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W3C

XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Functions and Operators (Second Edition)

W3C Recommendation 14 December 2010 (revised 13 April 2015)

This version:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2010/REC-xpath-functions-20101214/
Latest version:
http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath-functions/
Previous versions:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/PER-xpath-functions-20090421/, http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/REC-xpath-functions-20070123/
Editors:
Ashok Malhotra, Oracle Corporation <ashok.malhotra@alum.mit.edu>
Jim Melton, Oracle Corporation <jim.melton@oracle.com>
Norman Walsh, Mark Logic <Norman.Walsh@marklogic.com>
Michael Kay, Saxonica <http://www.saxonica.com/> - Second Edition

Please refer to the errata for this document, which may include some normative corrections.

See also translations.

This document is also available in these non-normative formats: XML and Change markings relative to first edition.

Note: This paragraph is informative. This document is currently not maintained. This document remains available on the W3C's Technical Report web page for reference and use by interested parties. Readers are advised that no further maintenance (including correction of reported errors) is planned for this document. Readers interested in the most recent version of the XQuery and XPath Functions and Operators specification are encouraged to refer to http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath-functions-3/.


Abstract

This document defines constructor functions, operators and functions on the datatypes defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] and the datatypes defined in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. It also discusses functions and operators on nodes and node sequences as defined in the [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. These functions and operators are defined for use in [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0], [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0] and other related XML standards. The signatures and summaries of functions defined in this document are available at: http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/.

Status of this Document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at http://www.w3.org/TR/.

This is one document in a set of eight documents that are being progressed to Edited Recommendation together (XPath 2.0, XQuery 1.0, XQueryX 1.0, XSLT 2.0, Data Model (XDM), Functions and Operators, Formal Semantics, Serialization).

This document, published on 14 December 2010, is an Edited Recommendation of the W3C. This second edition is not a new version of this specification; its purpose is to clarify a number of issues that have become apparent since the first edition was published. All of these clarifications (excepting trivial editorial fixes) have been published in a separate errata document, and published in a Proposed Edited Recommendation in April, 2009. The changes are summarized in an appendix.

This document has been jointly developed by the W3C XML Query Working Group and the W3C XSL Working Group, each of which is part of the XML Activity.

This document has been reviewed by W3C Members, by software developers, and by other W3C groups and interested parties, and is endorsed by the Director as a W3C Recommendation. It is a stable document and may be used as reference material or cited from another document. W3C's role in making the Recommendation is to draw attention to the specification and to promote its widespread deployment. This enhances the functionality and interoperability of the Web.

This document incorporates changes made against the Recommendation of 23 January 2007 that resolve all errata known at the date of publication. A list of the errata that have been applied, with links to the Bugzilla database, is provided in F Changes since the First Edition. The version of this document with change highlighting indicates where the textual changes have been made, and cross-references each textual change to the erratum where it originated. This document supersedes the first edition.

This specification is designed to be referred to normatively from other specifications defining a host language for it; it is not intended to be implemented outside a host language. The implementability of this specification has been tested in the context of its normative inclusion in host languages defined by the XQuery 1.0 and XSLT 2.0 specifications; see the XQuery 1.0 implementation report and the XSLT 2.0 implementation report (member-only) for details.

This document was produced by groups operating under the 5 February 2004 W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the XML Query Working Group and also maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the XSL Working Group; those pages also include instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.

