of the argument. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:substring-before
| Returns the characters of one string that precede in that string the characters in the value of another string. A collation may optionally be specified. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:substring-after
| Returns the characters of one string that precede in that string the characters in the value of another string. A collation may optionally be specified. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:normalize-space
| Returns the whitespace-normalized value of the argument. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:normalize-unicode
| Returns the normalized value of the first argument in the normalization form specified by the second argument. | XPath 2.0 Req 2.9 (Should) |
fn:upper-case
| Returns the upper-cased value of the argument. | XPath 2.0 Req 2.4.3 (Should) |
fn:lower-case
| Returns the lower-cased value of the argument. | XPath 2.0 Req 2.4.3 (Should) |
fn:translate
| Returns the first argument string with occurrences of characters in the second argument replaced by the character at the corresponding position in the third string. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:string-pad
| Returns a string composed of as many copies of its first argument as specified in its second argument. | XPath 2.0 Req 2.4.2, 4.4 (Should) |
fn:matches
| Returns a boolean value that indicates whether the value of the first argument is matched by the regular expression that is the value of the second argument. | XPath 2.0 Req 3. (Must) |
fn:replace
| Returns the value of the first argument with every substring matched by the regular expression that is the value of the second argument replaced by the replacement string that is the value of the third argument. | XPath 2.0 Req 2.4.1. (Should) |
fn:tokenize
| Returns a sequence of zero or more strings whose values are substrings of the value of the first argument separated by substrings that match the regular expression that is the value of the second argument. | XSLT 2.0 Req (Should) |
fn:escape-uri
| Returns the string representing a URI value with certain characters escaped as specified in [RFC 2396] and [RFC 2732]. |
[Issue 21: What is the precise type returned by each function?]
Note also that when the above operators and functions are applied to datatypes derived from string
, they are guaranteeed to return legal strings, but they may not return legal value for the particular subtype to which they were applied.
fn:concat
() as
string
fn:concat
($op1
as
string?
) as
string
fn:concat
($op1
as
string?
, $op2
as
string?
, ...) as
string
Accepts zero or more strings as arguments. Returns the string that is the concatenation of the values of its arguments. The resulting string might not be normalized in any Unicode or W3C normalization. If called with no arguments, returns the zero-length string. If any of the arguments is the empty sequence, it is treated as the zero-length string.
The concat()
function is specified to allow an arbitrary number of string arguments that are concatenated together. This capability is retained for compatibility with [XPath 1.0] and is the only function specified in this document that has that characteristic.
[Issue 144: Should the concat function accept sequences as arguments?]
fn:string-join
($operand1
as
string*
, $operand2
as
string*
) as
string
Returns a (possibly empty) string created by concatenating the members of
the $operand1
sequence using $operand2
as a separator. If the value of
$operand2 is the zero-length string, then the members of $operand1 are
concatenated without a separator.
If the value of $operand1
is the empty sequence, the empty string is returned.
fn:starts-with
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
) as
boolean?
fn:starts-with ( | $operand1 | as string? , |
$operand2 | as string? , | |
$collationLiteral | as anyURI ) as boolean? |
Returns a boolean indicating whether or not the value of $operand1
starts with a string that is equal to the value of $operand2
according to the collation that is used.
If the value of $operand2
is the zero-length string, then the function returns true
. If the value of $operand1
is the zero-length string and the value of $operand2
is not the zero-length string, then the function returns false
.
If the value of $operand1
or $operand2
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
fn:ends-with
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
) as
boolean?
fn:ends-with ( | $operand1 | as string? , |
$operand2 | as string? , | |
$collationLiteral | as anyURI ) as boolean? |
Returns a boolean indicating whether or not the value of $operand1
ends with a string that is equal to the value of $operand2
according to the specified collation.
If the value of $operand2
is the zero-length string, then the function returns true
. If the value of $operand1
is the zero-length string and the value of $operand2
is not the zero-length string, then the function returns false
.
If the value of $operand1
or $operand2
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
fn:contains
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
) as
boolean?
fn:contains ( | $operand1 | as string? , |
$operand2 | as string? , | |
$collationLiteral | as anyURI ) as boolean? |
Returns a boolean indicating whether or not the value of $operand1
contains (at the beginning, at the end, or anywhere within) a string equal to the value of $operand2
according to the collation that is used.
If the value of $operand2
is the zero-length string, then the function returns true
. If the value of $operand1
is the zero-length string and the value of $operand2
is not the zero-length string, then the function returns false
.
If the value of $operand1
or $operand2
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
fn:substring
($sourceString
as
string?
, $startingLoc
as
double?
) as
string?
fn:substring ( | $sourceString | as string? , |
$startingLoc | as double? , | |
$length | as double? ) as string? |
Returns the portion of the value of $sourceString
beginning at the position indicated by the value of $startingLoc
and continuing for the number of characters indicated by the value of $length
. More specifically, returns the characters in $sourceString
whose position $p
obeys:
fn:round($startingLoc) <= $p < fn:round($startingLoc + fn:round($length))
If $length
is not specified, the substring identifies characters to the end of $sourceString
.
If $length
is greater than the number of characters in the value of $sourceString
following $startingLoc
, the substring identifies characters to the end of $sourceString
.
The first character of a string is located at position 1 (not position 0).
If the value of any of the three parameters is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
Note: The position and length given in the second and (optional) third argument relate to the number of XML characters in the string (or equivalently, the number of Unicode codepoints). Some implementations may represent a codepoint above xFFFF using two 16-bit values known as a surrogate pair. A surrogate pair counts as one character, not two.
fn:string-length
($srcval
as
string?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer equal to the length in characters of the value of $srcval
. If the value of $srcval
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
Note: The value returned is the number of XML characters in the string (or equivalently, the number of Unicode codepoints). Some implementations may represent a codepoint above xFFFF using two 16-bit values known as a surrogate pair. A surrogate pair counts as one character, not two.
fn:substring-before
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
) as
string?
fn:substring-before ( | $operand1 | as string? , |
$operand2 | as string? , | |
$collationLiteral | as anyURI ) as string? |
Returns the substring of the value of $operand1
that precedes in the value of $operand1
the first occurrence of a string that is equal to the value of $operand2
according to the collation that is used.
If the value of $operand2
is the zero-length string, then the function returns the value of $operand1
.
If the value of $operand1
does not contain a string that is equal to the value of $operand2
, then the function returns the zero-length string.
If the value of $operand1
or $operand2
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
fn:substring-after
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
) as
string?
fn:substring-after ( | $operand1 | as string? , |
$operand2 | as string? , | |
$collationLiteral | as anyURI ) as string? |
Returns the substring of the value of $operand1
that follows in the value of $operand1
the first occurrence of a string that is equal to the value of $operand2
according to the collation that is used.
If the value of $operand2
is the zero-length string, then the function returns the value of $operand1
.
If the value of $operand1
does not contain a string that is equal to the value of $operand2
, then the function returns the zero-length string.
If the value of $operand1
or $operand2
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
fn:normalize-space
($srcval
as
string?
) as
string?
Returns the value of the string argument with whitespace normalized by stripping leading and trailing whitespace and replacing sequences of more than one whitespace character by a single space. If the value of $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:normalize-unicode
($srcval
as
string?
) as
string?
fn:normalize-unicode
($srcval
as
string?
, $normalizationForm
as
string
) as
string?
Returns the value of $srcval
normalized according to the normalization criteria for a normalization form identified by the value of $normalizationForm
. The effective value of the $normalizationForm
is computed by removing leading and trailing blanks, if present, and converting to upper case:
If the $normalizationForm
is absent, as in the first format above, it shall be assumed to be "NFC"
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is "NFC", then the value returned by the function is the value of $srcval
in Unicode Normalization Form C (NFC).
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is "NFD", then the value returned by the function is the value of $srcval
in Unicode Normalization Form D (NFD).
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is "NFKC", then the value returned by the function is the value of $srcval
in Unicode Normalization Form KC (NFKC).
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is "NFKD", then the value returned by the function is the value of $srcval
in Unicode Normalization Form KD (NFKD).
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is "W3C", then the value returned by the function is the value of $srcval
is the fully normalized form.
See [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0].
If the effective value of $normalizationForm
is the zero-length string then no normalization is performed and $srcval
is returned.
Implementations may choose to support other normalization forms in addition to the normalization forms discussed above.
If the effective value of the $normalizationForm
is other than one of the values supported by the implementation, then an error is raised ("Invalid normalization form").
If the value of $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:upper-case
($srcval
as
string?
) as
string?
Returns the value of $srcval
after translating every lower-case letter to its upper-case correspondent. Every lower-case letter that does not have an upper-case correspondent, and every character that is not a lower-case letter, is included in the returned value in its original form.
A "lower-case letter" is a character whose Unicode General Category class includes "Ll". The corresponding upper-case letter is determined using [Unicode Case Mappings].
If the value of $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:lower-case
($srcval
as
string?
) as
string?
Returns the value of $srcval
after translating every upper-case letter to its lower-case correspondent. Every upper-case letter that does not have a lower-case correspondent, and every character that is not an upper-case letter, is included in the output in its original form.
An "upper-case letter" is a character whose Unicode General Category class includes "Lu". The corresponding lower-case letter is determined using [Unicode Case Mappings].
If the value of $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:translate ( | $srcval | as string? , |
$mapString | as string? , | |
$transString | as string? ) as string? |
Returns the value of $srcval
modified so that every character in the value of $srcval
that occurs at some position N in the value of $mapString
has been replaced by the character that occurs at position N in the value of $transString
.
Every character in the value of $srcval
that does not appear in the value of $mapString
is unchanged.
Every character in the value of $srcval
that appears at some position M in the value of $mapString
, where the value of $transString
is less than M characters in length, is omitted from the returned value.
If the value of $srcval
or $mapString
or $transString
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
Note: This functions operates on XML characters in the string (or equivalently, Unicode codepoints). Some implementations may represent a codepoint above xFFFF using two 16-bit values known as a surrogate pair. A surrogate pair counts as one character, not two.
fn:string-pad
($padString
as
string?
, $padCount
as
integer?
) as
string?
Returns a string consisting of $padCount
copies of $padString
concatenated together. Returns the zero-length string if $padCount
is zero (0).
If the value of $padCount
is less than zero (0), then an error is raised ("Invalid string-pad count").
If the value of $padString
or $padCount
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:matches
($input
as
string?
, $pattern
as
string?
) as
boolean?
fn:matches
($input
as
string?
, $pattern
as
string?
, $flags
as
string?
) as
boolean?
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.
The function returns true if $input
matches the regular expression supplied as $pattern
; otherwise, it returns false.
If any of the arguments is an empty sequence, the result is an empty sequence.
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 multiline mode).
Note:
This is different from the behavior of patterns in XML Schema, where regular expressions are implicitly anchored.
An error is raised ("Invalid matches argument") if the value of $pattern
or of $flags
does not conform to the required syntax defined in section 6.4.16.1 Regular Expression Syntax.
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]), 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 has omitted some facilities that are widely-used with languages such as Perl, and this section therefore describes extensions to the XML Schema regular expressions syntax that re-instate these capabilities.
The regular expression syntax and semantics for these functions are identical to those defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] [add reference] with the following additions:
Two modes are defined, string mode and multiline mode.
Two meta-characters, ^
and $
are added. In string mode, the metacharacter ^
matches the start of the entire string, while $
matches the end of the entire string. In multiline 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).
In string mode, the metacharacter .
matches any character whatsoever. In multiline mode, the metacharacter .
matches any character except a newline character.
Reluctant quantifiers are supported, 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). In the absence of these quantifiers, the regular expression matches the longest possible substring.
To achieve this, the production in XML Schema:
[4] quantifier ::= [?*+] | ( '{' quantity '}' )
is changed to:
[4] quantifier ::= ( [?*+] | ( '{' quantity '}' ) ) '?'?
Sub-expressions (groups) within the regular expression are recognized. The regular expression syntax defined by XML Schema allows a regular expression to contain parenthesized sub-expressions, but attaches no special significance to them. Some functions described here 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 group 1, the second group 2, and so on. If a sub-expression matches more than one substring (because it is within a construct that allows repetition) then only the last substring that it matched will be captured.
Note:
Reluctant quantifiers have no effect on the results of the boolean fn:matches
function, since this is only interested in discovering whether a match exists, and not where it exists.
To enable conforming implementations to make use of existing regular expression library routines, this specification does not disallow extensions to the regular expression syntax described here. However, such extensions should only be provided if they conform to an existing recognized specification. All regular expressions that conform to the syntax described here must be accepted, and must implement the semantics described here.
[Issue 176: Should implementations be allowed to extend the regular expression syntax?]
All these functions provide an optional parameter, flags
, to set options for the interpretation of the regular expression. The parameter is a 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 letters present that are not defined here, then an error is raised ("Invalid regular expression syntax").
The following options are defined:
m
: If present, the match operates in multiline mode. Otherwise, the match operates in string mode.
i
: If present, the match operates in case-insensitive mode. Otherwise, the match operates in case-sensitive mode. The detailed rules for character matching in case-insensitive mode are implementation-dependent (and they may be locale-dependent).
fn:matches("abracadabra", "bra")
returns true
fn:matches("abracadabra", "^a.*a$")
returns true
fn:matches("abracadabra", "^bra")
returns false
Given the source document:
<poem author="Wilhelm Busch">
Kaum hat dies der Hahn gesehen,
Fängt er auch schon an zu krähen:
«Kikeriki! Kikikerikih!!»
Tak, tak, tak! - da kommen sie.
</poem>
the following function calls produce the following results, with the poem
element as the context node:
fn:matches(., "Kaum.*krähen")
returns true
fn:matches(., "Kaum.*krähen", "m")
returns false
fn:matches(., "^Kaum.*gesehen,$", "m")
returns true
fn:matches(., "^Kaum.*gesehen,$")
returns false
fn:matches(., "kiki", "i")
returns true
Note:
Regular expression matching is defined on the basis of Unicode code-points, it takes no account of collations.
fn:replace
($input
as
string?
, $pattern
as
string?
, $replacement
as
string?
) as
string?
fn:replace ( | $input | as string? , |
$pattern | as string? , | |
$replacement | as string? , | |
$flags | as string? ) as string? |
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.
The function returns the string that is obtained by replacing all non-overlapping substrings of $input
that match the given $pattern
with an occurrence of the $replacement
string. The $flags
argument is interpreted in the same way as for the fn:matches
function.
If any of the arguments is an empty sequence, the result is an empty sequence.
Within the $replacement string, the variables $1 to $9 may be used to refer to the substring captured by each of the first nine parenthesized sub-expressions in the regular expression. A literal $
symbol must be written as \$
.
An error is raised ("Invalid replace argument") if the value of $pattern
or $flags
is invalid according to the rules described in section 6.4.16.1 Regular Expression Syntax.
An error is raised ("Pattern matches zero-length string") if the pattern matches a zero-length string.
fn:tokenize
($input
as
string?
, $pattern
as
string?
) as
string*
fn:tokenize
($input
as
string?
, $pattern
as
string?
, $flags
as
string?
) as
string*
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.
This function breaks the $input
string into a sequence of strings, treating any substring that matches $pattern
as a separator. The separators themselves are not returned. The $flags
argument is interpreted in the same way as for the fn:matches
function.
If any of the arguments is an empty sequence, the result is an empty sequence.
If a separator occurs at the start of the $input
string, the result sequence will start with a zero-length string. 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 $pattern
.
fn:escape-uri
($uri-part
as
string
, $escape-reserved
as
boolean
) as
string
This function applies the URI escaping rules defined in section 2 of [RFC 2396] as amended by [RFC 2732] to the string supplied as $uri-part
, which typically represents all or part of a URI. The effect of the function is to replace any special character in the string by an escape sequence of the form %xx%yy..., where xxyy... is the hexadecimal representation of the octets used to represent the character in UTF-8.
The set of characters that are escaped depends on the setting of the boolean argument $escape-reserved.
If $escape-reserved
is true, all characters are escaped other than lower case letters a-z, upper case letters A-Z, digits 0-9, and the characters referred to in [RFC 2396] as "marks": specifically, "-" | "_" | "." | "!" | "~" | "*" | "'" | "(" | ")". The "%" character itself is escaped only if it is not followed by two hexadecimal digits (that is, 0-9, a-f, and A-F).
If $escape-reserved
is false, the behavior differs in that characters referred to in [RFC 2396] and [RFC 2732] as reserved characters, together with the '#' character, are not escaped. These characters are ";" | "/" | "?" | ":" | "@" | "&" | "=" | "+" | "$" | "," | "#", "[", "]".
[RFC 2396] does not define whether escaped URIs should use lower case or upper case for hexadecimal digits. To ensure that escaped URIs can be compared using string comparison functions, this function must always use the upper-case letters A-F.
Generally, $escape-reserved
should be set to true when escaping a string that is to form a single part of a URI, and to false when escaping an entire URI or URI reference.
fn:escape-uri ("gopher://spinaltap.micro.umn.edu/00/Weather/California/Los%20Angeles#ocean", true())
returns "gopher%3A%2F%2Fspinaltap.micro.umn.edu%2F00%2FWeather%2FCalifornia%2FLos%20Angeles%23ocean"
fn:escape-uri ("gopher://spinaltap.micro.umn.edu/00/Weather/California/Los%20Angeles#ocean", false())
returns "gopher://spinaltap.micro.umn.edu/00/Weather/California/Los%20Angeles#ocean"
This section discusses operators on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] boolean datatype.
