I'm not familiar with what XMP RDF/XML looks like but it might be worth using an RDF parser rather than using XSLT?
Graphite (http://graphite.ecs.soton.ac.uk/) is pretty easy to use if you are comfortable with PHP
Owen
On 14 Jan 2013, at 19:09, Kyle Banerjee <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 12, 2013 at 1:36 PM, Michael Hopwood <[log in to unmask]>wrote:
>
>> I got as far as producing XMP RDF/XML files but the problem then remains;
>> how to usefully manage these via XSLT transforms?
>>
>> The problem is that XMP uses an RDF syntax that comes in many flavours and
>> doesn't result in a predictable set of xpaths to apply the XSLT to.
>
> XSLT is not a good tool for many kinds of XML processing. In your
> situation, string processing or scanning for what tags are present and then
> outputting in delimited text so you know what is where is probably a better
> way to go.
>
> kyle
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