Table of Contents

1 Introduction
    1.1 Conformance
    1.2 Namespaces and Prefixes
    1.3 Function Overloading
    1.4 Function Signatures and Descriptions
    1.5 Namespace Terminology
    1.6 Type Hierarchy
    1.7 Terminology
2 Accessors
    2.1 fn:node-name
    2.2 fn:nilled
    2.3 fn:string
    2.4 fn:data
    2.5 fn:base-uri
    2.6 fn:document-uri
3 The Error Function
    3.1 Examples
4 The Trace Function
    4.1 Examples
5 Constructor Functions
    5.1 Constructor Functions for XML Schema Built-in Types
    5.2 A Special Constructor Function for xs:dateTime
        5.2.1 Examples
    5.3 Constructor Functions for xs:QName and xs:NOTATION
    5.4 Constructor Functions for User-Defined Types
6 Functions and Operators on Numerics
    6.1 Numeric Types
    6.2 Operators on Numeric Values
        6.2.1 op:numeric-add
        6.2.2 op:numeric-subtract
        6.2.3 op:numeric-multiply
        6.2.4 op:numeric-divide
        6.2.5 op:numeric-integer-divide
        6.2.6 op:numeric-mod
        6.2.7 op:numeric-unary-plus
        6.2.8 op:numeric-unary-minus
    6.3 Comparison Operators on Numeric Values
        6.3.1 op:numeric-equal
        6.3.2 op:numeric-less-than
        6.3.3 op:numeric-greater-than
    6.4 Functions on Numeric Values
        6.4.1 fn:abs
        6.4.2 fn:ceiling
        6.4.3 fn:floor
        6.4.4 fn:round
        6.4.5 fn:round-half-to-even
7 Functions on Strings
    7.1 String Types
    7.2 Functions to Assemble and Disassemble Strings
        7.2.1 fn:codepoints-to-string
        7.2.2 fn:string-to-codepoints
    7.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings
        7.3.1 Collations
        7.3.2 fn:compare
        7.3.3 fn:codepoint-equal
    7.4 Functions on String Values
        7.4.1 fn:concat
        7.4.2 fn:string-join
        7.4.3 fn:substring
        7.4.4 fn:string-length
        7.4.5 fn:normalize-space
        7.4.6 fn:normalize-unicode
        7.4.7 fn:upper-case
        7.4.8 fn:lower-case
        7.4.9 fn:translate
        7.4.10 fn:encode-for-uri
        7.4.11 fn:iri-to-uri
        7.4.12 fn:escape-html-uri
    7.5 Functions Based on Substring Matching
        7.5.1 fn:contains
        7.5.2 fn:starts-with
        7.5.3 fn:ends-with
        7.5.4 fn:substring-before
        7.5.5 fn:substring-after
    7.6 String Functions that Use Pattern Matching
        7.6.1 Regular Expression Syntax
        7.6.2 fn:matches
        7.6.3 fn:replace
        7.6.4 fn:tokenize
8 Functions on anyURI
    8.1 fn:resolve-uri
9 Functions and Operators on Boolean Values
    9.1 Additional Boolean Constructor Functions
        9.1.1 fn:true
        9.1.2 fn:false
    9.2 Operators on Boolean Values
        9.2.1 op:boolean-equal
        9.2.2 op:boolean-less-than
        9.2.3 op:boolean-greater-than
    9.3 Functions on Boolean Values
        9.3.1 fn:not
10 Functions and Operators on Durations, Dates and Times
    10.1 Duration, Date and Time Types
        10.1.1 Limits and Precision
    10.2 Date/time datatype values
        10.2.1 Examples
    10.3 Two Totally Ordered Subtypes of Duration
        10.3.1 xs:yearMonthDuration
        10.3.2 xs:dayTimeDuration
    10.4 Comparison Operators on Duration, Date and Time Values
        10.4.1 op:yearMonthDuration-less-than
        10.4.2 op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than
        10.4.3 op:dayTimeDuration-less-than
        10.4.4 op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than
        10.4.5 op:duration-equal
        10.4.6 op:dateTime-equal
        10.4.7 op:dateTime-less-than
        10.4.8 op:dateTime-greater-than
        10.4.9 op:date-equal
        10.4.10 op:date-less-than
        10.4.11 op:date-greater-than
        10.4.12 op:time-equal
        10.4.13 op:time-less-than
        10.4.14 op:time-greater-than
        10.4.15 op:gYearMonth-equal
        10.4.16 op:gYear-equal
        10.4.17 op:gMonthDay-equal
        10.4.18 op:gMonth-equal
        10.4.19 op:gDay-equal
    10.5 Component Extraction Functions on Durations, Dates and Times
        10.5.1 fn:years-from-duration
        10.5.2 fn:months-from-duration
        10.5.3 fn:days-from-duration
        10.5.4 fn:hours-from-duration
        10.5.5 fn:minutes-from-duration
        10.5.6 fn:seconds-from-duration
        10.5.7 fn:year-from-dateTime
        10.5.8 fn:month-from-dateTime
        10.5.9 fn:day-from-dateTime
        10.5.10 fn:hours-from-dateTime
        10.5.11 fn:minutes-from-dateTime
        10.5.12 fn:seconds-from-dateTime
        10.5.13 fn:timezone-from-dateTime
        10.5.14 fn:year-from-date
        10.5.15 fn:month-from-date
        10.5.16 fn:day-from-date
        10.5.17 fn:timezone-from-date
        10.5.18 fn:hours-from-time
        10.5.19 fn:minutes-from-time
        10.5.20 fn:seconds-from-time
        10.5.21 fn:timezone-from-time
    10.6 Arithmetic Operators on Durations
        10.6.1 op:add-yearMonthDurations
        10.6.2 op:subtract-yearMonthDurations
        10.6.3 op:multiply-yearMonthDuration
        10.6.4 op:divide-yearMonthDuration
        10.6.5 op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration
        10.6.6 op:add-dayTimeDurations
        10.6.7 op:subtract-dayTimeDurations
        10.6.8 op:multiply-dayTimeDuration
        10.6.9 op:divide-dayTimeDuration
        10.6.10 op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration
    10.7 Timezone Adjustment Functions on Dates and Time Values
        10.7.1 fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone
        10.7.2 fn:adjust-date-to-timezone
        10.7.3 fn:adjust-time-to-timezone
    10.8 Arithmetic Operators on Durations, Dates and Times
        10.8.1 op:subtract-dateTimes
        10.8.2 op:subtract-dates
        10.8.3 op:subtract-times
        10.8.4 op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime
        10.8.5 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime
        10.8.6 op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime
        10.8.7 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime
        10.8.8 op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date
        10.8.9 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date
        10.8.10 op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date
        10.8.11 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date
        10.8.12 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time
        10.8.13 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time
11 Functions Related to QNames
    11.1 Additional Constructor Functions for QNames
        11.1.1 fn:resolve-QName
        11.1.2 fn:QName
    11.2 Functions and Operators Related to QNames
        11.2.1 op:QName-equal
        11.2.2 fn:prefix-from-QName
        11.2.3 fn:local-name-from-QName
        11.2.4 fn:namespace-uri-from-QName
        11.2.5 fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix
        11.2.6 fn:in-scope-prefixes
12 Operators on base64Binary and hexBinary
    12.1 Comparisons of base64Binary and hexBinary Values
        12.1.1 op:hexBinary-equal
        12.1.2 op:base64Binary-equal
13 Operators on NOTATION
    13.1 Operators on NOTATION
        13.1.1 op:NOTATION-equal
14 Functions and Operators on Nodes
    14.1 fn:name
    14.2 fn:local-name
    14.3 fn:namespace-uri
    14.4 fn:number
        14.4.1 Examples
    14.5 fn:lang
        14.5.1 Examples
    14.6 op:is-same-node
        14.6.1 Examples
    14.7 op:node-before
        14.7.1 Examples
    14.8 op:node-after
        14.8.1 Examples
    14.9 fn:root
        14.9.1 Examples
15 Functions and Operators on Sequences
    15.1 General Functions and Operators on Sequences
        15.1.1 fn:boolean
        15.1.2 op:concatenate
        15.1.3 fn:index-of
        15.1.4 fn:empty
        15.1.5 fn:exists
        15.1.6 fn:distinct-values
        15.1.7 fn:insert-before
        15.1.8 fn:remove
        15.1.9 fn:reverse
        15.1.10 fn:subsequence
        15.1.11 fn:unordered
    15.2 Functions That Test the Cardinality of Sequences
        15.2.1 fn:zero-or-one
        15.2.2 fn:one-or-more
        15.2.3 fn:exactly-one
    15.3 Equals, Union, Intersection and Except
        15.3.1 fn:deep-equal
        15.3.2 op:union
        15.3.3 op:intersect
        15.3.4 op:except
    15.4 Aggregate Functions
        15.4.1 fn:count
        15.4.2 fn:avg
        15.4.3 fn:max
        15.4.4 fn:min
        15.4.5 fn:sum
    15.5 Functions and Operators that Generate Sequences
        15.5.1 op:to
        15.5.2 fn:id
        15.5.3 fn:idref
        15.5.4 fn:doc
        15.5.5 fn:doc-available
        15.5.6 fn:collection
        15.5.7 fn:element-with-id
16 Context Functions
    16.1 fn:position
    16.2 fn:last
    16.3 fn:current-dateTime
        16.3.1 Examples
    16.4 fn:current-date
        16.4.1 Examples
    16.5 fn:current-time
        16.5.1 Examples
    16.6 fn:implicit-timezone
    16.7 fn:default-collation
    16.8 fn:static-base-uri
17 Casting
    17.1 Casting from primitive types to primitive types
        17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic
        17.1.2 Casting to xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic
        17.1.3 Casting to numeric types
        17.1.4 Casting to duration types
        17.1.5 Casting to date and time types
        17.1.6 Casting to xs:boolean
        17.1.7 Casting to xs:base64Binary and xs:hexBinary
        17.1.8 Casting to xs:anyURI
    17.2 Casting to derived types
    17.3 Casting from derived types to parent types
    17.4 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy
        17.4.1 Casting to xs:ENTITY
    17.5 Casting across the type hierarchy