The following constructor functions are defined on the boolean type.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:true
| boolean | XPath 1.0 |
fn:false
| boolean | XPath 1.0 |
The following functions are defined on boolean values to back up operators defined in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XPath 2.0]:
Operator | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
op:boolean-equal
| Equality comparison | XPath 1.0 |
op:boolean-less-than
| A less-than operator for boolean vales: false is less-than true . | XPath 1.0 |
op:boolean-greater-than
| A greater-than operator for boolean vales: true is greater-than false . | XPath 1.0 |
op:boolean-equal
($value1
as
boolean
, $value2
as
boolean
) as
boolean
The arguments and return type are all boolean
. The result is true
if both arguments are true
or if both arguments are false
. The result is false
if one of the arguments is true
and the other argument is false
.
This function backs up the "eq" operator on boolean values.
The following functions are defined on boolean values:
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:not
| Inverts the boolean value of the argument. | XPath 1.0 |
This section discusses operations on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] duration, date and time types. In addition, it discusses operations on two subtypes of the duration datatype that are defined in 8.2 Two Totally Ordered Subtypes of Duration.
The functions described in this section follow the principle of locale-independent storage for these datatypes that originated with [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. Thus, a single calendar (Gregorian) and a single timezone (UTC) is chosen to represent date and time values. Applications and other processing systems are free to present this information in locale-specific representations.
[Issue 136: Should we allow casting a date/time from one timezone to another?]
The operators described in this section are defined on the following duration date and time types:
duration
dateTime
date
time
gYearMonth
gYear
gMonthDay
gMonth
gDay
In addition, they are defined on the 8.2 Two Totally Ordered Subtypes of Duration:
yearMonthDuration
dayTimeDuration
CONFORMANCE NOTE
For a number of the above datatypes [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] extends the basic [ISO 8601] lexical representations, such as YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.s for dateTime, by allowing more than four digits to represent the year field -- no maximum is specified -- and an unlimited number of digits for fractional seconds.
For this specification, all minimally conforming processors must support year values with a minimum of 4 digits (i.e., YYYY) and a minimum fractional second precision of 100 nanoseconds or seven digits (i.e. s.sssssss). However, conforming processors may set larger application-defined limits on the maximum number of digits they support in these two situations, in which case those application-defined maximum numbers must be clearly documented.
[Issue 159: For fractional seconds precision use 6 digits to match SQL TIMESTAMP.]
These two totally ordered subtypes of duration are defined in this specification using the mechanisms described in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] for defining user-defined types. They are available in the namespace http://www.w3.org/2002/11/xquery-functions
.
The W3C XML Query Working Group has requested the W3C XML Schema Working Group that these two subtypes of duration be included in the built-in datatypes described in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. If the W3C XML Schema Working Group agrees to this request, these two datatypes will be removed from the above name space and moved into the XML Schema namespace http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
.
[Definition:] yearMonthDuration is derived from duration by restricting its lexical representation to contain only the year and month components. The value space of yearMonthDuration is the set of integer month values. The year and month components of yearMonthDuration correspond to the Gregorian year and month components defined in section 5.5.3.2 of [ISO 8601], respectively.
yearMonthDuration is derived from duration as follows:
<simpleType name='yearMonthDuration'> <restriction base='duration'> <xsd:pattern value="[\-]?P[0-9]+(Y([0-9]+M)?|M)"/> </restriction> </simpleType>
The lexical representation for yearMonthDuration is the [ISO 8601] reduced format PnYnM, where nY represents the number of years and nM the number of months. The values of the years and months components are not restricted but allow an arbitrary unsigned integer.
An optional preceding minus sign ('-') is allowed to indicate a negative duration. If the sign is omitted a positive duration is indicated. To indicate a yearMonthDuration of 1 year, 2 months, one would write: P1Y2M. One could also indicate a yearMonthDuration of minus 13 months as: -P13M.
Reduced precision and truncated representations of this format are allowed provided they conform to the following:
If the number of years or months in any expression equals zero (0), the number and its corresponding designator may be omitted. However, at least one number and its designator must be present. For example, P1347Y and P1347M are all allowed; P-1347M is not allowed although -P1347M is allowed. P1Y2MT is not allowed.
The value of a yearMonthDuration lexical form is obtained by multiplying the value of the year component by 12 and adding the value of the month component. The value is positive or negative depending on the preceding sign.
The canonical representation of yearMonthDuration restricts the value of the months component to integer values between 0 and 11, both inclusive. To convert from a non-canonical representation to the canonical representation, the lexical representation is first converted to a value in integer number of months as defined above. This value is then divided by 12 to obtain the value of the years component of the canonical representation. The remaining number of months is the value of the months component of the canonical representation. If a component has the value zero (0) then the number and the designator for that component must be omitted. If the value is zero (0) months, the canonical form is "P0M".
[Definition:] dayTimeDuration is derived from duration by restricting its lexical representation to contain only the day, hour, minute, and second components. The value space of dayTimeDuration is the set of fractional second values. The components of dayTimeDuration correspond to the day, hour, minute and second components defined in Section 5.5.3.2 of [ISO 8601], respectively. dayTimeDuration is derived from duration as follows:
<simpleType name='dayTimeDuration'> <restriction base='duration'> <xsd:pattern value="[\-]?P([0-9]+D(T([0-9]+(H([0-9]+(M([0-9]+(\.[0-9]*)?S |\.[0-9]+S)?|(\.[0-9]*)?S)|(\.[0-9]*)?S)?|M([0-9]+ (\.[0-9]*)?S|\.[0-9]+S)?|(\.[0-9]*)?S)|\.[0-9]+S))? |T([0-9]+(H([0-9]+(M([0-9]+(\.[0-9]*)?S|\.[0-9]+S)? |(\.[0-9]*)?S)|(\.[0-9]*)?S)?|M([0-9]+(\.[0-9]*)?S|\.[0-9]+S)? |(\.[0-9]*)?S)|\.[0-9]+S))"/> </restriction> </simpleType>
The lexical representation for dayTimeDuration is the [ISO 8601] truncated format PnDTnHnMnS, where nD represents the number of days, T is the date/time separator, nH the number of hours, nM the number of minutes and nS the number of seconds.
The values of the days, hours and minutes components are not restricted but allow an arbitrary unsigned integer. Similarly, the value of the seconds component allows an arbitrary unsigned decimal number. An optional minus sign ('-') is allowed to precede the 'P', indicating a negative duration. If the sign is omitted, the duration is positive. See also [ISO 8601] Date and Time Formats.
For example, to indicate a duration of 3 days, 10 hours, and 30 minutes, one would write: P3DT10H30M. One could also indicate a duration of minus 120 days as: -P120D. Reduced precision and truncated representations of this format are allowed, provided they conform to the following:
If the number of days, hours, minutes, or seconds in any expression equals zero (0), the number and its corresponding designator may be omitted. However, at least one number and its designator must be present.
The seconds part may have a decimal fraction.
The designator 'T' must be absent if and only if all of the time items are absent. The designator 'P' must always be present.
For example, P13D, PT47H and P3DT2H are all allowed. P-134D is not allowed (invalid location of minus sign), although -P134D is allowed.
The value of a dayTimeDuration lexical form in fractional seconds is obtained by converting the day, hour minutes and seconds value to fractional seconds using the conversion rules: 24 hours = 1 day, 60 minutes = 1 hour and 60 seconds = 1 minute.
The canonical representation of dayTimeDuration restricts the value of the hours component to integer values between 0 and 23, both inclusive; the value of the minutes component to integer values between 0 and 59; both inclusive; and the value of the seconds component to decimal valued from 0.0 to 60.999... (see [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], Appendix D). The value can be greater than 60 seconds to accomodate occasional leap seconds used to keep human time synchronized with the rotation of the planet.
To convert from a non-canonical representation to the canonical representation, the value of the lexical form in fractional seconds is first calculated in the manner described above. The value of the days component in the canonical form is then calculated by dividing the value by 24*60*60. The remainder is in fractional seconds. The value of the hours component in the canonical form is calculated by dividing this remainder by 60*60. The remainder is again in fractional seconds. The value of the minutes component in the canonical form is calculated by dividing this remainder by 60. The remainder in fractional seconds is the value of the seconds component in the canonical form. If a component has the value zero (0) then the number and the designator for that component must be omitted. If all the components of the lexical form are zero (0), the canonical form is PT0S.
Operator | Meaning |
---|---|
op:duration-equal
| Equality comparison on duration values |
op:yearMonthDuration-equal
| Equality comparison on yearMonthDuration values |
op:yearMonthDuration-less-than
| Less-than comparison on yearMonthDuration values |
op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than
| Greater-than comparison on yearMonthDuration values |
op:dayTimeDuration-equal
| Equality comparison on dayTimeDuration values |
op:dayTimeDuration-less-than
| Less-than comparison on dayTimeDuration values |
op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than
| Greater-than comparison on dayTimeDuration values |
op:dateTime-equal
| Equality comparison on dateTime values |
op:dateTime-less-than
| Less-than comparison on dateTime values |
op:dateTime-greater-than
| Greater-than comparison on dateTime values |
op:date-equal
| Equality comparison on date values |
op:date-less-than
| Less-than comparison on date values |
op:date-greater-than
| Greater-than comparison on date values |
op:time-equal
| Equality comparison on time values |
op:time-less-than
| Less-than comparison on time values |
op:time-greater-than
| Greater-than comparison on time values |
op:gYearMonth-equal
| Equality comparison on gYearMonth values |
op:gYear-equal
| Equality comparison on gYear values |
op:gMonthDay-equal
| Equality comparison on gMonthDay values |
op:gMonth-equal
| Equality comparison on gMonth values |
op:gDay-equal
| Equality comparison on gDay values |
The following comparison operators are defined on date, time and duration values. Each operator takes two operands of the same type and returns a boolean result. As discussed in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], the order relation on the duration and the date and time datatypes is not a total order but, rather, a partial order. For this reason, only the equality function is defined on duration. A full complement of comparison and arithmetic functions are defined on the two subtypes of duration described in 8.2 Two Totally Ordered Subtypes of Duration.
If either operand to a comparison function on dateTime, date or time values does not have a explicit timezone then, for the purpose of the operation, an implicit timezone, provided by the static context, is assumed to be present as part of the value. This creates a total order for all dateTime, date and time values.
[Issue 186: Preserve original timezone in date/time values.]
op:duration-equal
($operand1
as
duration
, $operand2
as
duration
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if each component of $operand1
is exactly equal to the corresponding component of $operand2
. Returns false otherwise. If a component is missing it should be interpreted as have a 0
value.
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on duration values.
op:yearMonthDuration-equal ( | $operand1 | as yearMonthDuration , |
$operand2 | as yearMonthDuration ) as boolean |
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is exactly equal to $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on yearMonthDuration values.
op:yearMonthDuration-less-than ( | $operand1 | as yearMonthDuration , |
$operand2 | as yearMonthDuration ) as boolean |
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is less than $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
This function backs up the "lt" and "ge" operators on yearMonthDuration values.
op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than ( | $operand1 | as yearMonthDuration , |
$operand2 | as yearMonthDuration ) as boolean |
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is greater than $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
This function backs up the "gt" and "le" operators on yearMonthDuration values.
op:dayTimeDuration-equal ( | $operand1 | as dayTimeDuration , |
$operand2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as boolean |
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is exactly equal to $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on dayTimeDuration values.
op:dayTimeDuration-less-than ( | $operand1 | as dayTimeDuration , |
$operand2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as boolean |
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is less than $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
This function backs up the "lt" and "ge" operators on dayTimeDuration values.
op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than ( | $operand1 | as dayTimeDuration , |
$operand2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as boolean |
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is greater than $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
This function backs up the "gt" and "le" operators on dayTimeDuration values.
op:dateTime-equal
($operand1
as
dateTime
, $operand2
as
dateTime
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is exactly equal to $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
If either $operand1 or $operand2 is a value that does not contain a timezone, then for the purposes of this operation the implicit timezone is considered to be present in the value. The ordering of the dateTime data type is defined by section 3.2.7.3, "Order relation on dateTime", of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on dateTime values.
Assume that the static context provides an implicit timezone value of -5:00.
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00"), xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T17:00Z"))
returns true
.
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00"), xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T17:00"))
returns false
.
op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00"), xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00"))
returns true
.
op:dateTime-less-than
($operand1
as
dateTime
, $operand2
as
dateTime
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is less than $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
If either $operand1 or $operand2 is a value that does not contain a timezone, then for the purposes of this operation the Implicit Timezone is considered to be present in the value. The ordering of the dateTime data type is defined by section 3.2.7.3, "Order relation on dateTime", of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
This function backs up the "lt" and "ge" operators on dateTime values.
op:dateTime-greater-than ( | $operand1 | as dateTime , |
$operand2 | as dateTime ) as boolean |
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is greater than $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
If either $operand1 or $operand2 is a value that does not contain a timezone, then for the purposes of this operation the Implicit Timezone is considered to be present in the value. The ordering of the dateTime data type is defined by section 3.2.7.3, "Order relation on dateTime", of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
This function backs up the "gt" and "le" operators on dateTime values.
op:date-equal
($operand1
as
date
, $operand2
as
date
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is exactly equal to $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
If either $operand1 or $operand2 is a value that does not contain a timezone, then for the purposes of this operation the Implicit Timezone is considered to be present in the value. The ordering of the date data type is defined by section 3.2.7.3, "Order relation on dateTime", and section 3.2.9, "date", of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on date values.
op:date-less-than
($operand1
as
date
, $operand2
as
date
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is less than $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
If either $operand1 or $operand2 is a value that does not contain a timezone, then for the purposes of this operation the Implicit Timezone is considered to be present in the value. The ordering of the date data type is defined by section 3.2.7.3, "Order relation on dateTime", and section 3.2.9, "date", of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
This function backs up the "lt" and "ge" operators on date values.
op:date-greater-than
($operand1
as
date
, $operand2
as
date
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is greater than $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
If either $operand1 or $operand2 is a value that does not contain a timezone, then for the purposes of this operation the Implicit Timezone is considered to be present in the value. The ordering of the date data type is defined by section 3.2.7.3, "Order relation on dateTime", and section 3.2.9, "date", of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
This function backs up the "gt" and "le" operators on date values.
op:time-equal
($operand1
as
time
, $operand2
as
time
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is exactly equal to $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
If either $operand1 or $operand2 is a value that does not contain a timezone, then for the purposes of this operation the Implicit Timezone is considered to be present in the value. The ordering of the date data type is defined by section 3.2.7.3, "Order relation on dateTime", and section 3.2.8, "time", of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on time values.
op:time-less-than
($operand1
as
time
, $operand2
as
time
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is less than $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
If either $operand1 or $operand2 is a value that does not contain a timezone, then for the purposes of this operation the Implicit Timezone is considered to be present in the value. The ordering of the date data type is defined by section 3.2.7.3, "Order relation on dateTime", and section 3.2.8, "time", of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
This function backs up the "lt" and "ge" operators on time values.
op:time-greater-than
($operand1
as
dateTime
, $operand2
as
dateTime
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is greater than $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
If either $operand1 or $operand2 is a value that does not contain a timezone, then for the purposes of this operation the Implicit Timezone is considered to be present in the value. The ordering of the date data type is defined by section 3.2.7.3, "Order relation on dateTime", and section 3.2.8, "time", of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
This function backs up the "gt" and "le" operators on time values.
op:gYearMonth-equal ( | $operand1 | as gYearMonth , |
$operand2 | as gYearMonth ) as boolean |
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is exactly equal to $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on gYearMonth values.
op:gYear-equal
($operand1
as
gYear
, $operand2
as
gYear
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is exactly equal to $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on gYear values.
op:gMonthDay-equal
($operand1
as
gMonthDay
, $operand2
as
gMonthDay
) as
boolean
Returns true if and only if $operand1
is exactly equal to $operand2
. Returns false otherwise.
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on gMonthDay values.
