Increasing Performance by Using the XSLTemplate Object
Calling the transformNode
or transformNodeToObject
method does not always allow for maximum performance, because the style sheet object passed into the method is a DOM node, and must be recompiled every time the method is called. Compiling the style sheet means setting up all its template rules in an executable state. If you need to call these methods repeatedly, you should cache the compiled XSLT style sheet in an XSLTemplate
object, and use this object to perform your transformation. This helps reduce overhead, and increases the performance of your XSLT application.
This section demonstrates the use of the XSLTemplate
object with a sample Web application for reading book reviews. For simplicity, we'll assume that a small bookstore puts all its book reviews in a single XML file, BookReview.xml. To read the review of particular book, a reader submits a book title from our ReviewReader application. This triggers a transformation — that is, the application applies an XSLT style sheet to the XML file, with the new book title as its input. The review of the book is the output HTML.
This example uses the following three source files: BookReview.xml, BookReview.xsl, and BookReview.htm. These files are listed below.
Example: BookReview Web Application Using XSLTemplate
BookReview.xml
<?xml version='1.0'?> <book-review> <book> <title>A Good Book</title> <author>The Good Writer</author> <publisher>The Publisher</publisher> <date>A Good Day</date> <Review> <title>A Good Book</title> by <author>The Good Writer</author>, published by <publisher>The Publisher</publisher> on <date>A Good Day</date>, is indeed a good book. </Review> </book> <book> <title>A Bad Book</title> <author>The Bad Writer</author> <publisher>The Publisher</publisher> <date>A Bad Day</date> <Review> <title>A Bad Book</title> by <author>The Bad Writer</author>, published by <publisher>The Publisher</publisher> on <date>A Bad Day</date>, is indeed a bad book. </Review> </book> <book> <title>A So-so Book</title> <author>The So-so Writer</author> <publisher>The Publisher</publisher> <date>A So-so Day</date> <Review> <title>A So-so Book</title> by <author>The So-so Writer</author>, published by <publisher>The Publisher</publisher> on <date>A So-so Day</date>, is indeed a so-so book. </Review> </book> </book-review>
BookReview.xsl
<?xml version="1.0"?> <xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"> <xsl:param name="title" /> <xsl:template match="/"> <HTML> <HEAD> </HEAD> <BODY> <xsl:apply-templates select="//book[title=$title]" /> </BODY> </HTML> </xsl:template> <xsl:template match="book"> <TABLE> <TR> <TD style="font-weight:bold">Title:</TD> <TD><xsl:apply-templates select="title"/></TD> </TR> <TR> <TD style="font-weight:bold">Author:</TD> <TD><xsl:apply-templates select="author"/></TD> </TR> <TR> <TD style="font-weight:bold">Date:</TD> <TD><xsl:apply-templates select="date"/></TD> </TR> <TR> <TD style="font-weight:bold">Publisher:</TD> <TD><xsl:apply-templates select="publisher"/></TD> </TR> <TR> <TD style="font-weight:bold">Review:</TD> <TD><xsl:apply-templates select="Review"/></TD> </TR> </table> </xsl:template> <xsl:template match="title"> <SPAN><xsl:value-of select="."/></SPAN> </xsl:template> <xsl:template match="author"> <SPAN><xsl:value-of select="."/></SPAN> </xsl:template> <xsl:template match="publisher"> <SPAN><xsl:value-of select="."/></SPAN> </xsl:template> <xsl:template match="date"> <SPAN><xsl:value-of select="."/></SPAN> </xsl:template> <xsl:template match="review"> <P><xsl:apply-templates /></P> </xsl:template> </xsl:stylesheet>
BookReview.htm
<HTML> <HEAD> <SCRIPT language="jscript"> var objSrcTree, ObjXSLT, objCache; function init() { objSrcTree = new ActiveXObject('MSXML2.DOMDocument.5.0'); objSrcTree.async = false; objSrcTree.load('sample.xml'); objXSLT=new ActiveXObject('MSXML2.FreeThreadedDOMDocument.5.0'); objXSLT.async = false; objXSLT.load('sample.xsl'); objCache = new ActiveXObject("Msxml2.XSLTemplate.5.0"); objCache.stylesheet = objXSLT; output.innerHTML = "Select a book above to read the review!"; } function show(title) { var objXSLTProc = objCache.createProcessor(); objXSLTProc.input = objSrcTree; objXSLTProc.addParameter("title", title, ""); objXSLTProc.transform(); output.innerHTML = objXSLTProc.output; } </SCRIPT> </HEAD> <BODY onload="init();"> <DIV>Books reviewed: <A HREF="javascript:show('A Good Book')">A Good Book</A> <A HREF="javascript:show('A Bad Book')">A Bad Book</A> <A HREF="javascript:show('A So-so Book')">A So-so Book</A> </DIV> <DIV id="output" style="margin:1em"></DIV> </BODY> </HTML>
To perform your transformations with XSLTemplate
As shown above, to use the XSLTemplate
object to cache a compiled XSLT style sheet and perform transformations, your must perform the following tasks.
- Load the appropriate XSLT style sheet as a
FreeThreadedDOMDocument
object. Be sure to set theasync
property of this object to"false"
. - Create an
XSLTemplate
object. Set itsstylesheet
property to the XSLT style sheet created in the Step 1. Notice that loading and caching are carried out in theinit()
function when the HTML page is first loaded. - Load the source XML document as a
DOMDocument
object. In this example, this XML document is loaded once in theinit()
function as well. In other applications, this is not necessarily the case. - Create an
XSLProcessor
object for each transformation. The following steps are needed to complete the transformation. - Assign the source XML document object to the
input
property of theXSLProcessor
object created in Step 3. - Call the
addParameter
method on theXSLProcessor
object to pass any required global variables used in the XSLT style sheet. In the example above, the style sheet uses atitle
parameter to select a book with the specified title:<xsl:apply-templates select="//book[title=$title]" />
. - Optionally, assign an output stream object (such as a
recordset
object in ADO or aResponse
object in ASP) to theoutput
parameter of theXSLProcessor
object. Choose this option if you do not want to use the default output stream object. - Call the
transform
method on theXSLProcessor
object to start the transformation. - Retrieve the result of the transformation from the
output
parameter of theXSLProcessor
object.
In addition to passing a parameter to an XSLT style sheet, as described in Step 6, you can also pass an object (a DOM node), if necessary. For more information about how to pass an object to an XSLT style sheet by way of an XSLProcessor
object, see the XSLProcessor.addObject method.