Appendices

A References
    A.1 Normative References
    A.2 Non-normative References
B Error Summary
C Compatibility with XPath 1.0 (Non-Normative)
D Illustrative User-written Functions (Non-Normative)
    D.1 eg:if-empty and eg:if-absent
        D.1.1 eg:if-empty
        D.1.2 eg:if-absent
    D.2 union, intersect and except on sequences of values
        D.2.1 eg:value-union
        D.2.2 eg:value-intersect
        D.2.3 eg:value-except
    D.3 eg:index-of-node
    D.4 eg:string-pad
    D.5 eg:distinct-nodes-stable
E Checklist of Implementation-Defined Features (Non-Normative)
F Changes since the First Edition (Non-Normative)
G Function and Operator Quick Reference (Non-Normative)
    G.1 Functions and Operators by Section
    G.2 Functions and Operators Alphabetically


1 Introduction

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 [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0], [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0].

This document defines constructor functions and functions that take typed values as arguments. Some of the functions define the semantics of operators discussed in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language].

[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] defines a number of primitive and derived datatypes, collectively known as built-in datatypes. This document defines functions and operations on these datatypes as well as the datatypes defined in Section 2.6 TypesDM of the [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. These functions and operations are defined for use in [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0], [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0] and related XML standards. This document also discusses functions and operators on nodes and node sequences as defined in the [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model] for use in [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0], [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0] and other related XML standards.

References to specific sections of some of the above documents are indicated by cross-document links in this document. Each such link consists of a pointer to a specific section followed a superscript specifying the linked document. The superscripts have the following meanings: 'XQ' [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language], 'XT' [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0], 'XP' [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0], 'DM' [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model] and 'FS' [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Formal Semantics].

1.1 Conformance

The Functions and Operators specification is intended primarily as a component that can be used by other specifications. Therefore, Functions and Operators relies on specifications that use it (such as [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0], [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0] and [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language]) to specify conformance criteria for their respective environments.

Authors of conformance criteria for the use of the Functions and Operators should pay particular attention to the following features:

  • It is ·implementation-defined· which version of Unicode is supported, but it is recommended that the most recent version of Unicode be used.

  • Support for XML 1.0 and XML 1.1 by the datatypes used in Functions and Operators.

Note:

At the time of writing there is no published version of XML Schema that references the XML 1.1 specifications. This means that datatypes such as xs:NCName and xs:ID are constrained by the XML 1.0 rules. Authors of conformance requirements for the use of Functions and Operators should state clearly the implications for conformance of any changes to the rules in later versions of XML Schema.

In this document, text labeled as an example or as a Note is provided for explanatory purposes and is not normative.