The date and time datatypes may be considered to be composite datatypes in that they contain distinct components. The extraction functions specified below extract one component from a date or time value.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:get-years-from-yearMonthDuration
| Returns the year component of a yearMonthDuration value. |
fn:get-months-from-yearMonthDuration
| Returns the months component of a yearMonthDuration value. |
fn:get-days-from-dayTimeDuration
| Returns the days component of a dayTimeDuration value. |
fn:get-hours-from-dayTimeDuration
| Returns the hours component of a dayTimeDuration value. |
fn:get-minutes-from-dayTimeDuration
| Returns the minutes component of a dayTimeDuration value. |
fn:get-seconds-from-dayTimeDuration
| Returns the seconds component of a dayTimeDuration value. |
fn:get-year-from-dateTime
| Returns the year from a dateTime value. |
fn:get-month-from-dateTime
| Returns the month from a dateTime value. |
fn:get-day-from-dateTime
| Returns the day from a dateTime value. |
fn:get-hours-from-dateTime
| Returns the hours from a dateTime value. |
fn:get-minutes-from-dateTime
| Returns the minutes from a dateTime value. |
fn:get-seconds-from-dateTime
| Returns the seconds from a dateTime value. |
fn:get-timezone-from-dateTime
| Returns the timezone from a dateTime value. |
fn:get-year-from-date
| Returns the year from a date value. |
fn:get-month-from-date
| Returns the month from a date value. |
fn:get-day-from-date
| Returns the day from a date value. |
fn:get-timezone-from-date
| Returns the timezone from a date value. |
fn:get-hours-from-time
| Returns the hours from a time value. |
fn:get-minutes-from-time
| Returns the minutes from a time value. |
fn:get-seconds-from-time
| Returns the seconds from a time value. |
fn:get-timezone-from-time
| Returns the timezone from a time value. |
fn:get-years-from-yearMonthDuration
($srcval
as
yearMonthDuration?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer representing the years component in the value of $srcval
. The result may be negative. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-months-from-yearMonthDuration ( | $srcval | as yearMonthDuration? ) as integer? |
Returns an integer representing the months component in the value of $srcval
. The result may be negative. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-days-from-dayTimeDuration
($srcval
as
dayTimeDuration?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer representing the days component in the value of $srcval
. The result may be negative. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-hours-from-dayTimeDuration
($srcval
as
dayTimeDuration?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer representing the hours component in the value of $srcval
. The result may be negative. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-minutes-from-dayTimeDuration
($srcval
as
dayTimeDuration?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer representing the minutes component in the value of $srcval
. The result may be negative. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-seconds-from-dayTimeDuration
($srcval
as
dayTimeDuration?
) as
decimal?
Returns a decimal number representing the seconds component in the value of $srcval
. The result may be negative. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-year-from-dateTime
($srcval
as
dateTime?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer representing the year component in the value of $srcval
. The result may be negative. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-month-from-dateTime
($srcval
as
dateTime?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer between 1 and 12, both inclusive, representing the month component in the value of $srcval
. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-day-from-dateTime
($srcval
as
dateTime?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer between 1 and 31, both inclusive, representing the day component in the value of $srcval
. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-hours-from-dateTime
($srcval
as
dateTime?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer representing the hours value identified in the value of $srcval
. The hours value ranges from 0 to 23, both inclusive. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-minutes-from-dateTime
($srcval
as
dateTime?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer value representing the minute identified in the value of $srcval
. The minute value ranges from 0 to 59, both inclusive. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-seconds-from-dateTime
($srcval
as
dateTime?
) as
decimal?
Returns a decimal value representing the seconds and fractional seconds identified in the value of $srcval
. The value ranges from 0 to 60.999..., inclusive. The number of digits of fractional seconds precision is determined by the relevant facet of the argument. Note that the value can be greater than 60 seconds to accomodate occasional leap seconds used to keep human time synchronized with the rotation of the planet. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-timezone-from-dateTime
($srcval
as
dateTime?
) as
string?
Returns a string representing the timezone component of $srcval
. The result is a dayTimeDuration that indicates deviation from UTC whose value may range from +14:00 to -12:00 hours, both inclusive. If $srcval
does not contain a timezone, the result is the empty sequence. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-year-from-date
($srcval
as
date?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer representing the year in the value of $srcval
. The value may be negative. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-month-from-date
($srcval
as
date?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer between 1 and 12, both inclusive, representing the month component in the value of $srcval
. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-day-from-date
($srcval
as
date?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer between 1 and 31, both inclusive, representing the day component in the value of $srcval
. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-timezone-from-date
($srcval
as
date?
) as
string?
Returns a string representing the timezone component of $srcval
. The result is a dayTimeDuration that indicates deviation from UTC whose value may range from +14:00 to -12:00 hours, both inclusive. If $srcval
does not contain a timezone, the result is the empty sequence. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-hours-from-time
($srcval
as
time?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer representing the hours value identified in the value of $srcval
. The hours value ranges from 0 to 23, both inclusive. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-minutes-from-time
($srcval
as
time?
) as
integer?
Returns an integer value representing the minute identified in the value of $srcval
. The minute value ranges from 0 to 59, both inclusive. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-seconds-from-time
($srcval
as
time?
) as
decimal?
Returns a decimal value representing the seconds and fractional seconds identified in the value of $srcval
. The value ranges from 0 to 60.999..., inclusive. The number of digits of fractional seconds precision is determined by the relevant facet of the argument. Note that the value can be greater than 60 seconds to accomodate occassional leap seconds used to keep human time synchronized with the rotation of the planet. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-timezone-from-time
($srcval
as
time?
) as
string?
Returns a dayTimeDuration representing the timezone component of $srcval
. The result is a dayTimeDuration that indicates deviation from UTC whose value may range from +14:00 to -12:00 hours, both inclusive. If $srcval
does not contain a timezone, the result is the empty sequence. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:add-yearMonthDurations
| Adds two yearMonthDurations. Returns a yearMonthDuration. |
op:subtract-yearMonthDurations
| Subtracts one yearMonthDuration from another. Returns a yearMonthDuration. |
op:multiply-yearMonthDuration
| Multiply a yearMonthDuration by a decimal. Returns a yearMonthDuration. |
op:divide-yearMonthDuration
| Divide a yearMonthDuration by a decimal. Returns a yearMonthDuration. |
op:add-dayTimeDurations
| Adds two dayTimeDurations. Returns a dayTimeDuration. |
op:subtract-dayTimeDurations
| Subtracts one dayTimeDuration from another. Returns a dayTimeDuration. |
op:multiply-dayTimeDuration
| Multiply a dayTimeDuration by a decimal. Returns a dayTimeDuration. |
op:divide-dayTimeDuration
| Divide a dayTimeDuration by a decimal. Returns a dayTimeDuration. |
op:add-yearMonthDurations ( | $srcval1 | as yearMonthDuration , |
$srcval2 | as yearMonthDuration ) as yearMonthDuration |
Returns the result of adding the value of $srcval1
to the value of
$srcval2
. Backs up the "+" operator on yearMonthDuration values.
op:subtract-yearMonthDurations ( | $srcval1 | as yearMonthDuration , |
$srcval2 | as yearMonthDuration ) as yearMonthDuration |
Returns the result of subtracting the value of
$srcval2
from the value of $srcval2
. Backs up the "-" operator on yearMonthDuration values.
op:multiply-yearMonthDuration ( | $srcval1 | as yearMonthDuration , |
$srcval2 | as decimal ) as yearMonthDuration |
Returns the result of multiplying the value of $srcval1
by $srcval2
. The result is rounded to the nearest month. For a value v, 0 <= v < 0.5 rounds to 0; 0.5 <= v < 1.0 rounds to 1.
Backs up the "*" operator on yearMonthDuration values.
op:divide-yearMonthDuration ( | $srcval1 | as yearMonthDuration , |
$srcval2 | as decimal ) as yearMonthDuration |
Returns the result of dividing the value of $srcval1
by $srcval2
. The result is rounded to the nearest month. For a value v, 0 <= v < 0.5 rounds to 0; 0.5 <= v < 1.0 rounds to 1.
Backs up the "div" operator on yearMonthDuration values.
op:add-dayTimeDurations ( | $srcval1 | as dayTimeDuration , |
$srcval2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as dayTimeDuration |
Returns the result of adding the value of $srcval1
to the value of $srcval2
. Backs up the "+" operator on dayTimeDuration values.
op:subtract-dayTimeDurations ( | $srcval1 | as dayTimeDuration , |
$srcval2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as dayTimeDuration |
Returns the result of subtracting the value of $srcval2
from the value of $srcval2
. Backs up the "-" operator on dayTimeDuration values.
op:multiply-dayTimeDuration ( | $srcval1 | as dayTimeDuration , |
$srcval2 | as decimal ) as dayTimeDuration |
Returns the result of multiplying the value of $srcval1
by $srcval2
. Backs up the "*" operator on dayTimeDuration values.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:add-timezone-to-dateTime
| Returns a dateTime with a timezone. |
fn:remove-timezone-from-dateTime
| Returns a dateTime without a timezone. Values with an explicit timezone are converted to the implicit timezone. |
fn:add-timezone-to-date
| Returns a date with a timezone. |
fn:add-timezone-to-time
| Returns a time with a timezone. |
fn:remove-timezone-from-time
| Returns a time without a timezone. Values with an explicit timezone are converted to the implicit timezone. |
fn:add-timezone-to-dateTime
($srcval
as
dateTime
) as
dateTime
fn:add-timezone-to-dateTime ( | $srcval | as dateTime , |
$timezone | as dayTimeDuration ) as dateTime |
Returns a dateTime with a timezone.
If $srcval is a dateTime value without a timezone, then let $srcn be $srcval. Otherwise, let $srcn be the value of fn:remove-timezone-from-dateTime ($srcval)
. If $timezone is not specified, then $timezone will be the value of the implicit timezone for the query. The value of $srcn - $timezone
is returned with a timezone of Z.
Assume the static context provides an implicit timezone of -5:00.
let $tz := fn:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")
fn:add-timezone-to-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00"))
returns 2002-03-07T15:00:00Z
fn:add-timezone-to-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00"))
returns 2002-03-07T17:00:00Z
fn:add-timezone-to-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00"), $tz)
returns 2002-03-07T20:00:00Z
fn:add-timezone-to-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00"), $tz)
returns 2002-03-07T22:00:00Z
fn:remove-timezone-from-dateTime
($srcval
as
dateTime
) as
dateTime
fn:remove-timezone-from-dateTime ( | $srcval | as dateTime , |
$timezone | as dayTimeDuration ) as dateTime |
Returns a dateTime without a timezone.
If $srcval has a timezone, then let $srcn be $srcval. Otherwise, let $srcn be the value of fn:add-timezone-to-dateTime ($srcval)
. If $timezone is not specified, then $timezone will be the value of the implicit timezone for the query. The value returned is $srcn + $timezone
, expressed in timezone Z, with the timezone of Z removed.
Assume that the static context provides an implicit timezone of -5:00.
let $tz := fn:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")
fn:remove-timezone-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00"))
returns 2002-03-07T10:00:00
fn:remove-timezone-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00"))
returns 2002-03-07T12:00:00
fn:remove-timezone-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00"), $tz)
returns 2002-03-07T05:00:00
fn:remove-timezone-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00"), $tz)
returns 2002-03-07T07:00:00
fn:add-timezone-to-date
($srcval
as
date
) as
date
fn:add-timezone-to-date
($srcval
as
date
, $timezone
as
dayTimeDuration
) as
date
Returns a date with a timezone.
If $srcval is a date value without a timezone, then let $srcn be $srcval. Otherwise, let $srcn be the value of fn:remove-timezone-from-date($srcval)
. If $timezone is not specified, then $timezone will be the value of the implicit timezone for the query. The value of $srcn - $timezone
is returned with a timezone of Z.
Note:
EDITOR'S NOTE: The preceding paragraph makes use of a function fn:remove-timezone-from-date
that has been removed by a different proposal. As a result, the preceding paragraph is "broken", as is the fourth example below.
Assume an implicit timezone of -5:00.
let $tz := fn:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")
fn:add-timezone-to-date(xs:date("2002-03-07))
returns 2002-03-07-05:00
fn:add-timezone-to-date(xs:date("2002-03-07-07:00"))
returns 2002-03-07-07:00
fn:add-timezone-to-date(xs:date("2002-03-07"), $tz)
returns 2002-03-07-10:00
fn:add-timezone-to-date(xs:date("2002-03-07T-07:00"), $tz)
returns 2002-03-07Z
Note:
EDITOR NOTE: The fourth example above is broken because it implies removing the timezone from the date value before adding a new timezone to it.
fn:add-timezone-to-time
($srcval
as
time
) as
time
fn:add-timezone-to-time
($srcval
as
time
, $timezone
as
dayTimeDuration
) as
time
Returns a time with a timezone.
If $srcval is a time value without a timezone, then let $srcn be $srcval. Otherwise, let $srcn be the value of fn:remove-timezone-from-time($srcval)
. If $timezone is not specified, then $timezone will be the value of the implicit timezone for the query. The value of $srcn - $timezone
is returned with a timezone of Z.
Assume an implicit timezone of -5:00.
let $tz := fn:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")
fn:add-timezone-to-time(xs:time("10:00:30"))
returns 15:00:30Z
fn:add-timezone-to-time(xs:time("10:00:00-07:00"))
returns 17:00:00Z
fn:add-timezone-to-time(xs:time("10:30:00"), $tz)
returns 20:30:00Z
fn:add-timezone-to-time(xs:time("10:00:00-07:00"), $tz)
returns 22:00:00Z
fn:remove-timezone-from-time
($srcval
as
time
) as
time
fn:remove-timezone-from-time ( | $srcval | as time , |
$timezone | as dayTimeDuration ) as time |
Returns a time without a timezone.
If $srcval has a timezone, then let $srcn be $srcval. Otherwise, let $srcn be the value of fn:add-timezone-to-time ($srcval)
. If $timezone is not specified, then $timezone will be the value of the implicit timezone for the query. The value returned is $srcn + $timezone
, expressed in timezone Z, with the timezone of Z removed.
Assume an implicit timezone of -5:00.
let $tz := fn:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")
fn:remove-timezone-from-time(xs:time("10:30:00"))
returns 10:30:00
fn:remove-timezone-from-time(xs:time("10:30:00-07:00"))
returns 12:30:00
fn:remove-timezone-from-time(xs:time("10:00:00"), $tz)
returns 05:00:00
fn:remove-timezone-from-time(xs:time("10:15:00-07:00"), $tz)
returns 07:15:00
These functions support adding or subtracting a duration value to or from a dateTime, a date or a time value. Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] describes an algorithm for performing such operations.
If any of the arguments to the functions below is a dateTime, date or time value that does not contain a timezone, then, for the purposes of the function, the argument is considered to a have an implicit timezone provided by the implementation.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
fn:subtract-dateTimes-yielding-yearMonthDuration
| Returns the difference between two dateTimes as a yearMonthDuration. |
fn:subtract-dateTimes-yielding-dayTimeDuration
| Returns the difference between two dateTimes as a dayTimeDuration. |
op:subtract-dates
| Returns the difference between two dates as a dayTimeDuration. |
op:subtract-times
| Returns the difference between two times as a dayTimeDuration. |
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime
| Returns the end of a time period by adding a yearMonthDuration to the dateTime that starts the period. |
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime
| Returns the end of a time period by adding a dayTimeDuration to the dateTime that starts the period. |
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime
| Returns the beginning of a time period by subtracting a yearMonthDuration from the dateTime that ends the period. |
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime
| Returns the beginning of a time period by subtracting a dayTimeDuration from the dateTime that ends the period. |
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date
| Returns the end of a time period by adding a yearMonthDuration to the date that starts the period. |
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date
| Returns the end of a time period by adding a dayTimeDuration to the date that starts the period. |
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date
| Returns the beginning of a time period by subtracting a yearMonthDuration from the date that ends the period. |
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date
| Returns the beginning of a time period by subtracting a dayTimeDuration from the date that ends the period. |
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time
| Adds the value of the hours, minutes and seconds components of a dayTimeDuration to a time value. |
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time
| Subtracts the value of the hours, minutes and seconds components of a dayTimeDuration to a time value. |
fn:subtract-dateTimes-yielding-yearMonthDuration ( | $srcval1 | as dateTime , |
$srcval2 | as dateTime ) as yearMonthDuration |
Returns the yearMonthDuration that corresponds to the difference between the value of $srcval1
and the value of $srcval2
. If the value of $srcval1
follows in time the value of $srcval2
, then the returned value is a negative duration. If one or both arguments do not have a timezone they are assigned an implicit ·implementation-defined· timezone. If either argument is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
In general, the difference between two dateTime values will be a duration that contains years and months as well as days, hours, etc. In fact, it can be looked at as a yearMonthDuration plus a dayTimeDuration. This function returns the result rounded to contain only years and months. The calculation is as follows: first the duration is calculated as the value of a dayTimeDuration in seconds. Then, starting from $srcval2
, the
maximum number of months in the duration are calculated. The remainder r
is is rounded and added to the number of months. If 0 <= r < 15.5 days, r rounds to 0 months; if 15.5 days <= r, r rounds to 1 month.
fn:subtract-dateTimes-yielding-dayTimeDuration ( | $srcval1 | as dateTime , |
$srcval2 | as dateTime ) as dayTimeDuration |
Returns the dayTimeDuration that corresponds to the difference between the value of $srcval1
and the value of $srcval2
. If the value of $srcval1
follows in time the value of $srcval2
, then the returned value is a negative duration. If one or both arguments do not have a timezone they are assigned an implicit ·implementation-defined· timezone. If either argument is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
This function returns the value of a dayTimeDuration in seconds. Note that the number of days in this value can be greater than 31.
Backs up the subtract, "-", operator on dateTime values.
op:subtract-dates
($srcval1
as
date
, $srcval2
as
date
) as
dayTimeDuration
Returns the dayTimeDuration that corresponds to the difference between the value of $srcval1
and the value of $srcval2
. If the value of $srcval1
precedes in time the value of $srcval2
, then the returned value is a negative duration. If one or both arguments do not have a timezone, they are assigned an implicit ·implementation-defined· timezone. If either argument is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
This function returns the value of a dayTimeDuration in seconds. Note that the number of days in this value can be greater than 31.
Backs up the subtract, "-", operator on date values.
op:subtract-times
($srcval1
as
time
, $srcval2
as
time
) as
dayTimeDuration
Returns the dayTimeDuration that corresponds to the difference between the value of $srcval1
and the value of $srcval2
. If the value of $srcval1
precedes in time the value of $srcval2
, then the returned value is a negative duration. If one or both arguments do not have a timezone, they are assigned an implicit ·implementation-defined· timezone. If either argument is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
This function returns the value of a dayTimeDuration in seconds.
Backs up the subtract, "-", operator on time values.
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime ( | $srcval1 | as dateTime , |
$srcval2 | as yearMonthDuration ) as dateTime |
Returns the dateTime computed by adding the yearMonthDuration $srcval2
to the dateTime $srcval1
using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. If $srcval2
is negative, then the result dateTime precedes $srcval1
.
The result has the same timezone as srcval1
. If srcval1
has no timezone the result has no timezone.
This functions backs up the "+" operator on dateTime and yearMonthDuration.
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime ( | $srcval1 | as dateTime , |
$srcval2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as dateTime |
Returns the dateTime computed by adding the dayTimeDuration $srcval2
to the dateTime $srcval1
using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. If $srcval2
is negative, then the result dateTime precedes $srcval1
.
The result has the same timezone as srcval1
. If srcval1
has no timezone the result has no timezone.
This functions backs up the "+" operator on dateTime and dayTimeDuration.
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime ( | $srcval1 | as dateTime , |
$srcval2 | as yearMonthDuration ) as dateTime |
Returns the dateTime computed by negating the yearMonthDuration $srcval2
and adding the result to the dateTime $srcval1
using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. If $srcval2
is negative, then the result dateTime follows $srcval1
.
The result has the same timezone as srcval1
. If srcval1
has no timezone the result has no timezone.
This functions backs up the "-" operator on dateTime and yearMonthDuration.
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime ( | $srcval1 | as dateTime , |
$srcval2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as dateTime |
Returns the dateTime computed by negating the dayTimeDuration $srcval2
and adding the result to the dateTime $srcval1
using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. If $srcval2
is negative, then the result dateTime follows $srcval1
.
The result has the same timezone as srcval1
. If srcval1
has no timezone the result has no timezone.
This functions backs up the "-" operator on dateTime and dayTimeDuration.
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date ( | $srcval1 | as date , |
$srcval2 | as yearMonthDuration ) as date |
Returns the date computed by adding the yearMonthDuration $srcval2
to the date $srcval1
using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. If $srcval2
is negative, then the result date precedes $srcval1
.
The result has the same timezone as srcval1
. If srcval1
has no timezone the result has no timezone.
This functions backs up the "+" operator on date and yearMonthDuration.
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date ( | $srcval1 | as date , |
$srcval2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as date |
Returns the date computed by adding the dayTimeDuration $srcval2
to the date $srcval1
using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. If $srcval2
is negative, then the result date precedes $srcval1
.
The result has the same timezone as srcval1
. If srcval1
has no timezone the result has no timezone.
This functions backs up the "+" operator on date and dayTimeDuration.
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date ( | $srcval1 | as date , |
$srcval2 | as yearMonthDuration ) as date |
Returns the date computed by negating the yearMonthDuration $srcval2
and adding the result to the date $srcval1
using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. If $srcval2
is negative, then the result date precedes $srcval1
.
The result has the same timezone as srcval1
. If srcval1
has no timezone the result has no timezone.
This functions backs up the "-" operator on date and yearMonthDuration.
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date ( | $srcval1 | as date , |
$srcval2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as date |
Returns the date computed by negating the dayTimeDuration $srcval2
and adding the result to the date $srcval1
using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. If $srcval2
is negative, then the result date precedes $srcval1
.
The result has the same timezone as srcval1
. If srcval1
has no timezone the result has no timezone.
This functions backs up the "-" operator on date and dayTimeDuration.
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time ( | $srcval1 | as time , |
$srcval2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as time |
First, the days component of $srcval2
is set to zero (0) and the value of the resulting duration is calculated. This value is added to $parameter1
and the result returned.
The result has the same timezone as srcval1
. If srcval1
has no timezone the result has no timezone.
This functions backs up the "+" operator on time and dayTimeDuration.
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time ( | $srcval1 | as time , |
$srcval2 | as dayTimeDuration ) as time |
First, the days component of $srcval2
is set to zero (0) and the value of the resulting duration is calculated. This value is subtracted from $srcval1
and the result returned.
The result has the same timezone as srcval1
. If srcval1
has no timezone the result has no timezone.
This functions backs up the "-" operator on time and dayTimeDuration.
Since the validity of a QName is situation dependent, there is no constructor function for QName defined in 4 Constructor Functions. Neither is casting defined for QName from any other type in 16 Casting Functions. This section defines constructor functions for QName as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. Leading and trailing whitespace, if present, is stripped from string arguments before the result is constructed.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:QName-in-context
| Returns a QName with the lexical form given in the first argument. The prefix is resolved using the in-scope namespaces defined in the static context or in the given context. |
fn:QName-in-context
($qname
as
string
, $use-default
as
boolean
) as
QName
Takes a QName in its lexical form (that is, [prefix:]local-part), and turns it into a value of type QName, resolving any namespace prefix using the in-scope namespaces defined in the static context.
A dynamic error is raised (Invalid lexical form for QName) if $qname
is not in the lexical space for the QName data type as defined [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
The local part of the resulting QName is taken from the local part of the
supplied $qname
. The namespace URI of the resulting QName is
determined as follows:
If $qname
has a prefix, then the prefix is mapped to a
namespace URI using the in-scope namespaces from the static context. A
dynamic error is raised (No namespace for prefix) if there is no in-scope namespace with this prefix.
If $qname
has no prefix, and $use-default
is false
, then the resulting QName has no namespace URI.
If $qname
has no prefix, and $use-default
is true
, then the resulting QName has the namespace URI given by the default namespace for elements, as defined in the static context.
Note: since the supplied argument can be constructed dynamically, this function requires that the namespace mappings defined in the static context are available at evaluation time.
fn:QName-in-context ( | $qname | as string , |
$use-default | as boolean , | |
$node | as node ) as QName |
In this version of the function, the namespace prefix is resolved using the in-scope namespaces property of a supplied element node. The namespace URI of the resulting QName is determined as follows:
If $qname
has a prefix, then this prefix is mapped to a
namespace URI using the in-scope namespaces of $node
. A dynamic error is raised if there is no in-scope namespace with this prefix (No namespace for prefix).
If $qname
has no prefix, and $use-default
is false
, then the resulting QName has no namespace URI.
If $qname
has no prefix, and $use-default
is true
, then the resulting QName has the namespace URI given by the default in-scope namespace for $node
.
Note: this function is typically used to resolve a QName occurring within the content of an element or attribute, in cases where the QName cannot be resolved directly by the schema processor. Some processors may allow unreferenced in-scope namespaces for an element to be discarded from the data model; when this is the case, the function may raise an error indicating that the prefix is not in scope.
fn:QName-in-context("hello", xs:boolean("false"))
returns a QName with local name = "hello" that is in no namespace".
fn:QName-in-context("eg:myFunc", xs:boolean("false")
returns a QName with local name = "myFunc", prefix = "eg" where the prefix is bound to some namespace URI in the static context. The value of the QName is the tuple: namespace URI, local name.
This section discusses functions on QNames as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
op:QName-equal
| Returns true if the local names and namespace URIs of the two arguments are equal. | |
fn:get-local-name-from-QName
| Returns a string representing the local part of the QName argument. | |
fn:get-namespace-from-QName
| Returns the namespace URI for the QName argument. This may be the empty sequence if the QName is in no namespace. | |
fn:get-namespace-uri-for-prefix
| Returns the namespace URI of one of the in-scope namespaces for the given element, identified by its namespace prefix. | |
fn:get-in-scope-namespaces
| Returns the names of the in-scope namespaces for the given element. |
op:QName-equal
($srcval1
as
QName
, $srcval2
as
QName
) as
boolean
Returns true
if the namespace names of $srcval1
and $srcval2
are equal and the local-name parts of $srcval1
and $srcval2
are identical on a codepoint-by-codepoint basis. Otherwise, returns false
. Two namespace names are considered equal if they are either both absent or both present and identical on a codepoint-by-codepoint basis.
Backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on values of type QName.
If either namespace name is a relative URI, it is undefined whether it will compare equal to any other namespace name.
fn:get-local-name-from-QName
($srcval
as
QName?
) as
string?
Returns a string representing the local part of $srcval
. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:get-namespace-from-QName
($srcval
as
QName?
) as
anyURI?
Returns the namespace URI for $srcval
. If $srcval
is in no namespace, the function returns the empty sequence.
If $srcval
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
fn:get-namespace-uri-for-prefix ( | $element | as element , |
$prefix | as string ) as string? |
Returns the namespace URI of one of the in-scope namespaces for $element, identified by its namespace prefix.
If $element
has an in-scope namespace whose namespace prefix is equal to $prefix, it returns the namespace URI of that namespace. If $prefix
is the zero-length string, it returns the namespace URI of the default (unnamed) namespace. Otherwise, it returns the empty sequence.
Names are equal only if their Unicode code-points match exactly.
fn:get-in-scope-namespaces
($element
as
element
) as
string*
Returns the names of the in-scope namespaces for $element
. For namespaces that have a name, it returns the name of the namespace node (that is, the namespace prefix) as an NCName. For the default namespace, which is unnamed, it returns the zero-length string.
This section defines a constructor function for anyURI as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:resolve-uri
| Returns an absolute anyURI given a base URI and a relative URI. |
fn:resolve-uri
($relative
as
anyURI
) as
anyURI
fn:resolve-uri
($relative
as
anyURI
, $base
as
anyURI
) as
anyURI
The second form of this function expects $base
to be an absolute URI and $relative
to be a relative URI. It resolves the relative URI $relative
against the base-uri $base
and returns the resulting absolute URI. If $relative
is an absolute URI, it is returned unchanged. If $base
is not an absolute URI, a error is raised ("Relative URI base argument to resolve-uri").
The first form of this function resolves the relative URI $relative
against the base-uri from the static context. If $relative
is an absolute URI, it is returned unchanged. If base-uri is not defined in the static context an error is raised ("No base-uri in static context").
If the $relativeURI
is the empty string, returns the base-uri from the static context in the first form and $base
in the second form.
Resolving a URI does not dereference it. This is merely a syntactic operation on two character strings.
This section specifies functions that take anyURI as arguments.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
op:anyURI-equal
| Returns true if the two arguments are equal. |
We define the following comparison operators on base64Binary and hexBinary values. Comparisons take two operands of the same type; that is, both operands must be base64Binary or hexBinary. Each returns a boolean value.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
op:hexBinary-equal
| Returns true if the two arguments are equal. | |
op:base64Binary-equal
| Returns true if the two arguments are equal. |
op:hexBinary-equal
($value1
as
hexBinary
, $value2
as
hexBinary
) as
boolean
Returns true
if $value1
and value2
are of the same length and contain the same code-points. Otherwise, returns false
.
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on hexBinary values.
op:base64Binary-equal ( | $value1 | as base64Binary , |
$value2 | as base64Binary ) as boolean |
Returns true
if $value1
and value2
are of the same length and contain the same code-points. Otherwise, returns false
.
This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on base64Binary values.
This section discusses functions that take NOTATION as arguments.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
op:NOTATION-equal
| Returns true if the two arguments are equal. |
This section discusses functions and operators on nodes
. Nodes
are formally defined in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model].
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:name
| Returns the name of the context node or the specified node as a string. | XPath 1.0 modified |
fn:local-name
| Returns the local name of the context node or the specified node as a NCName. | XPath 1.0 modified |
fn:namespace-uri
| Returns the namespace URI as a string for the QName of the argument node or the context node if the argument is omitted. This may be the zero-length string if the QName is in no namespace. | |
fn:number
| Returns the value of the context node or the specified sequence converted to a number. | XPath 2.0 req 1.5 (Could) |
fn:lang
| Returns true or false depending on whether the language of the context node, as defined using the xml:lang attribute, is the same as, or a sublanguage of, the language specified by the argument. | XPath 1.0 |
op:node-equal
| Returns true if the two arguments have the same identity. | Data Model |
fn:deep-equal
| Returns true if the two arguments have the same value. | Data Model |
op:node-before
| Indicates whether one node appears before another node in document order. | Data Model |
op:node-after
| Indicates whether one node appears after another node in document order. | Data Model |
fn:root
| Returns the root of the tree to which the node argument belongs. | Data Model |
For the illustrative examples below, assume an XQuery operating on a Purchase Order document containing a number of item elements. Each item has child elements called description, quantity, etc. Quantity has simple content of type decimal. Further assume that variables $item1
, $item2
, etc. are bound to the nodes for the item elements in the document in sequence.
fn:name
() as
string
fn:name
($srcval
as
node?
) as
string
Returns the name of a node, as a string that is either the zero-length string, or has the lexical form of a QName.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context node. If there is no context node (that is, if the context item is not a node), the function returns the zero-length string.
If the argument is supplied and is the empty sequence, the function returns the zero-length string.
If the target node 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 value returned is a string whose lexical form is a QName.
If $srcval
is a processing instruction or a namespace node, or if it is an element or attribute node whose expanded-QName (as determined by the name accessor in the data model) is in no namespace, then the function returns the local part of the expanded-QName.
If $srcval
is an element or attribute whose expanded QName is in a namespace, then a prefix is determined using the same rules as those for determining the prefix property when the element or attribute node is mapped to an element or attribute information item in the InfoSet. These rules are given in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. This prefix is then combined with the local part of the node's expanded QName to form a string which will take one of the forms "prefix:local-part" (if the prefix is a non-zero length string) or "local-part" (if the prefix is a zero-length string).
fn:local-name
() as
string
fn:local-name
($srcval
as
node?
) as
string
Returns the local part of the name of $srcval
as a string that will either be the zero-length string, or will have the lexical form of an NCName.
If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context node. If there is no context node (that is, if the context item is not a node), the function returns the zero-length string.
If the argument is supplied and is the empty sequence, the function returns the zero-length string.
If the target node has no name (that is, if it is a document node, a comment, or a text node), the function returns the zero-length string.
Otherwise, the value returned will be the local part of the expanded-QName of the target node (as determined by the name accessor in the data model). This will be a string whose lexical form is an NCName.
fn:namespace-uri
() as
string
fn:namespace-uri
($srcval
as
node?
) as
string
Returns the namespace URI of the QName of $srcval
as a string. If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context node. If there is no context node (that is, if the context item is not a node), the function returns the zero-length string. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, the zero-length string is returned.
If the $srcval
is neither an element nor an attribute node, or if it is an element or attribute node which has no QName or whose expanded-QName (as determined by the name accessor in the data model) is in no namespace, then the function returns the zero-length string.
fn:number
() as
double
fn:number
($srcval
as
item?
) as
double
Returns the value indicated by $srcval
or, if $srcval
is not specified, the context node, converted to a double.
If $srcval
is atomic then return the value obtained by
converting it to double following the rules of 16.8 Casting to numeric types.
If $srcval
is a node with a simply typed value then return that value converted to double following the rules of 16.8 Casting to numeric types.
Otherwise convert $srcval
to a string as if by a call to the fn:string() function and then convert the string to a double
following the rules of 16.8 Casting to numeric types.
If the conversion to double fails because the lexical representation is not a valid lexical representation of a numeric simple type as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical representation")
fn:lang
($testlang
as
string
) as
boolean
Returns true
or false
depending on whether the language of the context node, as defined using the xml:lang
attribute, is the same as, or a sublanguage of, the language specified by $testlang
.
The relevant xml:lang
attribute is determined by the value of the XPath expression:
(ancestor-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 the string-value of the relevant xml:lang
attribute is equal to $testlang
ignoring case, or if the string-value of the relevant testlang
attribute contains some hyphen (-) such that the part of the string-value preceding that hyphen is equal to $testlang
, ignoring case.
op:node-equal
($parameter1
as
node
, $parameter2
as
node
) as
boolean
If the node identified by the value of $parameter1
is the same node as the node identified by the value of $parameter2
(that is, the two nodes have the same identity), then the function returns true
; otherwise, the function returns false
. This function backs up the "is" and "isnot" operators on nodes.
fn:deep-equal
($parameter1
as
node
, $parameter2
as
node
) as
boolean
fn:deep-equal ( | $parameter1 | as node , |
$parameter2 | as node , | |
$collation | as anyURI ) as boolean |
This function tests whether the name and content of the node $parameter1
are the same as the name and content of the node $parameter2
.
The following (recursive) tests are applied in order to determine whether two nodes are deep-equal.