1.2 Namespaces and Prefixes

The functions and operators discussed in this document are contained in one of three namespaces (see [Namespaces in XML]) and referenced using an xs:QName. The datatypes and constructor functions for the built-in datatypes defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] and in Section 2.6 TypesDM of [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model] and discussed in 5 Constructor Functions are in the XML Schema namespace, http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema, and named in this document using the xs prefix. The namespace prefix used in this document for functions that are available to users is fn. Operator functions are named with the prefix op.

This document uses the prefix err to represent the namespace URI http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors, which is the namespace for all XPath and XQuery error codes and messages. This namespace prefix is not predeclared and its use in this document is not normative.

The namespace prefix used for the functions, datatypes and errors can vary, as long as the prefix is bound to the correct URI.

The URIs of the namespaces and the default prefixes associated with them are:

  • http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema for constructors -- associated with xs.

  • http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions for functions -- associated with fn.

  • http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors -- associated with err.

Note:

The namespace URI associated with the err prefix is not expected to change from one version of this document to another. The contents of this namespace may be extended to allow additional errors to be returned.

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 [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0], [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0]. These functions are not available directly to users, and there is no requirement that implementations should actually provide these functions. For this reason, no namespace is associated with the op prefix. For example, multiplication is generally associated with the * operator, but it is described as a function in this document:

op:numeric-multiply($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric

1.3 Function Overloading

In general, the specifications named above do not support function overloading in the sense that functions that have multiple signatures with the same name and the same number of parameters are not supported. Consequently, there are no such overloaded functions in this document except for legacy [XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0] functions such as fn:string(), which accepts a single parameter of a variety of types. In addition, it should be noted that the functions defined in 6 Functions and Operators on Numerics that accept numeric parameters accept arguments of type xs:integer, xs:decimal, xs:float or xs:double. See 1.4 Function Signatures and Descriptions. Operators such as "+" may be overloaded. This document does define some functions with more than one signature with the same name and different number of parameters. User-defined functions with more than one signature with the same name and different number of parameters are also supported.

1.4 Function Signatures and Descriptions

Each function is defined by specifying its signature, a description of the return type and each of the parameters 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, in bold-face, is the name of the function whose signature is being specified. If the function takes no parameters, then the name is followed by an empty parameter list: "()"; otherwise, the name is followed by a parenthesized list of parameter declarations, each declaration specifies the static type of the parameter, in italics, and a descriptive, but non-normative, name. If there are two or more parameter declarations, they are separated by a comma. The return-type , also in italics, specifies the static type of the value returned by the function. The dynamic type returned by the function is the same as its static type or derived from the static type. All parameter types and return types are specified using the SequenceType notation defined in Section 2.5.3 SequenceType SyntaxXP.

In some cases the word " numeric " is used in function signatures as a shorthand to indicate the four numeric types: xs:integer, xs:decimal, xs:float and xs:double. For example, a function with the signature:

fn:numeric-function($arg as numeric) as ...

represents the following four function signatures:

fn:numeric-function($arg as xs:integer) as ...
fn:numeric-function($arg as xs:decimal) as ...
fn:numeric-function($arg as xs:float) as ...
fn:numeric-function($arg as xs:double) as ...

For most functions there is an initial paragraph describing what the function does followed by semantic rules. These rules are meant to be followed in the order that they appear in this document.

In some cases, the static type returned by a function depends on the type(s) of its argument(s). These special functions are indicated by using bold italics for the return type. The semantic rules specifying the type of the value returned are documented in the function definition. The rules are described more formally in Section 7.2 Standard functions with specific static typing rulesFS.

The function name is a QName as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] and must adhere to its syntactic conventions. Following [XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0], function names are composed of English words separated by hyphens,"-". If a function name contains a [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] datatype name, it may have intercapitalized spelling and is used in the function name as such. For example, fn:timezone-from-dateTime.

Rules for passing parameters to operators are described in the relevant sections of [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0]. For example, the rules for passing parameters to arithmetic operators are described in Section 3.4 Arithmetic ExpressionsXP. Specifically, rules for parameters of type xs:untypedAtomic and the empty sequence are specified in this section.

As is customary, the parameter type name indicates that the function or operator accepts arguments of that type, or types derived from it, in that position. This is called subtype substitution (See Section 2.5.4 SequenceType MatchingXP). In addition, numeric type instances and instances of type xs:anyURI can be promoted to produce an argument of the required type. (See Section B.1 Type PromotionXP).

  1. Subtype Substitution: A derived type may substitute for its base type. In particular, xs:integer may be used where xs:decimal is expected.

  2. Numeric Type Promotion: xs:decimal may be promoted to xs:float or xs:double. Promotion to xs:double should be done directly, not via xs:float, to avoid loss of precision.

  3. anyURI Type Promotion: A value of type xs:anyURI can be promoted to the type xs:string.

Some functions accept a single value or the empty sequence as an argument and some may return a single value or the empty sequence. This is indicated in the function signature by following the parameter or return type name with a question mark: "?", indicating that either a single value or the empty sequence must appear. See below.

fn:function-name($parameter-name as parameter-type?) as return-type?

Note that this function signature is different from a signature in which the parameter is omitted. See, for example, the two signatures for fn:string(). In the first signature, the parameter is omitted and the argument defaults to the context item, referred to as ".". In the second signature, the argument must be present but may be the empty sequence, referred to as "()."

Some functions accept a sequence of zero or more values as an argument. This is indicated by following the name of type of the items in the sequence with *. The sequence may contain zero or more items of the named type. For example, the function below accepts a sequence of xs:double and returns a xs:double or the empty sequence.

fn:median($arg as xs:double*) as xs:double?