If the two nodes are of different node-kinds, the result is false.
if (fn:node-kind($parameter1) ne fn:node-kind($parameter2)) then false else
If the two nodes have names, and the names are different when compared as expanded-QNames, the result is false.
if (fn:node-name($parameter1) != fn:node-name($parameter2)) then false else
If the two nodes are text nodes, comment nodes, processing instruction nodes, or namespace nodes, then the result is true if and only if the two nodes have equal string-values, when compared using the selected collation.
if (some $n in ("text", "comment", "processing-instruction", "namespace") satisfies $n eq fn:node-kind($parameter1) and fn:compare(fn:string($parameter1), fn:string($parameter2), $collation) ne 0) then false else
If either node has attributes, then the result is false if either node has an attribute that is not deep-equal to an attribute of the other node, using the selected collation.
if (some $a1 in $parameter1/@* satisfies not (some $a2 in $parameter2/@* satisfies fn:deep-equal($a1, $a2, $collation)) or some $a2 in $parameter2/@* satisfies not (some $a1 in $parameter1/@* satisfies fn:deep-equal($a1, $a2, $collation))) then false else
If neither node has element children, then the result is true only if the other node also has simple content, and if the simple content of the two nodes (that is, the result of the fn:data
function) is equal under the rules for the fn:sequence-deep-equal
function, using the selected collation. (Note: attributes always have simple content.)
if (empty($parameter1/*) and empty($parameter2/*)) then fn:sequence-deep-equal( fn:data($parameter1), fn:data($parameter2), $collation ) else
Otherwise, the result is true if and only if the children of node $parameter1
are pairwise deep-equal to the children of node $parameter2
, ignoring comment and processing instruction nodes in both cases.
fn:sequence-deep-equal( $parameter1/(* | text()), $parameter2/(* | text()), $collation )
Note:
The two nodes are not required to have the same type annotation, and they are not required to have the same in-scope namespaces. They may also differ in their parent, their base URI, and their unique-ID. The order of children is significant, but the order of attributes is insignificant. The contents of comments and processing instructions are significant only if these nodes are used directly as arguments to the function, not if they appear as children of the nodes supplied as arguments.
Note:
The result of sequence-deep-equal(1, current-dateTime())
is false; it does not cause an error to be returned.
The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
op:node-before
($parameter1
as
node
, $parameter2
as
node
) as
boolean
If the node identified by the value of $parameter1
occurs in document order before the node identified by the value of $parameter2
, this function returns true
; otherwise, it returns false
. The rules determining the order of nodes within a single document and in different documents can be found in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. This function backs up the "<<" operator.
op:node-after
($parameter1
as
node
, $parameter2
as
node
) as
boolean
If the node identified by the value of $parameter1
occurs in document after the node identified by the value of $parameter2
, this function returns true
; otherwise, it returns false
. The rules determining the order of nodes within a single document and in different documents can be found in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. This function backs up the ">>" operator.
fn:root
() as
node
fn:root
($srcval
as
node
) as
node
Returns the root of the tree to which $srcval
belongs. This will usually, but not necessarily, be a document node.
If $srcval
is a document node it is returned.
If the function is called without an argument, the context item is used as the default argument. If the context item is not a node an error is raised ("Context item is not a node").
A sequence
is an ordered collection of zero or more items
. An item
is either a node or an atomic value. The terms sequence
and item
are defined formally in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XPath 2.0].
[Issue 89: Functions that have anyType in their return are problematic.]
The following constructor functions are defined for sequences.
Function | Meaning |
---|---|
op:to
| Returns the sequence containing every integer between the values of the operands. |
op:to
($firstval
as
integer
, $lastval
as
integer
) as
integer+
Returns the sequence containing every integer whose value is between the value of $firstval
(inclusive) and the value of $lastval
(inclusive), in monotonic order. If the value of the first operand is less than the value of the second, the sequence is in increasing order; otherwise, it is in decreasing order. If the values of the two operands are equal, a sequence containing a single integer equal to the value is returned.
This function backs up the "to" operator.
The following functions are defined on sequences.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:boolean
| Casts a sequence to a boolean. | XPath 1.0 |
op:concatenate
| Concatenates two sequences. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:item-at
| Returns the item at given index. | XPath 2.0 Req 4.4 (Should) |
fn:index-of
| Returns a sequence of unsignedInts, each of which is the index of a member of the specified sequence that is equal to the simple value or node that is the value of the second argument. If no members of the specified sequence are equal to the value of the second argument, the function returns an empty sequence. | XPath 2.0 Req 4.4 (Should) |
fn:empty
| Indicates whether or not the provided sequence is empty. | XPath 2.0 Req 4.4 (Should) |
fn:exists
| Indicates whether or not the provided sequence is not empty. | |
fn:distinct-nodes
| Returns a sequence in which all but one of a set of duplicate nodes, based on node identity, have been deleted. The order in which the distinct nodes are returned is implementation-dependent. | XPath 2.0 Req 4.4 (Should) |
fn:distinct-values
| Returns a sequence in which all but one of a set of duplicate values, based on value equality, have been deleted. The order in which the distinct values are returned is implementation-dependent. | XPath 2.0 Req 4.4 (Should) |
fn:insert
| Inserts an item or sequence of items into a specified position of a sequence. | XPath 2.0 Req 2.4, 4.4 (Should) |
fn:remove
| Removes an item from a specified position of a sequence. | XPath 2.0 Req 2.4, 4.4 (Should) |
fn:subsequence
| Returns the subsequence of a given sequence identified by location. | XPath 2.0 Req 4.4 (Should) |
fn:unordered
| Indicates that the given sequence may be returned in any order. |
[Issue 63: Do we need variations of index-of for values and identity?]
As in the previous section, for the illustrative examples below, assume an XQuery operating on a Purchase Order document containing a number of item elements. The variable $seq
is bound to the sequence of item nodes in document order. The variables $item1
, $item2
, etc. are bound to individual item nodes in the sequence.
fn:boolean
($srcval
as
item*
) as
boolean
Computes the boolean value of the sequence $srcval
. Returns false
if $srcval
is one of the following:
The empty sequence
The singleton boolean value false
.
The singleton string value "" (the empty string).
A singleton numeric value that is numerically equal to zero.
The singleton double or float value NaN
.
Otherwise returns true
.
op:concatenate
($seq1
as
item*
, $seq2
as
item*
) as
item*
Returns a sequence consisting of the items in $seq1
followed by the items in $seq2
. This function backs up the infix operator ",". If either sequence is the empty sequence, the other operand is returned.
fn:item-at
($seqParam
as
item*
, $posParam
as
integer
) as
item?
Returns the item in $seqParam
that is located at the index that is the value of $posParam
.
If $seqParam
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
If the value of $posParam
is greater than the number of items in the sequence, or is less than or equal to zero (0), then an error is raised ("Invalid position").
This function is used in the definition of the formal semantics of filter expressions, that is, expressions of the form expression-1[expression-2]
fn:node-equal(fn:item-at($seq, 1), $item1)
returns true
.
fn:index-of
($seqParam
as
item*
, $srchParam
as
item
) as
unsignedInt*
fn:index-of ( | $seqParam | as item* , |
$srchParam | as item , | |
$collationLiteral | as anyURI ) as unsignedInt* |
If the value of $seqParam
contains only simple values, then the function returns a sequence of unsigned integers indicating the indexes (positions) of items in the value of $seqParam
that are equal to the simple value of $srchParam
. If the data types of the simple values are strings, then equality is determined according to the collation that is used.
If the value of $seqParam
contains nodes, then the function returns a sequence of unsigned integers indicating the indexes (positions) of nodes whose string values are equal to the string value of the node in the second argument. Equality of string values is determined according to the collation that is used.
The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
The sequence must contain either simple values or nodes, not both. In addition, if the sequence contains simple values $srchParam
must be a simple value and if the sequence contains nodes $srchParam
must be a node. If the above conditions are violated, then an error is raised ("Mixed simple values and nodes").
If the value of $seqParam
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
The index is 1-based, not 0-based.
fn:empty
($srcval
as
item*
) as
boolean
If the value of $srcval
is the empty sequence, the function returns true
; otherwise, the function returns false
.
fn:exists
($srcval
as
item*
) as
boolean
If the value of $srcval
is not the empty sequence, the function returns true
; otherwise, the function returns false
.
fn:distinct-nodes
($srcval
as
node*
) as
node*
Returns the sequence that results from removing from $srcval
all but one of a set of nodes that have the same identity as one another, based on node identity (that is, using node-equal()
). The order in which the distinct nodes are returned is implementation-dependent. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:distinct-values
($srcval
as
atomic value*
) as
atomic value*
fn:distinct-values ( | $srcval | as atomic value* , |
$collationLiteral | as anyURI ) as atomic value* |
Returns the sequence that results from removing from $srcval
all but one of a set of values that are eq
to one other. Values of the same type must have a total order. If this condition is not satisfied, an error is raised ("Values do not have total order"). If date/time values do not have a timezone a implicit timezone, provided by the static context is added.
For float
and double
values NaN
is
equal to itself and 0.0
is equal to -0.0
.
Equality of string values are determined according to the collation that is used. The order of the values returned is implementation-dependent. The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
If $srcval
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
fn:insert
($target
as
item*
, $position
as
integer
, $inserts
as
item*
) as
item*
Returns a new sequence constructed from the value of $target
with the value of $inserts
inserted at the position specified by the value of $position
. (The value of $target
is not affected by the sequence construction.)
Let the effective value of $position
be N computed as cast as
unsignedInt(floor($position))
.
If N is less than zero (0), the effective value of N is zero (0). If N is greater than the number of items in $target
, then the effective value of N is equal to the number of items in $target
plus 1.
The value returned by the function consists of all items of $target
whose index is less than or equal to N, followed by all items of $inserts
, followed by the remaining elements of $target
, in that sequence.
If $target
is the empty sequence, a copy of $inserts
is returned. If $inserts
is the empty sequence, a copy of $target
is returned.
fn:remove
($target
as
item*
, $position
as
integer
) as
item*
Returns a new sequence constructed from the value of $target
with the item at the position specified by the value of $position
removed.
Let the effective value of $position
be N computed as cast as unsignedInt(floor($position))
.
If N is less than 1 or greater than the number of items in $target
, no action is taken. Otherwise, the value returned by the function consists of all items of $target
whose index is less than N, followed by
all items of $target
whose index is greater than N. If $target
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
fn:subsequence
($sourceSeq
as
item*
, $startingLoc
as
integer
) as
item*
fn:subsequence ( | $sourceSeq | as item* , |
$startingLoc | as integer , | |
$length | as integer ) as item* |
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
.
If $length
is not specified, then the subsequence includes items to the end of $sourceSeq
.
The value of $length
can be greater than the number of items in the value of $sourceSeq
following the beginning position, in which case the subsequence includes items to the end of $length
.
The first item of a sequence is located at position 1, not position 0.
If $sourceSeq
is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:sequence-deep-equal
| Returns true if the two arguments have the same value. | Data Model |
fn:sequence-node-equal
| Returns true if the two arguments have the same nodes. | Data Model |
op:union
| Returns the union of the two sequence arguments, eliminating duplicates. | XPath 2.0 Req 1.5 (Should) |
op:intersect
| Returns the intersection of the two sequence arguments, eliminating duplicates. | XPath 2.0 Req 1.5 (Should) |
op:except
| Returns the difference of the two sequence arguments, eliminating duplicates. | XPath 2.0 Req 1.5 (Should) |
As in the previous sections, for the illustrative examples below, assume a XQuery operating on a Purchase Order document containing a number of item elements. The variables $item1
, $item2
, etc. are bound to individual item nodes in the sequence. We shall use sequences of these nodes in the examples below.
fn:sequence-deep-equal
($parameter1
as
item*
, $parameter2
as
item*
) as
boolean?
fn:sequence-deep-equal ( | $parameter1 | as item* , |
$parameter2 | as item* , | |
$collationLiteral | as anyURI ) as boolean? |
If the sequences that are the values of $parameter1
and $parameter2
have the same values (that is, they have the same number of items and items in corresponding positions in the two sequences compare equal if they are values and deep-equal()
if they are nodes.), then the function returns true
; otherwise, the function returns false
. Returns the empty sequence if one or both of its arguments is the empty sequence.
String values are compared according to the collation that is used.
The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
fn:sequence-node-equal
($parameter1
as
node*
, $parameter2
as
node*
) as
boolean?
Returns the empty sequence if one or both of its arguments is the empty sequence.
If the sequences that are the values of $parameter1
and $parameter2
have the same nodes as content (that is, they have the same number of items and items in corresponding positions in the two sequences are the identical nodes), then the function returns true
; otherwise, the function returns false
.
op:union
($parameter1
as
node*
, $parameter2
as
node*
) as
node*
Constructs a sequence containing every node that occurs in the values of $parameter1
or $parameter2
, eliminating duplicate nodes. Nodes are returned in document order. Two nodes are equal if they are fn:node-equal()
.
This function backs up the "union" or "|" operator.
op:intersect
($parameter1
as
node*
, $parameter2
as
node*
) as
node*
Constructs a sequence containing every node that occurs in the values of both $parameter1
and $parameter2
, eliminating duplicate nodes. Nodes are returned in document order.
If either operand is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
Two nodes are equal if they are fn:node-equal()
.
This function backs up the "intersect" operator.
op:except
($parameter1
as
node*
, $parameter2
as
node*
) as
node*
Constructs a sequence containing every node that occurs in the values of $parameter1
, but not in the value of $parameter2
, eliminating duplicate nodes. Nodes are returned in document order.
If $parameter1
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned. If $parameter2
is the empty sequence, a copy of $parameter1
is returned.
Two nodes are equal if they are fn:node-equal()
.
This function backs up the "except" operator.
Aggregate functions take a sequence as argument and return a single value computed from values in the sequence. Except for fn:count
, the sequence must consist of values of a single type, or they must be numeric, and support certain operations.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:count
| Returns the number of items in the sequence. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:avg
| Returns the average of a sequence of values. | XSLT 2.0 Req. 1.4 (Must) |
fn:max
| Returns the object with maximum value from a collection of comparable objects. | XSLT 2.0 Req. 1.4 (Must) |
fn:min
| Returns the object with minimum value from a collection of comparable objects. | XSLT 2.0 Req. 1.4 (Must) |
fn:sum
| Returns the sum of a sequence of values. | XSLT 1.0 |
[Issue 187: How do we handle untyped values in aggregate functions.]
fn:count
($srcval
as
item*
) as
unsignedInt
Returns the number of items in the value of $srcval
. Returns 0 if $srcval
is the empty sequence.
fn:avg
($srcval
as
atomic value*
) as
atomic value?
$srcval
must contain items of a single type (For numeric values, the numeric promotion rules defined in
5.2 Operators on Numeric Values are used to promote all values to a single common type). In addition, the type must support addition and division by an integer. If date/time values do not have a timezone, the implicit timezone provided by the static context is added. The function returns a value of the same type as the items in $srcval
which is the average of the values (computed as sum($srcval) div count($srcval)
). If $srcval
is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.
If, $srcval
does not contain only numbers, or items of a single type that support addition and division by an integer, then an error is raised ("Invalid argument").
fn:max
($srcval
as
atomic value*
) as
atomic value?
fn:max
($srcval
as
atomic value*
, $collationLiteral
as
anyURI
) as
atomic value?
$srcval
must contain only items of a single type. (For numeric values, the numeric promotion rules defined in
5.2 Operators on Numeric Values are used to promote all values to a single common type.) In addition, the values in the sequence must have a total order. If date/time values do not have a timezone, the implicit timezone provided by the static context is added. Duration values must either all be yearMonthDuration values or must all be dayTimeDuration values. If any of these conditions is not true, then an error is raised ("Invalid argument").
fn:max
returns a value of the same type as the items in $srcval
which is the item in the value in $srcval
whose value is greater than or equal to the value of every other item in the value of $srcval
. If there are two or more such items, then the specific item whose value is returned is implementation-dependent.
For float
and double
values NaN
is greater than all numeric values including +INF and 0.0
is greater than -0.0
.
If the items in the value of $srcval
are strings, then the determination of the greatest item is made according to the collation that is used. The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
fn:min
($srcval
as
atomic value*
) as
atomic value?
fn:min
($srcval
as
atomic value*
, $collationLiteral
as
anyURI
) as
atomic value?
$srcval
must contain only items of a single type. (For numeric values, the numeric promotion rules defined in
5.2 Operators on Numeric Values are used to promote all values to a single common type.) In addition, the values in the sequence must have a total order. If date/time values do not have a timezone, the implicit timezone provided by the static context is added. Duration values must either all be yearMonthDuration values or must all be dayTimeDuration values. If any of these conditions is not true, then an error is raised ("Invalid argument").
fn:min
returns a value of the same type as the items in $srcval
which is the item in the value in $srcval
whose value is less than or equal to the value of every other item in the value of $srcval
. If there are two or more such items, then the specific item whose value is returned is implementation-dependent.
For float
and double
values NaN
is greater than all numeric values including +INF and 0.0
is greater than -0.0
.