1.5 Namespace Terminology

This document uses the phrase "namespace URI" to identify the concept identified in [Namespaces in XML] as "namespace name", and the phrase "local name" to identify the concept identified in [Namespaces in XML] as "local part".

It also uses the term "expanded-QName" defined below.

[Definition] Expanded-QName

An expanded-QName is a pair of values consisting of a namespace URI and a local name. They belong to the value space of the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] datatype xs:QName. When this document refers to xs:QName we always mean the value space, i.e. a namespace URI, local name pair (and not the lexical space referring to constructs of the form prefix:local-name).

1.6 Type Hierarchy

The diagram below shows the types for which functions are defined in this document. These include the built-in types defined by [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] (shown on the right) as well as types defined in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model] (shown on the left). Solid lines connect a base datatype above to a derived datatype.xs:IDREFS, xs:NMTOKENS, xs:ENTITIES and user-defined list and union types are special types in that these types are lists or unions rather than true subtypes. Dashed lines connect a union type above with its component types below.

Type hierarchy graphic

The information in the above diagram is reproduced below in tabular form. For ease of presentation the information is divided into three tables. The first table shows the top three layers of the hierarchy starting at xs:anyType. The second table shows the types derived from xs:anyAtomicType. The third table shows the types defined in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]

Each type whose name is indented is derived from the type whose name appears nearest above it with one less level of indentation.

xs:anyType
user-defined complex types
xs:untyped
xs:anySimpleType
user-defined list and union types
xs:IDREFS
xs:NMTOKENS
xs:ENTITIES
xs:anyAtomicType

The table below shows the datatypes derived from xs:anyAtomicType. This includes all the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] built-in datatypes as well as the two totally ordered subtypes of duration defined in Section 2.6 TypesDM.

Each type whose name is indented is derived from the type whose name appears nearest above it with one less level of indentation.

xs:untypedAtomic
xs:dateTime
xs:date
xs:time
xs:duration
xs:yearMonthDuration
xs:dayTimeDuration
xs:float
xs:double
xs:decimal
xs:integer
xs:nonPositiveInteger
xs:negativeInteger
xs:long
xs:int
xs:short
xs:byte
xs:nonNegativeInteger
xs:unsignedLong
xs:unsignedInt
xs:unsignedShort
xs:unsignedByte
xs:positiveInteger
xs:gYearMonth
xs:gYear
xs:gMonthDay
xs:gDay
xs:gMonth
xs:string
xs:normalizedString
xs:token
xs:language
xs:NMTOKEN
xs:Name
xs:NCName
xs:ID
xs:IDREF
xs:ENTITY
xs:boolean
xs:base64Binary
xs:hexBinary
xs:anyURI
xs:QName
xs:NOTATION

The table below shows the type hierarchy for the types introduced in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. For these types, each type whose name is indented is a component of the union type whose name appears nearest above with one less level of indentation.

item
xs:anyAtomicType
node
attribute
user-defined attribute types
comment
document
user-defined document types
element
user-defined element types
processing-instruction
text

1.7 Terminology

The terminology used to describe the functions and operators on [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] is defined in the body of this specification. The terms defined in the following list are used in building those definitions:

[Definition] for compatibility

A feature of this specification included to ensure that implementations that use this feature remain compatible with [XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0]

[Definition] may

Conforming documents and processors are permitted to, but need not, behave as described.

[Definition] must

Conforming documents and processors are required to behave as described; otherwise, they are either non-conformant or else in error.

[Definition] implementation-defined

Possibly differing between implementations, but specified and documented by the implementor for each particular implementation.

[Definition] implementation-dependent

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.

[Definition] execution scope

The scope over which any two calls on a function would be executed. In XSLT, it applies to any two calls on the function executed during the same transformation. In XQuery, it applies to any two calls executed during the evaluation of a top-level expression i.e. an expression not contained in any other expression. In other contexts, the scope is specified by the host environment that invokes the function library.

[Definition] stable

Most of the functions in the core library have the property that calling the same function twice within an ·execution scope· with the same arguments returns the same result: these functions are said to be stable. This category includes a number of functions such as fn:doc(), fn:collection(), fn:current-dateTime(), fn:current-date and fn:current-time() whose result depends on the external environment. Where the function returns nodes, stability means that the returned nodes are identical, not merely equal and are returned in the same order.

Note:

in the case of fn:collection() and fn:doc(), the requirement for stability may be relaxed: see the function definitions for details.

Some other functions, for example fn:position() and fn:last(), depend on the dynamic context and may, therefore, produce different results each time they are called. These functions are said to be contextual.

[Definition] URI and URI reference

Within this specification, the term "URI" refers to Universal Resource Identifiers as defined in [RFC 3986] and extended in [RFC 3987] with a new name "IRI". The term "URI Reference", unless otherwise stated, refers to a string in the lexical space of the xs:anyURI datatype as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]. Note that this means, in practice, that where this specification requires a "URI Reference", an IRI as defined in [RFC 3987] will be accepted, provided that other relevant specifications also permit an IRI. The term URI has been retained in preference to IRI to avoid introducing new names for concepts such as "Base URI" that are defined or referenced across the whole family of XML specifications. Note also that the definition of xs:anyURI is a wider definition than the definition in [RFC 3987]; for example it does not require non-ASCII characters to be escaped.

2 Accessors

Accessors and their semantics are described in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. Some of these accessors are exposed to the user through the functions described below.