If the items in the value of $srcval
are strings, then the determination of the least item is made according to the collation that is used. The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings.
fn:sum
($srcval
as
atomic value*
) as
atomic value
$srcval
must contain items of a single type (For numeric values, the numeric promotion rules defined in
5.2 Operators on Numeric Values are used to promote all values to a single common type). In addition, the type must support addition. Duration values must either all be yearMonthDuration values or must all be dayTimeDuration values. The function returns a value of the same type as the items in $srcval
which is the sum of the values. If $srcval
is the empty sequence, then 0.0 is returned.
If, $srcval
does not contain only numbers, or items of a single type that support addition, then an error is raised ("Invalid argument").
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:id
| Returns the sequence of nodes having unique IDs that match the IDREFs represented by the argument sequence. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:idref
| Returns the sequence of nodes with IDREFs matching the items in the argument sequence. | XSLT 2.0 Req. 2.11 (Could) |
fn:document
| Returns a sequence of document nodes retrieved using the URIs specified in its arguments. | XSLT 1.0 |
fn:collection
| Returns a sequence of document nodes retrieved using the URI specified as its argument. | |
fn:input
| Returns the input sequence. |
fn:id
($srcval
as
string*
) as
element*
Returns the sequence of element nodes with ID values matching the value of one of the IDREF values supplied in $srcval
.
Each string in $srcval
is parsed as if it were of type
xs:IDREF
, that is, $srcval
is treated as a
space-separated sequence of tokens, each acting as an IDREF. These tokens
are then included in the list of candidate IDREFs. After this substitution,
the sequence must consist entirely of IDREF values. If any of the tokens is
not a lexically-valid IDREF (that is, if it is not lexically an NCName)
it is ignored.
The result of the function is a sequence, in document order, of those elements that are in the same document as the context node, and that have an ID value equal to one or more of the IDREFs in the list of candidate IDREFs. An element has an ID value of V if it has an attribute whose type is xs:ID and whose value is V.
An ID value matches a candidate IDREF if they consist of the same sequence of Unicode code-points. The default collation is not used in the comparison.
A dynamic error is raised if the context item is not a node ("No context node").
No error is raised in respect of an IDREF value that does not match the ID of any element in the document. If no IDREF value matches any element, the function will return an empty sequence.
If the source document is well-formed but not valid, it is possible for two or more elements to have the same ID value. In this situation, the function will select the last such element.
It is also possible in an invalid document to have an attribute that has a declared type of ID, whose value does not conform to the lexical rules for an ID. Such an element will never be selected by this function.
fn:idref
($srcval
as
string*
) as
element*
Returns the sequence of elements nodes having either an IDREF attribute whose value matches the value of one of the items in the value of $srcval
or an IDREFS attribute whose value contains an IDREF value that matches the value of one of the items in the value of $srcval
. This function allows reverse navigation from IDs to IDREFs.
The nodes that are returned all belong to the document containing the context item, if it is a node. If the context document is not specified, then an error is raised ("No context document"). If the context document is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.
fn:document
($srcval1
as
item*
) as
node*
fn:document
($srcval1
as
item*
, $srcval2
as
node*
) as
node*
If $srcval2
is the empty sequence, or a sequence whose first item is not a node, unless all the URIs in $srcval1
are absolute URIs, then an error is raised ("Invalid arguments to document function"). If $srcval2
is a sequence of more than one node, the effect is as if only the first node in the sequence were supplied.
Two documents are treated as the same document if they are identified by the same URI. The URI used for the comparison is the absolute URI into which any relative URI was resolved and does not include any fragment identifier. Thus, the following expression (if it does not cause an error) will always be true:
document("foo.xml") is document("foo.xml")
Note:
The scope over which this applies depends on the processing context. In XSLT, it applies to any two calls on the document function executed during the same transformation. In XQuery, it applies to any two calls executed during the same query evaluation.
The result of the document function can be explained in terms of an internal primitive function one-doc
, which takes a requested URI and a base URI as arguments and returns a node sequence as its result. The result of the document function is the union of the node sequences obtained by calling one-doc
once for each member of $srcval1
.
The one-doc
function retrieves a document using a request URI R and a base URI B.
For a member of $srcval1
that is a node N, the one-doc
function is called with the string-value of N as the request URI and the effective base URI of $srcval2
if $srcval2
is supplied. If srcval2
is not supplied, the base URI is the effective base URI of N.
For a member of $srcval1
that is a simple value, the one-doc
function is called using a request URI obtained by converting the simple value to a string as if by using the string function, and the effective base URI of $srcval2
if $srcval2
is supplied. If srvcal2
is not supplied, the base URI is obtained from the static context.
The effective base URI of a node is defined to be the base URI of the node (as defined in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model] in the case of document nodes and element nodes, and the base URI of the parent of the node for any other kind of node. If the node is not a document or element node and has no parent, then an error is raised ("Invalid arguments to document function").
The internal one-doc
function operates as follows.
The resource identified by the URI is retrieved. The data resulting from the retrieval action is parsed as an XML document and a tree is constructed in accordance with the [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. An error retrieving the resource is classed as a dynamic error. In such cases, either an error is raised ("Error retrieving resource"), or the processor must recover by returning an empty sequence. One possible kind of retrieval error is that the implementation does not support the URI scheme used by the URI. An implementation is not required to support any particular URI schemes. The documentation for an implementation should specify which URI schemes the implementation supports.
If the URI reference does not contain a fragment identifier, then the document node of the document is returned. If the URI reference does contain a fragment identifier, the function returns a node sequence containing the nodes in the tree identified by the fragment identifier of the URI reference. The semantics of the fragment identifier are dependent on the media type of the result of retrieving the URI. An error in processing the fragment identifier is classed as a dynamic error. In such cases, then an error is raised ("Error processing fragment identifier"), or the processor must recover by returning an empty sequence. Possible errors include:
The fragment identifier identifies something that cannot be represented by a node sequence (such as a range of characters within a text node).
The implementation does not support fragment identifiers for the media-type of the retrieval result. An implementation is not required to support any particular media types. The documentation for an implementation should specify for which media types the implementation supports fragment identifiers.
The data resulting from the retrieval action is parsed as an XML document regardless of the media type of the retrieval result; if the top-level media type is text, then it 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.
fn:collection
($srcval
as
string
) as
node*
Takes a string as argument and returns a sequence of nodes obtained by casting $srcval
to anyURI and resolving it. If $srcval
is not in the lexical space of anyURI or if the value, after casting, does not resolve to a collection, then an error is raised ("Invalid argument to collection function"). All invocations of this function that are executed during the course of a single outermost XQuery or XPath expression return the same value.
fn:input
() as
node*
Returns the input sequence. If no input sequence has been assigned, then an error is raised ("No input sequence"). The means by which an input sequence is assigned depends on the environment. All invocations of this function that are executed during the course of a single outermost XQuery or XPath expression return the same value.
The following functions are defined to obtain information from the evaluation context. The context is always defined but may be the empty sequence.
Function | Meaning | Source |
---|---|---|
fn:context-item
| Returns the context item. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:position
| Returns the position of the context item within the sequence of items currently being processed. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:last
| Returns the number of items in the sequence of items currently being processed. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:current-dateTime
| Returns the current dateTime. | XPath 1.0 |
fn:current-date
| Returns the current date. | |
fn:current-time
| Returns the current time. | |
fn:default-collation
| Returns the default collation from the static context. | |
fn:implicit-timezone
| Returns the implicit timezone from the static context. |
fn:context-item
() as
item?
Returns the context item i.e. the item currently being processed. Returns the empty sequence if the context is the empty sequence.
fn:position
() as
unsignedInt?
Returns an unsignedInt indicating the position of the context item within the sequence of items currently being processed. Returns the empty sequence if the context is the empty sequence.
fn:last
() as
unsignedInt?
Returns an unsignedInt indicating the number of items in the sequence of items currently being processed. Returns the empty sequence if the context is the empty sequence.
fn:current-dateTime
() as
dateTime
Returns the dateTime (with timezone) that is current at some time during the evaluation of the XQuery or XPath expression in which current-dateTime()
is executed. All invocations of current-dateTime()
that are executed during the course of a single outermost XQuery or XPath expression return the same value. The precise instant during that XQuery or XPath expression's evaluation represented by the value of current-dateTime()
is ·implementation-defined·.
fn:current-date
() as
date
Returns the date (with timezone) that is current at some time during the evaluation of the XQuery or XPath expression in which current-date()
is executed. All invocations of current-date()
that are executed during the course of a single outermost XQuery or XPath expression return the same value. The precise instant during that XQuery or XPath expression's evaluation represented by the value of current-date()
is ·implementation-defined·.
fn:current-time
() as
time
Returns the date (with timezone) that is current at some time during the evaluation of the XQuery or XPath expression in which current-date()
is executed. All invocations of current-date()
that are executed during the course of a single outermost XQuery or XPath expression return the same value. The precise instant during that XQuery or Xpath expression's evaluation represented by the value of current-date()
is ·implementation-defined·.
Cast functions and cast operators take an expression as their argument and return a value of a given type. There are two ways of converting values to a given type: constructor functions and cast expressions. They provide identical semantics with different syntax. The name of a constructor function is the same as the name of the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] built-in type (see 4.1 Constructor Functions for XML Schema Built-in Types) or user-derived type (see 4.2 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("2002-01-01")
means exactly the same as "cast as xs:date
("2002-01-02"
)" .
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.
This section defines casting between the 19 primitive types defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] as well as xs:anySimpleType and the two derived types fn:yearMonthDuration
and fn:dayTimeDuration
. The type conversions that are supported are indicated in the table below. In this table, there is a row for each primitive type with that type as the source of the conversion and there is a column for each primitive type 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 be supported, subject to restrictions discussed in this section.
In the following table, the columns and rows are identified by short codes that identify simple types as follows:
aST = anySimpleType
aURI = anyURI
b64 = base64Binary
bool = boolean
dat = date
Day = gDay
dbl = double
dec = decimal
dT = dateTime
dTD = dayTimeDuration
dur = duration
flt = float
hxB = hexBinary
MD = gMonthDay
Mon = gMonth
NOT = NOTATION
QN = Qname
str = string
tim = time
YM = gYearMonth
yMD = yearMonthDuration
Yr = 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 | aST | str | flt | dbl | dec | dur | yMD | dTD | dT | tim | dat | YM | Yr | MD | Day | Mon | bool | b64 | hxB | aURI | QN | NOT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
aST | Y | Y | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | N | N |
str | Y | Y | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | N | N |
flt | Y | Y | Y | Y | M | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N |
dbl | Y | Y | Y | Y | M | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N |
dec | 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 | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
yMD | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
dTD | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
dT | Y | Y | 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 | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
dat | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N |
YM | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
Yr | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
MD | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
Day | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
Mon | Y | Y | 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 | 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 | M | Y | N | N | N | N |
hxB | Y | Y | M | M | M | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | M | N | Y | N | N | N |
aURI | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N |
QN | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N |
NOT | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y |
Casting a value to an derived type can be separated into three cases:
When the supplied value is an instance of a type that is derived by restriction from the target type. This is described in section 16.3 Casting from derived types to parent types.
When the supplied value is of a type derived by restriction from the same primitive type as the target type. This is described in 16.4 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy.
.When the derived type is derived, directly or indirectly from a from a different primitive type than the source type. This is described in 16.5 Casting across the type hierarchy.
It is possible to cast a value of any type to a type from which it is derived, directly or indirectly, by restriction. For example, it is possible to cast an unsignedShort
to an unsignedInt
, an unsignedLong
, an unsignedInteger
, an integer
, or a decimal
. Since the value space of the original type is a subset of the value space of the target type, such a cast is always successful. The result will have same value as the original, but will have a new type annotation.
It is possible to cast a value to a target type if the type of the source value and the target 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. For example an instance of xs:byte
can be cast to xs:unsignedShort
, provided the value is not negative. This includes the case where the target type is derived from the type of the supplied value as well as the case where both derive from a common supertype.
If the value does not conform to the facets defined by the target type, then an error is raised ("Value does not conform to facets"). 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 by the source data type (or the result of casting the value to a string, in the case of types that have no canonical lexical representation).
Note that this will cause casts to fail if the pattern excludes the canonical lexical representation. For example, if the type my:currency
is defined as a restriction of xs:decimal
with a pattern that requires two digits after the decimal point, casting of an integer to my:currency
will always fail, because the canonical representation of an integer does not conform to this pattern.
In some cases, casting from a parent type to a derived type requires special rules. See, for example: 16.9 Casting to duration and date and time types
When the source type and the target type are derived, directly or indirectly from different primitive types, this is called casting across the type hierarchy. Casting across the type hierarchy is logically equivelent to three separate steps performed in order. Errors can occur in either of the latter two steps.
Cast the source value up the hirerachy to the primitive type of the source as described in: 16.3 Casting from derived types to parent types.
Cast the value to the primitive type of the target type as described in: 16.1 Casting from primitive types to primitive types.
Cast the value down to the target type as described in: 16.4 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy
When the supplied value is a string
, or an instance of anySimpleType
, it is treated as being a string value and validated as a lexical value of the target type. Casting is permitted from string
and anySimpleType
to any primitive atomic type or an atomic type derived by restriction except
QName
.
For example, cast as xs:unsignedInteger("13")
returns the unsignedInteger
with value 13. This could also be written xs:unsignedInteger("13")
.
Casting is permitted from any primitive type to the primitive type string
.
When a value of any simple type is cast to string
, the derivation of the string
value TV depends on the source type ST and on the source value SV, as follows.
If ST is string
or NOTATION
, TV is SV.
If ST is anyURI
, then TV is the lexical representation of SV, as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], with each space replaced by the sequence "%20".
In all other cases, TV is the canonical representation of SV, as defined by [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes]. If [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes] does not provide a canonical representation for the datatype, then it is the single lexical representation of SV as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes].
Casting is permitted from any primitive type to anySimpleType
.
To cast to anySimpleType
the value is converted to its canonical lexical representation and the type annotation changed to anySimpleType
.
Conversion to the numeric types (that is, float
, double
and decimal
depends on factors discussed below.
When a value of any simple type is cast to float
, the float
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is float
, then TV is SV and the conversion is complete.
If ST is double
and SV cannot be represented in the value space of float
as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then the cast returns NaN..
If ST is double
and SV can be represented in the value space of float
as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then TV is SV and the conversion is complete.
If ST is decimal
or a type derived from decimal
, then TV is SVconverted to a float
value and the conversion is complete.
If ST is boolean
, SV is converted to 1.0
if SV is 1
or true
and 0.0
if SV is 0
or false
and the conversion is complete.
SV is converted to an intermediate value IV of type token
.
If the value of fn:upper-case(
IV
)
is INF
, -INF
, or NAN
, then TV is positive infinity, negative infinity, or not-a-number, respectively, and the conversion is complete.
If IV does not match the lexical structure of NumericLiteral
as defined in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
Otherwise, let NL be a NumericLiteral
comprising the same sequence of characters as IV. TV is xs:float(
NL
)
.
When a value of any simple type is cast to double
, the double
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is double
, then TV is SV and the conversion is complete.
If ST is float
or decimal
or types derived from them, then TV is xs:double(cast as string(
SV
))
and the conversion is complete.
If ST is decimal
or a type derived from decimal
, then TV is SVconverted to a double
value and the conversion is complete.
If ST is boolean
, SV is converted to 1.0
if SV is 1
or true
and 0.0
if SV is 0
or false
and the conversion is complete.
SV is converted to an intermediate value IV of type token
.
If the value of fn:upper-case(
IV
)
is INF
, -INF
, or NAN
, then TV is positive infinity, negative infinity, or not-a-number, respectively, and the conversion is complete.
If IV does not match the lexical structure of NumericLiteral
as defined in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
Otherwise, let NL be a NumericLiteral
comprising the same sequence of characters as IV. TV is xs:double(
NL
)
.
When a value of any simple type is cast to decimal
, the decimal
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is decimal
, or a type derived from decimal
, then TV is SV, converted to decimal
value if need be, and the conversion is complete.
If ST is float
or double
, then TV is the decimal
value, within the set of 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 positive or negative infinity or NaN
, or if it is higher than the highest decimal
value that the implementation can represent, or lower than the lowest, then the cast raises an error (Error in casting to decimal).
If ST is boolean
, SV is converted to 1.0
if SV is 1
or true
and 0.0
if SV is 0
or false
and the conversion is complete.
SV is converted to an intermediate value IV of type token
.
If IV does not match the lexical structure of NumericLiteral
as defined in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
Otherwise, let NL be a NumericLiteral
comprising the same sequence of characters as IV. TV is decimal(cast as string(fn:round(
NL
)))
.
Conversion from primitive types to duration and date and time types depends on factors considered below.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to duration
, yearMonthDuration
or dayTimeDuration
the target value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If source type (ST) = target type (TT) then TV is SV.
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
, then TV is derived from SV using XML Schema validation.
If ST is duration
or a type derived from duration
and TT is yearMonthDuration
, then TV is derived from SV by removing the date and time components from SV.
If ST is duration
or a type derived from duration
and TT is dayTimeDuration
, then TV is derived from SV by removing the year and month components from SV.