Function Accessor Accepts Returns
fn:node-name node-name an optional node zero or one xs:QName
fn:nilled nilled a node an optional xs:boolean
fn:string string-value an optional item or no argument xs:string
fn:data typed-value zero or more items a sequence of atomic values
fn:base-uri base-uri an optional node or no argument zero or one xs:anyURI
fn:document-uri document-uri an optional node zero or one xs:anyURI

2.1 fn:node-name

fn:node-name($arg as node()?) as xs:QName?

Summary: Returns an expanded-QName for node kinds that can have names. For other kinds of nodes it returns the empty sequence. If $arg is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

2.2 fn:nilled

fn:nilled($arg as node()?) as xs:boolean?

Summary: Returns an xs:boolean indicating whether the argument node is "nilled". If the argument is not an element node, returns the empty sequence. If the argument is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

2.3 fn:string

fn:string() as xs:string
fn:string($arg as item()?) as xs:string

Summary: Returns the value of $arg represented as a xs:string. If no argument is supplied, the context item (.) is used as the default argument. The behavior of the function if the argument is omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed as the argument.

If the context item is undefined, error [err:XPDY0002]XP is raised.

If $arg is the empty sequence, the zero-length string is returned.

If $arg is a node, the function returns the string-value of the node, as obtained using the dm:string-value accessor defined in the Section 5.13 string-value AccessorDM.

If $arg is an atomic value, then the function returns the same string as is returned by the expression " $arg cast as xs:string " (see 17 Casting).

2.4 fn:data

fn:data($arg as item()*) as xs:anyAtomicType*

Summary: fn:data takes a sequence of items and returns a sequence of atomic values.

The result of fn:data is the sequence of atomic values produced by applying the following rules to each item in $arg:

  • If the item is an atomic value, it is returned.

  • If the item is a node:

2.5 fn:base-uri

fn:base-uri() as xs:anyURI?
fn:base-uri($arg as node()?) as xs:anyURI?

Summary: Returns the value of the base-uri URI property for $arg as defined by the accessor function dm:base-uri() for that kind of node in Section 5.2 base-uri AccessorDM. If $arg is not specified, the behavior is identical to calling the function with the context item (.) as argument. The following errors may be raised: if the context item is undefined [err:XPDY0002]XP; if the context item is not a node [err:XPTY0004]XP.

If $arg is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

Document, element and processing-instruction nodes have a base-uri property which may be empty. The base-uri property of all other node types is the empty sequence. The value of the base-uri property is returned if it exists and is not empty. Otherwise, if the node has a parent, the value of dm:base-uri() applied to its parent is returned, recursively. If the node does not have a parent, or if the recursive ascent up the ancestor chain encounters a node whose base-uri property is empty and it does not have a parent, the empty sequence is returned.

See also fn:static-base-uri.

2.6 fn:document-uri

fn:document-uri($arg as node()?) as xs:anyURI?

Summary: Returns the value of the document-uri property for $arg as defined by the dm:document-uri accessor function defined in Section 6.1.2 AccessorsDM.

If $arg is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

Returns the empty sequence if the node is not a document node. Otherwise, returns the value of the dm:document-uri accessor of the document node.

In the case of a document node $D returned by the fn:doc function, or a document node at the root of a tree containing a node returned by the fn:collection function, it will always be true that either fn:document-uri($D) returns the empty sequence, or that the following expression is true: fn:doc(fn:document-uri($D)) is $D. It is implementation-defined whether this guarantee also holds for document nodes obtained by other means, for example a document node passed as the initial context node of a query or transformation.

3 The Error Function

In this document, as well as in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language], [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0], and [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Formal Semantics], the phrase "an error is raised" is used. Raising an error is equivalent to invoking the fn:error function defined in this section with the provided error code.

The above phrase is normally accompanied by specification of a specific error, to wit: "an error is raised [error code]". Each error defined in this document is identified by an xs:QName that is in the http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors namespace, represented in this document by the err prefix. It is this xs:QName that is actually passed as an argument to the fn:error function invocation. Invocation of this function raises an error. For a more detailed treatment of error handing, see Section 2.3.3 Handling Dynamic ErrorsXP and Section 7.2.9 The fn:error functionFS.

The fn:error function is a general function that may be invoked as above but may also be invoked from [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] or [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0] applications with, for example, an xs:QName argument.

fn:error() as none
fn:error($error as xs:QName) as none
fn:error($error as xs:QName?, $description as xs:string) as none
fn:error( $error  as xs:QName?,
$description  as xs:string,
$error-object  as item()*) as none

Summary: The fn:error function raises an error. While this function never returns a value, an error is returned to the external processing environment as an xs:anyURI or an xs:QName. The error xs:anyURI is derived from the error xs:QName. An error xs:QName with namespace URI NS and local part LP will be returned as the xs:anyURI NS#LP. The method by which the xs:anyURI or xs:QName is returned to the external processing environment is ·implementation dependent·.

If an invocation provides $description and $error-object, then these values may also be returned to the external processing environment. The method by which these values are provided to the external environment is ·implementation dependent·.

Note:

The value of the $description parameter may need to be localized.

Note that "none" is a special type defined in [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Formal Semantics] and is not available to the user. It indicates that the function never returns and ensures that it has the correct static type.

If fn:error is invoked with no arguments, then its behavior is the same as the invocation of the following expression:

 fn:error(fn:QName('http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors', 'err:FOER0000')) 

If the first argument in the third or fourth signature is the empty sequence it is assumed to be the xs:QName constructed by:

 fn:QName('http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors', 'err:FOER0000')

3.1 Examples

  • fn:error() returns http://www.w3.org/2005/xqt-errors#FOER0000 (or the corresponding xs:QName) to the external processing environment.