If ST is yearMonthDuration
or dayTimeDuration
or a type derived from them and TT is duration
, then TV is derived from SV by xs:duration(cast as string(
SV))
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to dateTime
, time
, date
, gYearMonth
, gYear
,
gMonthDay
, gDay
, or gMonth
, let CYR be cast as string( fn:get-Year( fn:currentDateTime() ) )
, let CMO be cast as string( fn:get-month( fn:currentDateTime() ) )
, and let CDA be cast as string( fn:get-day( fn:currentDateTime() ) )
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to dateTime
, the dateTime
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is dateTime
, then TV is SV.
If ST is time
, then let SHR be cast as string( fn:get-hour(
SV
) )
, let SMI be cast as string( fn:get-minute(
SV
) )
, and let SSE be cast as string( fn:get-second(
SV
) )
; TV is xs:dateTime( fn:concat(
CYR
, '-',
CMO
, '-',
CDA
, 'T',
SHR
, ':',
SMI
, ':',
SSE
) )
.
If ST is date
, then let SYR be cast as string( fn:get-Year(
SV
) )
, let SMO be cast as string( fn:get-month(
SV
) )
, and let SDA be cast as string( fn:get-day(
SV
) )
; TV is xs:dateTime( fn:concat(
SYR
, '-',
SMO
, '-',
SDA
, 'T00:00:00') )
.
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is not a valid lexical representation for dateTime
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is a valid lexical representation for dateTime
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then TV is xs:dateTime(
SV
)
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to time
, the time
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is time
, then TV is SV.
If ST is dateTime
, then TV is xs:time( fn:concat( cast as string( fn:get-hour(
SV
) ), ':', cast as string( fn:get-minute(
SV
) ), ':', cast as string( fn:get-second(
SV
) ) ) )
.
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is a valid lexical representation for time
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then TV is xs:time(
SV
)
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to date
, the date
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is dateTime
, then let SYR be cast as string( fn:get-Year(
SV
) )
, let SMO be cast as string( fn:get-month(
SV
) )
, and let SDA be cast as string( fn:get-day(
SV
) )
; TV is xs:dateTime( fn:concat(
SYR
, '-',
SMO
, '-',
SDA
) )
.
If ST is date
, then TV is SV.
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is not a valid lexical representation for date
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is a valid lexical representation for date
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then TV is xs:date(
SV
)
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to gYearMonth
, the gYearMonth
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is gYearMonth
, then TV is SV.
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is not a valid lexical representation for gYearMonth
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is a valid lexical representation for gYearMonth
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then TV is xs:date(
SV
)
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to gYear
, the gYear
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is gYear
, then TV is SV.
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is not a valid lexical representation for gYear
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is a valid lexical representation for gYear
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then TV is xs:date(
SV
)
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to gMonthDay
, the gMonthDay
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is gMonthDay
, then TV is SV.
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is not a valid lexical representation for gMonthDay
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is a valid lexical representation for gMonthDay
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then TV is xs:date(
SV
)
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to gDay
, the gDay
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is gDay
, then TV is SV.
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is not a valid lexical representation for gDay
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is a valid lexical representation for gDay
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then TV is xs:date(
SV
)
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to gMonth
, the gMonth
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is gMonth
, then TV is SV.
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is not a valid lexical representation for gMonth
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
If ST is string
or a type derived from string
and SV is a valid lexical representation for gMonth
as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then TV is xs:date(
SV
)
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to boolean
, the boolean
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is string
and
has value " true
" or " 1
", then TV is true
; if ST is string
and has value "
false
" or "
0
", then TV is false
.
If ST is float
, double
, or decimal
and SV is 0, +0, -0, or NaN, then TV is false
.
If ST is float
, double
, or decimal
and SV is not one of the above values, then TV is true
.
If ST is boolean
, then TV is SV.
If ST is base64Binary
or hexBinary
and SV is "
1
", then TV is true
; if ST is base64Binary
or hexBinary
and SV is "
0
", then TV is false
.
Otherwise, an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
Casting to base64Binary
and hexBinary
is supported only from string
or anySimpleType
.
Casting to anyURI
is possible only from the same type or possibly from string
or subtypes of string
.
When a value of any primitive type is cast to anyURI
, the anyURI
value TV is derived from the source type ST and the source value SV as follows:
If ST is string
ora subtype of string
and SV conforms to the format of a Uniform Resource Identifier Reference as specified in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes], then TV is SV.
Otherwise, an error is raised ("Invalid lexical value").
This appendix summarizes the relationship between certain functions defined in [XPath 1.0] and the corresponding functions defined in this document. The first column of the table provides the signature of functions defined in this document, while the second column provides the signature of the corresponding function in [XPath 1.0]. The third column records issues concerning the relationship between the corresponding functions.
XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 | XPath 1.0 | Issues | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
fn:node-name ($srcval as node ) as QName? |
name(node-set?) => string
| XPath 1.0 function retained to provide compatibility. | |||||||
fn:string () as string |
string(object) => string
| The string representation of double values is not backwards-compatible. When multiple items are supplied, an error ("type exception") is raised, with fall-back of first node, for XPath 1.0 compatibility. | |||||||
fn:string ($srcval as item* ) as string | |||||||||
fn:floor ($srcval as double? ) as double? |
| Potential problems with double arguments that are NaN, infinite, or out of range for an integer. | |||||||
fn:ceiling ($srcval as double? ) as double? |
ceiling(number)=> number
| Potential problems with double arguments that are NaN, infinite, or out of range for an integer. | |||||||
fn:round ($srcval as double? ) as double? |
round(number)=> number
| Potential problems with double arguments that are NaN, infinite, or out of range for an integer. | |||||||
fn:concat () as string |
concat(string, string, string*) => string
| In 2.0 the arguments are optional, which is not really a backward compatibility issue. | |||||||
fn:concat ($op1 as string? ) as string | |||||||||
fn:concat ($op1 as string? , $op2 as string? , ...) as string | |||||||||
fn:starts-with ($operand1 as string? , $operand2 as string? ) as boolean? |
starts-with(string, string) => boolean
| In 1.0 returns false if the first argument is an empty node-set. In 2.0, returns (). | |||||||
| |||||||||
fn:contains ($operand1 as string? , $operand2 as string? ) as boolean? |
contains(string, string) => boolean
| In 1.0 returns false if the first argument is an empty node-set. In 2.0, returns (). | |||||||
| |||||||||
fn:substring ($sourceString as string? , $startingLoc as double? ) as string? |
substring(string, number, number?) => string
| In 1.0 returns "" if the first argument is an empty node-set. In 2.0, returns (). | |||||||
| |||||||||
fn:string-length ($srcval as string? ) as integer? |
string-length(string?) => number
| Note: 2.0 does not mention if it defaults to the context node converted to a string when the argument is omitted. | |||||||
fn:substring-before ($operand1 as string? , $operand2 as string? ) as string? |
substring-before(string, string) => string
| In 1.0 returns "" if the first argument is an empty node-set. In 2.0, returns (). | |||||||
| |||||||||
fn:substring-after ($operand1 as string? , $operand2 as string? ) as string? |
substring-after(string, string) => string
| In 1.0 returns "" if the first argument is an empty node-set. At 2.0, returns (). | |||||||
| |||||||||
fn:normalize-space ($srcval as string? ) as string? |
normalize-space(string?) => string
| 1.0 optional argument vs. 2.0 required argument. Note: 2.0 does not mention if it defaults to the context node converted to a string when the argument is omitted. | |||||||
|
translate(string, string, string)=> string
| In 1.0 returns "" if the first argument is an empty node-set. At 2.0, returns (). | |||||||
fn:true () as boolean |
true() => boolean
| ||||||||
fn:false () as boolean |
false() => boolean
| ||||||||
fn:not ($srcval as item*? ) as boolean |
not(boolean) => boolean
| In 2.0 the strings "0" and "false" are treated as false, while in 1.0, they were treated as true. | |||||||
fn:namespace-uri () as string |
namespace-uri(node-set?) => string
| 2.0 The required type for this function is node. If fallback conversion is enabled and $srcval is a node sequence, the first node in the sequence is used as the argument. 1.0 Not an issue if fallback is enabled. | |||||||
fn:namespace-uri ($srcval as string* ) as string | |||||||||
fn:name () as string |
name(node-set?) => string
| ||||||||
fn:name ($srcval as string* ) as string | |||||||||
fn:local-name () as string |
local-name(node-set?) => string
| Should 2.0 be node*? | |||||||
fn:local-name ($srcval as node ) as string | |||||||||
fn:number () as double |
number(object?) => number
| 2.0 returns the error value instead of NaN. 2.0 No longer accepts any object, but takes a node or the context node when a node isn't supplied. 2.0 "Other" types are now errors. | |||||||
fn:number ($srcval as node ) as double | |||||||||
fn:lang ($testlang as string ) as boolean |
lang(strong) => boolean
| 2.0 If $srcval is a sequence containing more than one item, an error is raised (type exception). 1.0 Takes first node in a node-set. 2.0 If this is an untyped node, an error is raised (type exception); otherwise, its typed-value is accessed. The value is then converted to boolean. 1.0 Nodes are not typed. | |||||||
fn:count ($srcval as item*? ) as unsignedInt |
count(node-set) => number
| ||||||||
fn:sum ($srcval as item*? ) as double |
sum(node-set) => number
| 2.0 returns error value if sequence contains anything that is not a number. 1.0 returns NaN. | |||||||
fn:id ($srcval as string*? ) as element*? |
id(object) => node-set
| id(true()) is a type error in 2.0, rather than an attempt to find an element with the ID "true"; and id(42) is a type error rather than returning an empty node-set. | |||||||
fn:document ($srcval1 as anyURI*? , $srcval2 as node*? ) as node*? |
document(object, node-set?) => node-set
| 1.0 allows a string or node-set as argument; the 2.0 spec is more restrictive. Fallback conversions do not currently handle this. | |||||||
fn:position () as unsignedInt |
position()
| ||||||||
fn:last () as unsignedInt |
last() => number
|
Certain functions that were proposed for inclusion in this function library have been excluded on the basis that it is straightforward for users to implement these functions themselves using XSLT 2.0 or XQuery 1.0.
This Appendix provides sample implementations of these functions.
To emphasize that these functions are examples of functions that vendors may write, their names carry the prefix 'eg'. Vendors are free to define such functions in any namespace. A group of vendors may also choose to create a collection of such useful functions and put them in a common namespace.
eg:if-empty
($node
as
node?
, $value
as
anySimpleType
) as
anySimpleType*
If the first argument is the empty sequence or an element withput simple or complex content, if-empty() returns the second argument; otherwise, it returns the content of the first argument.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:if-empty"> <xsl:param name="node" type="node?"/> <xsl:param name="value" type="xs:anySimpleType"/> <xsl:result type="xs:anySimpleType*" select="if ($node and $node/child::node()) then fn:data($node) else $value"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
define function eg:if-empty ( node? $node, anySimpleType $value ) returns xs:anySimpleType* { if ($node and $node/child::node()) then fn:data($node) else $value" }
eg:if-absent
($node
as
node?
, $value
as
anySimpleType
) as
anySimpleType*
If the first argument is the empty sequence, if-absent() returns the second argument; otherwise, it returns the content of the first argument.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:if-absent"> <xsl:param name="node" type="node?"/> <xsl:param name="value" type="xs:anySimpleType"/> <xsl:result type="xs:anySimpleType*" select="if ($node) then fn:data($node) else $value"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
define function eg:if-absent ( node? $node, anySimpleType $value ) returns xs:anySimpleType* { if ($node) then fn:data($node) else $value" }
eg:value-union
($operand1
as
item*
, $operand2
as
item*
) as
item*
This function returns a sequence containing all the distinct items in $operand1 and $operand2, in an undefined order.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:value-union"> <xsl:param name="operand1" type="item*"/> <xsl:param name="operand2" type="item*"/> <xsl:result type="item*" select="fn:distinct-values(($operand1, $operand2))"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
define function eg:value-union ( item* $operand1, item* $operand2 ) returns item* { fn:distinct-values(($operand1, $operand2)) }
eg:value-intersect
($operand1
as
item*
, $operand2
as
item*
) as
item*
This function returns a sequence containing all the distinct items that appear in both $operand1 and $operand2, in undefined order.
XSLT implementation>
<xsl:function name="eg:value-intersect"> <xsl:param name="operand1" type="item*"/> <xsl:param name="operand2" type="item*"/> <xsl:result type="item*" select="fn:distinct-values($operand1[.=$operand2])"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
define function eg:value-intersect ( item* $operand1, item* $operand2 ) returns item* { fn:distinct-values($operand1[.=$operand2]) }
eg:value-except
($operand1
as
item*
, $operand2
as
item*
) as
item*
This function returns a sequence containing all the distinct items that appear in $operand1 but not in $operand2, in undefined order.
XSLT implementation
<xsl:function name="eg:value-except"> <xsl:param name="operand1" type="item*"/> <xsl:param name="operand2" type="item*"/> <xsl:result type="item*" select="fn:distinct-values($operand1[not(.=$operand2)])"/> </xsl:function>
XQuery implementation
define function eg:value-except ( item* $operand1, item* $operand2 ) returns item* { fn:distinct-values($operand1[not(.=$operand2)]) }
This appendix contains the current issues related to the operators specification.
Originator: | Operators Task Force F2F 2001-03-21 |
Locus: | Syntax |
What is the precise type returned by various functions? Is the specific type of the argument the returned type, or does it get "upcast" to "string"? Some operations might not be able to keep the most specific type (e.g., SUBSTRING(NCNAME,2) may not be a NCNAME!)
Resolution:
None recorded.
This issue occurs in 6.4 Functions on String Values
Originator: | Michael Sperberg-McQueen |
Locus: | Syntax |
In a presentation at the July, 2001 F2F, it was said that collations would be referred to by URI references. Michael Rys said one rationale is to allow relative URI(-reference)s so one can refer to "French" rather than http://www.example.com/i18n/collation-sequences/case-sensitive/French, and so on. There may be negative impacts on the interoperability results caused by allowing relative URI referneces for this function. It is tempting to suggest requiring collation names to be absolute URIs without fragment identifiers. If brevity is really important, perhaps we should invent a way to assign short names to collations. See, also, issue 70.
Issue resulted from e-mail: Michael Sperberg-McQueen (member-only message)
Resolution:
None recorded.
This issue occurs in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings
Originator: | Michael Kay |
Locus: | Syntax |
index-of. Need find-by-value and find-by-identity. Currently index-of takes a sequence of nodes *or* valies. Do we need to change this?
Issue resulted from e-mail: Michael Kay (member-only message)
Resolution:
None recorded.
This issue occurs in 14.2 Functions and Operators on Sequences
Originator: | Andrew Eisenberg |
Locus: | Syntax |
I believe that we should have an fn:compare-between function (analogous to SQL's BETWEEN predicate, allowing quick determination of whether one value lies between two other values).
Issue resulted from e-mail: Andrew Eisenberg (member-only message)
Resolution:
None recorded.
This issue occurs in 6.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings
Originator: | Steve Tolkin |
Locus: | Syntax |
The fn:numeric-mod()
function, the div
operator, and others do not specify what the required number of digits of precision is in the result.
Resolution:
The resolution depends on (1)how many digits Schema supports for decimals, and (2)what Functions and Operators does about overflow.
This issue occurs in 5.4 Functions on Numeric Values
Originator: | Phil Wadler (member-only message) |
Locus: | Syntax |
Functions with AnyType in the return are problematic for two reasons. To be concrete, I discuss the following.
-- fn:item-at(anyType* $seqParam, decimal $posParam) => anyType
(1) Note that the types anyType* and anyType are equivalent, which suggests that the typing here is not quite right. We should define
-- define group AnyItem = AnyElement | AnyAttribute | AnySimpleType
and then give the above the type
-- fn:item-at(anyItem* $seqParam, decimal $posParam) => anyItem
(2) Even having made the above change, the type is too broad to be useful, and one will almost always have to cast the result of calling fn:item-at (and similarly for other functions with anyItem or anyType in the result).
Instead, we should allow parametric polymorphism when specifying the signatures of built-in functions.
-- fn:item-at($anyItem* $seqParam, decimal $posParam) => $anyItem
Here $anyItem is a type variable which ranges over any group $anyItem such that $anyItem <: AnyItem. (Recall that s <: t if the extent of type s is a subset of the extent of type t, where the extent of a type is the set of values that have that type.)
Here are two examples of functions written with the current signature.
-- define function second-integer (integer* $integer-sequence) integer { treat as integer (fn:item($integer-sequence, 2)) }
-- define function third-book (Book* $book-sequence) book { treat as Book (fn:item($book-sequence, 3)) }
Here are two examples of functions that would type check under this scheme.
-- define function second-integer (integer* $integer-sequence) integer { fn:item($integer-sequence, 2) }
-- define function third-book (Book* $book-sequence) book { fn:item($book-sequence, 3) }
The definitions are easier to write and more efficient to execute (since no "treat as" needs to check the structure of the result).
Parametric polymorphism would also be useful for user-defined functions, it were clear how to define it for user-defined functions in general. But at the very least, we should allow parametric polymorphism for the built-in functions defined in the functions and operators document.