  • fn:error(fn:QName('http://www.example.com/HR', 'myerr:toohighsal'), 'Does not apply because salary is too high') returns http://www.example.com/HR#toohighsal and the xs:string "Does not apply because salary is too high" (or the corresponding xs:QName) to the external processing environment.

4 The Trace Function

fn:trace($value as item()*, $label as xs:string) as item()*

Summary: Provides an execution trace intended to be used in debugging queries.

The input $value is returned, unchanged, as the result of the function. In addition, the inputs $value, converted to an xs:string, and $label may be directed to a trace data set. The destination of the trace output is ·implementation-defined·. The format of the trace output is ·implementation dependent·. The ordering of output from invocations of the fn:trace() function is ·implementation dependent·.

4.1 Examples

  • Consider a situation in which a user wants to investigate the actual value passed to a function. Assume that in a particular execution, $v is an xs:decimal with value 124.84. Writing fn:trace($v, 'the value of $v is:') will put the strings "124.84" and "the value of $v is:" in the trace data set in implementation dependent order.

5 Constructor Functions

5.1 Constructor Functions for XML Schema Built-in Types

Every built-in atomic type that is defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition], except xs:anyAtomicType and xs:NOTATION, has an associated constructor function. xs:untypedAtomic, defined in Section 2.6 TypesDM and the two derived types xs:yearMonthDuration and xs:dayTimeDuration defined in Section 2.6 TypesDM also have associated constructor functions.

A constructor function is not defined for xs:anyAtomicType as there are no atomic values with type annotation xs:anyAtomicType at runtime, although this can be a statically inferred type. A constructor function is not defined for xs:NOTATION since it is defined as an abstract type in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]. If the static context (See Section 2.1.1 Static ContextXP) contains a type derived from xs:NOTATION then a constructor function is defined for it. See 5.4 Constructor Functions for User-Defined Types.

The form of the constructor function for a type prefix:TYPE is:

prefix:TYPE($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as prefix:TYPE?

If $arg is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned. For example, the signature of the constructor function corresponding to the xs:unsignedInt type defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] is:

xs:unsignedInt($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:unsignedInt?

Invoking the constructor function xs:unsignedInt(12) returns the xs:unsignedInt value 12. Another invocation of that constructor function that returns the same xs:unsignedInt value is xs:unsignedInt("12"). The same result would also be returned if the constructor function were to be invoked with a node that had a typed value equal to the xs:unsignedInt 12. The standard features described in Section 2.4.2 AtomizationXP would 'atomize' the node to extract its typed value and then call the constructor with that value. If the value passed to a constructor is illegal for the datatype to be constructed, an error is raised [err:FORG0001].

The semantics of the constructor function " xs:TYPE(arg) " are identical to the semantics of " arg cast as xs:TYPE? ". See 17 Casting.

If the argument to a constructor function is a literal, the result of the function may be evaluated statically; if an error is found during such evaluation, it may be reported as a static error.

Special rules apply to constructor functions for xs:QName and types derived from xs:QName and xs:NOTATION. See 5.3 Constructor Functions for xs:QName and xs:NOTATION.

The following constructor functions for the built-in types are supported:

  • xs:string($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:string?
  • xs:boolean($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:boolean?
  • xs:decimal($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:decimal?
  • xs:float($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:float?

    Implementations ·may· return negative zero for xs:float("-0.0E0"). [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] does not distinguish between the values positive zero and negative zero.

  • xs:double($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:double?

    Implementations ·may· return negative zero for xs:double("-0.0E0"). [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] does not distinguish between the values positive zero and negative zero.

  • xs:duration($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:duration?
  • xs:dateTime($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:dateTime?
  • xs:time($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:time?
  • xs:date($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:date?
  • xs:gYearMonth($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:gYearMonth?
  • xs:gYear($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:gYear?
  • xs:gMonthDay($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:gMonthDay?
  • xs:gDay($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:gDay?
  • xs:gMonth($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:gMonth?
  • xs:hexBinary($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:hexBinary?
  • xs:base64Binary($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:base64Binary?
  • xs:anyURI($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:anyURI?
  • xs:QName($arg as xs:anyAtomicType) as xs:QName?

    See 5.3 Constructor Functions for xs:QName and xs:NOTATION for special rules.

  • xs:normalizedString($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:normalizedString?
  • xs:token($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:token?
  • xs:language($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:language?
  • xs:NMTOKEN($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:NMTOKEN?
  • xs:Name($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:Name?
  • xs:NCName($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:NCName?
  • xs:ID($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:ID?
  • xs:IDREF($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:IDREF?
  • xs:ENTITY($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:ENTITY?

    See 17.4.1 Casting to xs:ENTITY for rules related to constructing values of type xs:ENTITY and types derived from it.

  • xs:integer($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:integer?
  • xs:nonPositiveInteger($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:nonPositiveInteger?
  • xs:negativeInteger($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:negativeInteger?
  • xs:long($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:long?
  • xs:int($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:int?
  • xs:short($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:short?
  • xs:byte($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:byte?
  • xs:nonNegativeInteger($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:nonNegativeInteger?
  • xs:unsignedLong($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:unsignedLong?
  • xs:unsignedInt($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:unsignedInt?
  • xs:unsignedShort($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:unsignedShort?
  • xs:unsignedByte($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:unsignedByte?
  • xs:positiveInteger($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:positiveInteger?
  • xs:yearMonthDuration($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:yearMonthDuration?
  • xs:dayTimeDuration($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:dayTimeDuration?
  • xs:untypedAtomic($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:untypedAtomic?