Resolution:
This issue occurs in 14 Functions and Operators on Sequences
Originator: | (member-only message) Anders Berglund. |
Locus: | Syntax |
Should we have functions that convert a date/time time value from one timezone to another? If the original value has no timezone, the timezone is added. If it has a timezone, the value is changed to conform to the specified timezone. Perhaps an alternate signature takes a timezone delta.
Resolution:
This issue occurs in 8 Functions and Operators on Durations, Dates, and Times
Originator: | (member-only message) Minutes of December 5, 2001 meeting. |
Locus: | Syntax |
What do floor, ceiling and round return? The document says integer. But NaN and the empty sequnce are allowed. Should they return the same type as their operand (without a fractional part)? This allows them to operate on numbers larger than a decimal or integer can accomodate.
See related issue at [Issue 179: What is the appropriate return type for fn:floor, fn:celing, and fn:round?]
Resolution:
This issue occurs in 5.4 Functions on Numeric Values,
Originator: | (member-only message) Minutes of December 5, 2001 meeting. |
Locus: | Syntax |
Should the concat function accept sequences as arguments? Should sequences of strings be flattened? Should string-values be used if the items in the sequence are not strings?
Resolution:
This issue occurs in 6.4.1 fn:concat
Originator: | Andrew Eisenberg. (member-only message) |
Locus: | Syntax |
For fractional seconds precision we should choose a limit that matched SQL's TIMESTAMP data type, which is 6 digits of fractional seconds precision.
Resolution:
This issue occurs in 8.1 Duration, Date, and Time Types
Originator: Andrew Eisenberg | Email 2002-04-18 (member-only message) |
Locus: | Syntax |
In the description of some functions it is possible to justify more than one result for an invocation. Rules to disambiguate these situations are necessary.
For example, for the function invocation fn:normalize-unicode ( (), "NFANDREW")
, there are rules in the specification that justify returning either () or error. Such ambiguities must be resolved.
Resolution:
This issue is not referenced!
Originator: Functions and Operators Task Force | Email 2002-06-26 (member-only message) |
Locus: | Syntax |
The expression currently alllows implementations to provide extensions to the regular expression syntax. Some participants would prefer a stricter conformance requirement than this.
Resolution:
This issue occurs in 6.4.16.1 Regular Expression Syntax
Originator: | Ashok Malhotra (member-only message) |
Locus: | Syntax |
There is precedence in XSLT for not always reporting overflow and underflow resulting from multiplication and division. Should this specification require that such errors always be reported or should it be more permissive, perhaps using XSLT as a guide?
Resolution:
This issue occurs in 5.2 Operators on Numeric Values,
Originator: | Don Chamberlin (member-only message) |
Locus: | Syntax |
The signatures of the fn:floor and fn:ceiling functions ("integer | double") are not valid SequenceTypes. One of the following should be done: (Solution 1) Make fn:floor, fn:ceiling, and fn:round return integers. You call these functions to get an integer. If the argument is NaN or infinity, an error is raised. (Solution 2) Make these functions return the same type as their argument. The signature and return type should be listed as "numeric", meaning it accepts any numeric type and returns the same type. In this case, an argument of NaN or infinity should still raise an error. (What does the floor of infinity mean??). There appears to be inclination towards Solution 2, but the final decision has not yet been made.
See related issue at [Issue 142: Should floor ceiling and round return the same type as their argument? ].
Resolution:
This issue occurs in 5.4 Functions on Numeric Values,
Originator: | Functions & Operators editorial team |
Locus: | Syntax |
We now have an fn:error function that is implicitly invoked by our specs and possibly even explicitly by XQuery applications. However, the precise semantics of this function are not at all clear.
Resolution:
This issue occurs in 3 The Error Function
Originator: Item 4 in | Don Chamberlin (member-only message) |
Locus: | Syntax |
Resolution:
Don says: I suggest deleting this function, since we do not in general know how to decide whether two durations are equal. I think an "equal" function that returns False when comparing 24 hours with 1 day does more harm than good.
This issue occurs in , 8.3.1 op:duration-equal
Originator: Item 3 in | Ashok Malhotra (member-only message) |
Locus: | Syntax |
Resolution:
The issue of whether the original timezone in the lexical form of date/time values is under discussion. This issue as added to track it's progress.
This issue occurs in , 8.3 Comparisons of Duration, Date and Time Values
Originator: Michael Rys | Minutes of 11/6 telcon (member-only message) |
Locus: | Syntax |
Resolution:
What are the semantics of handling untyped values in min, max and other aggregate functions.
This issue occurs in 14.4 Aggregate Functions
This appendix tracks gross changes in the document; it is not intended to provide a fine-grained revision history.
06-Nov-2002 (AM) Added issue on the treatment of untyped values in aggregate functions. Minutes of 11/6 telcon.
06-Nov-2002 (AM) Aligned the semantics of passing parameters to function calls with Appendix B of XQuery using the terms subtype substitution and type promotion. Minutes of 11/6 telcon.
29-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 47 (operator-datetime-internationalization). Added note as recommended in (member-only message) http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Member/w3c-query-operators/2002Sep/0140.html and agreed to in 10/17 meeting.
26-Oct-2002 (AM) Added note to fn:substring(), fn:string-length and fn:translate re. surrogate pairs based on MHK note to XSL WG on 10/24.
25-Oct-2002 (AM) Added text to collection() and input() to say that these functions yield the same result if executed repeatedly within a XQuery or XPath. As approved by the WGs on 10/17.
25-Oct-2002 (AM) Rewrote the aggregate functions to bring them in line with the Consolidation Proposal as approved by the WGs on 10/17.
25-Oct-2002 (AM) Added issue 186 preserve-timezone as requested in taskforce in telcon on 10/24.
25-Oct-2002 (AM) Added issue 185 remove-duration-equal as requested by Don Chamberlin and approved by taskforce in telcon on 10/24.
24-Oct-2002 (AM) Made changes to fn:name and added functions xf:get-in-scope-namespaces() and xf:get-namespace-uri-for-prefix() based on proposal by Mike Kay: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Member/w3c-xml-query-wg/2002Oct/0206.html. WGs approved on 10/18.
24-Oct-2002 (AM) Made changes to fn:string(), fn:not(), fn:number(), fn:boolean() based on Consolidation Proposal 3.2 http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Member/w3c-query-editors/2002Oct/0051.html.15. WGs approved on 10/17.
24-Oct-2002 (AM) Added functions to create a string from codepoints and vice-versa. Closed issue 77 (operator-string-from-char). Taskforce agreed to close on 10/15. WGs approved on 10/17.
24-Oct-2002 (AM) Added fn:unordered() as approved in the joint WGs meeting on 10/18.
24-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 122 (operators-namespaces-in-scope). The term "namespaces in scope" does not appear in the document. Taskforce agreed to close on 10/15. WGs approved on 10/17.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 145(need-to-specify-resource-limits) ). Taskforce agreed to close on 10/15 by asking the language documents to add text as suggested in (member-only message) http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Member/w3c-query-operators/2002Sep/0133.html. Note send to query-editors on 10/23. WGs approved on 10/17.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 122(operators-namespaces-in-scope) ). The term "namespaces in scope" does not appear in the document. Taskforce agreed to close on 10/15. WGs approved on 10/17.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 155 (Define-if-empty) ). Since if-empty and if-absent now moved to Appendix, term does not appear in the document. Taskforce agreed to close on 10/15. WGs approved on 10/17.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 170 (Need-note-on-capability-of-collations) ). Note added to section 6.2 based on (member-only message) http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Member/w3c-query-operators/2002Oct/0078.html. Taskforce agreed to close on 10/15 if note was added. WGs approved on 10/17.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 182 (raise-predefined-error-values). Taskforce voted to close on 10/15 and WGs approved on 10/17. Few words of text added whenever raising an error is mentioned.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 108 (operators-always-normalize). Taskforce voted to close on 10/15 and WGs approved on 10/17. We mention that some functions can return non-normalized strings. Also the I18N has softened its position on this issue.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 160 (align-string-function-with-cast). The xs:string() constructor and 'cast xxx as xs:string' have identical semantics. fn:string() is retained for XPath 1.0 compatibility. FandO taskforce voted to close on 10/15 and agreed to at 10/17 joint XSL/XML Query meeting.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 109 (operators-calendar-context). Withdrawn by originator. FandO taskforce voted to close on 10/15 and agreed to at 10/17 joint XSL/XML Query meeting.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 110 (operators-timezone-empty-sequence) ) as recommended by the FandO taskforce on 10/15 and agreed to at 10/17 joint XSL/XML Query meeting. Overtaken by events. Timezones are now returned as dayTimeDurations.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 84 (operator-cast-to-token) as recommended by the FandO taskforce on 10/15 and agreed to at 10/17 joint XSL/XML Query meeting.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 83 (operator-cast-table-structure) as recommended by the FandO taskforce on 10/15 and agreed to at 10/17 joint XSL/XML Query meeting.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 168 (should-id-take-a-list-of-strings) as recommended by the FandO taskforce on 10/15 and agreed to at 10/17 joint XSL/XML Query meeting. fn:id() function has been fixed to be compatible with XPath 1.0.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 152 (parameterized-extraction-functions-for-date-and-times) as recommended by the FandO taskforce on 10/15 and agreed to at 10/17 joint XSL/XML Query meeting.
23-Oct-2002 (AM) Closed issue 20 (operator-codepoint-vs-character). Added note as recommended in (member-only message) http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Member/w3c-query-operators/2002Sep/0140.html and agreed to in 10/17 meeting.
22-Oct-2002 (AM) Added fn:default-collation and fn:implicit-timezone() functions as agreed to in 10/17 meeting.
22-Oct-2002 (AM) Added fn:string-join() function as agreed to in 10/17 meeting.
22-Oct-2002 (AM) Added fn:base-uri() with no argument to return the base uri from the static context. As agreed to in 10/17 meeting.
22-Oct-2002 (AM) Changed fn:expanded-QName to QName-in-context according to MHK proposal of 10/7. As agreed to in 10/17 meeting.
22-Oct-2002 (AM) Changed fn:substring to align with XPath 1.0 function. As agreed to in 10/17 meeting.
20-Oct-2002 (AM) Expanded casting table with rows and columns for anySimpleType, yearMonthDuration and dayTimeDuration.
20-Oct-2002 (AM) Added sections on constructing and casting to user-defined types. As agreed to in 10/17 meeting.
18-Oct-2002 (AM) Changed function prefix to fn: from xf:. As agreed to in 10/17 meeting.
17-Oct-2002 (AM) Restricted legal string values to boolean casting and constructor to 0,1,true, false to bring in line with schema semnatics. As decided in 10/17 meeting.
17-Oct-2002 (AM) Added fn:error function with no arguments. As decided in 10/17 meeting.
17-Oct-2002 (AM) Removed special note on string function re. decimal values with no fractional part. As decided in 10/17 meeting.
08-Oct-2002 (AM) Removed if-absent and if-empty functions and put sample implenmentations in Appendix D. As decided 8/1 in Redmond. Closed two issues on these functions: Issue 171 Do-we-need-if-empty-and-if-absent and Issue 183 if-absent-static-typing.
08-Oct-2002 (AM) Added value-except, value-union and value-intersect to Appendix D.
26-Sep-2002 (AM) Opened and closed issue on changing function signatures for 7 functions from decimal to integer now that integer is available as primitive. Proposal by MHK approved by FandO 9-12-2002.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Closed issue 23 "operator-copy-returns" as per mail 9/13.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Closed issue 48 "operator-datetime-suntime" as per mail 9/13.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Closed issue 60 "operator-copy-semantics" as per mail 9/13. Removed the xf:copy() function.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Closed issue 64 "operator-generic-reverse" as per mail 9/13.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Closed issue 66 "operator-docorder-function" as per mail 9/13.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Closed issue 82 "operator-nodeset-list-sequence" as per mail 9/13.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Closed issue 157 "boolean-from-string-legal-literals" as per mail 9/13.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Closed issue 118 "operators-string-nonscalar-error" as per mail 9/13.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Closed issue 154 "second-order-distinct-function" as per mail 9/13.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Allowed xf:root() to be called without an argument and closed issue 162 "can-the-node-parameter-to-root-be-omitted" as per mail 9/13.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Created appendicies to hold requirements for future versions and example functions.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Changed the decimal operands of xf:substring, xf:string-pad, xf:item-at, xf:insert, xf:remove, xf:subsequence, op:to to integer as per mail 9/13.
25-Sep-2002 (AM) Changed xf:resolve-uri as per MHK proposal http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Member/w3c-query-operators/2002Aug/0022.html as approved per mail 9/13.
23-Aug-2002 (AM) Changed section 1.5 to include material that constructors use XML Schema namespace.
23-Aug-2002 (AM) Changed section 16.10 and the casting table to allow casting from string and anySimpleType to base64Binary and hexBinary.
23-Aug-2002 (AM) Changed names of get-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime and get-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTimes to subtract-dateTimes-yielding-dayTimeDuration and subtract-dateTimes-yielding-yearMonthDuration. See Sept archives.
fn:substring-before
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
, $collationLiteral
as
anyURI
) as
string?
fn:substring-after
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
, $collationLiteral
as
anyURI
) as
string?
fn:replace
($input
as
string?
, $pattern
as
string?
, $replacement
as
string?
, $flags
as
string?
) as
string?
op:yearMonthDuration-equal
($operand1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $operand2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
boolean
op:yearMonthDuration-less-than
($operand1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $operand2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
boolean
op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than
($operand1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $operand2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
boolean
op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than
($operand1
as
dayTimeDuration
, $operand2
as
dayTimeDuration
) as
boolean
op:add-yearMonthDurations
($srcval1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $srcval2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
yearMonthDuration
op:subtract-yearMonthDurations
($srcval1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $srcval2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
yearMonthDuration
op:multiply-yearMonthDuration
($srcval1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $srcval2
as
decimal
) as
yearMonthDuration
op:divide-yearMonthDuration
($srcval1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $srcval2
as
decimal
) as
yearMonthDuration
op:add-dayTimeDurations
($srcval1
as
dayTimeDuration
, $srcval2
as
dayTimeDuration
) as
dayTimeDuration
op:subtract-dayTimeDurations
($srcval1
as
dayTimeDuration
, $srcval2
as
dayTimeDuration
) as
dayTimeDuration
fn:subtract-dateTimes-yielding-yearMonthDuration
($srcval1
as
dateTime
, $srcval2
as
dateTime
) as
yearMonthDuration
fn:subtract-dateTimes-yielding-dayTimeDuration
($srcval1
as
dateTime
, $srcval2
as
dateTime
) as
dayTimeDuration
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime
($srcval1
as
dateTime
, $srcval2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
dateTime
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime
($srcval1
as
dateTime
, $srcval2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
dateTime
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime
($srcval1
as
dateTime
, $srcval2
as
dayTimeDuration
) as
dateTime
fn:sequence-deep-equal
($parameter1
as
item*
, $parameter2
as
item*
, $collationLiteral
as
anyURI
) as
boolean?
op:add-dayTimeDurations
($srcval1
as
dayTimeDuration
, $srcval2
as
dayTimeDuration
) as
dayTimeDuration
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime
($srcval1
as
dateTime
, $srcval2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
dateTime
op:add-yearMonthDurations
($srcval1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $srcval2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
yearMonthDuration
op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than
($operand1
as
dayTimeDuration
, $operand2
as
dayTimeDuration
) as
boolean
op:divide-yearMonthDuration
($srcval1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $srcval2
as
decimal
) as
yearMonthDuration
op:multiply-yearMonthDuration
($srcval1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $srcval2
as
decimal
) as
yearMonthDuration
fn:replace
($input
as
string?
, $pattern
as
string?
, $replacement
as
string?
, $flags
as
string?
) as
string?
fn:sequence-deep-equal
($parameter1
as
item*
, $parameter2
as
item*
, $collationLiteral
as
anyURI
) as
boolean?
fn:substring-after
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
, $collationLiteral
as
anyURI
) as
string?
fn:substring-after
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
, $collationLiteral
as
anyURI
) as
string?
fn:substring-before
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
, $collationLiteral
as
anyURI
) as
string?
fn:substring-before
($operand1
as
string?
, $operand2
as
string?
, $collationLiteral
as
anyURI
) as
string?
fn:subtract-dateTimes-yielding-dayTimeDuration
($srcval1
as
dateTime
, $srcval2
as
dateTime
) as
dayTimeDuration
fn:subtract-dateTimes-yielding-yearMonthDuration
($srcval1
as
dateTime
, $srcval2
as
dateTime
) as
yearMonthDuration
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime
($srcval1
as
dateTime
, $srcval2
as
dayTimeDuration
) as
dateTime
op:subtract-dayTimeDurations
($srcval1
as
dayTimeDuration
, $srcval2
as
dayTimeDuration
) as
dayTimeDuration
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime
($srcval1
as
dateTime
, $srcval2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
dateTime
op:subtract-yearMonthDurations
($srcval1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $srcval2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
yearMonthDuration
op:yearMonthDuration-equal
($operand1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $operand2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
boolean
op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than
($operand1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $operand2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
boolean
op:yearMonthDuration-less-than
($operand1
as
yearMonthDuration
, $operand2
as
yearMonthDuration
) as
boolean