5.2 A Special Constructor Function for xs:dateTime

A special constructor function is provided for constructing a xs:dateTime value from a xs:date value and a xs:time value.

fn:dateTime($arg1 as xs:date?, $arg2 as xs:time?) as xs:dateTime?

The result xs:dateTime has a date component whose value is equal to $arg1 and a time component whose value is equal to $arg2. The result is the empty sequence if either of the parameters is the empty sequence.

The timezone of the result is computed as follows:

  • If neither argument has a timezone, the result has no timezone.

  • If exactly one of the arguments has a timezone, or if both arguments have the same timezone, the result has this timezone.

  • If the two arguments have different timezones, an error is raised:[err:FORG0008]

5.2.1 Examples

  • fn:dateTime(xs:date("1999-12-31"), xs:time("12:00:00")) returns xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T12:00:00").

  • fn:dateTime(xs:date("1999-12-31"), xs:time("24:00:00")) returns xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T00:00:00") because "24:00:00" is an alternate lexical form for "00:00:00".

5.3 Constructor Functions for xs:QName and xs:NOTATION

Special rules apply to constructor functions for the types xs:QName and xs:NOTATION, for two reasons:

  • The lexical representation of these types uses namespace prefixes, whose meaning is context-dependent.

  • Values cannot belong directly to the type xs:NOTATION, only to its subtypes.

These constraints result in the following restrictions:

  • Conversion from an xs:string to a value of type xs:QName, a type derived from xs:QName or a type derived from xs:NOTATION is permitted only if the xs:string is written as a string literal. This applies whether the conversion is expressed using a constructor function or using the "cast as" syntax. Such a conversion can be regarded as a pseudo-function, which is always evaluated statically. It is also permitted for these constructors and casts to take a dynamically-supplied argument in the normal manner, but as the casting table (see 17.1 Casting from primitive types to primitive types) indicates, the only arguments that are supported in this case are values of type xs:QName or xs:NOTATION respectively.

  • There is no constructor function for xs:NOTATION. Constructors are defined, however, for xs:QName, for types derived from xs:QName, and for types derived from xs:NOTATION.

When converting from an xs:string, the prefix within the lexical xs:QName supplied as the argument is resolved to a namespace URI using the statically known namespaces from the static context. If the lexical xs:QName has no prefix, the namespace URI of the resulting expanded-QName is the default element/type namespace from the static context. Components of the static context are discussed in Section 2.1.1 Static ContextXP. A static error is raised [err:FONS0004] if the prefix is not bound in the static context. As described in Section 2.1 TerminologyDM, the supplied prefix is retained as part of the expanded-QName value.

5.4 Constructor Functions for User-Defined Types

For every atomic type in the static context (See Section 2.1.1 Static ContextXP) that is derived from a primitive type, there is a constructor function (whose name is the same as the name of the type) whose effect is to create a value of that type from the supplied argument. The rules for constructing user-defined types are defined in the same way as the rules for constructing built-in derived types discussed in 5.1 Constructor Functions for XML Schema Built-in Types.

Special rules apply to constructor functions for types derived from xs:QName and xs:NOTATION. See 5.3 Constructor Functions for xs:QName and xs:NOTATION.

Consider a situation where the static context contains a type called hatSize defined in a schema whose target namespace is bound to the prefix my. In such a case the constructor function:

my:hatSize($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as my:hatSize?

is available to users.

To construct an instance of an atomic type that is not in a namespace, it is necessary to use a cast expression or undeclare the default function namespace. For example, if the user-defined type apple is derived from xs:integer but is not in a namespace, an instance of this type can be constructed as follows using a cast expression (this requires that the default element/type namespace is no namespace):

17 cast as apple

The following shows the use of the constructor function:

declare default function namespace ""; apple(17)

6 Functions and Operators on Numerics

This section discusses arithmetic operators on the numeric datatypes defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]. It uses an approach that permits lightweight implementation whenever possible.

6.1 Numeric Types

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 indentation.

xs:decimal
xs:integer
xs:float
xs:double

They also apply to types derived by restriction from the above types.

Note:

This specification uses [IEEE 754-1985] arithmetic for xs:float and xs:double values. This differs from [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] which defines NaN as being equal to itself and defines only a single zero in the value space while [IEEE 754-1985] arithmetic treats NaN as unequal to all other values including itself and can produce distinct results of positive zero and negative zero. (These are two different machine representations for the same [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] value.) The text accompanying several functions discusses behaviour for both positive and negative zero inputs and outputs in the interest of alignment with [IEEE 754-1985].

6.2 Operators on Numeric Values

The following functions define the semantics of operators defined in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0] on these numeric types.

Operators Meaning
op:numeric-add Addition
op:numeric-subtract Subtraction
op:numeric-multiply Multiplication
op:numeric-divide Division
op:numeric-integer-divide Integer division
op:numeric-mod Modulus
op:numeric-unary-plus Unary plus
op:numeric-unary-minus Unary minus (negation)

The parameters and return types for the above operators are the basic numeric types: xs:integer, xs:decimal, xs:float and xs:double, and types derived from them. The word "numeric" in function signatures signifies these four types. For simplicity, each operator is defined to operate on operands of the same type and return the same type. The exceptions are op:numeric-divide, which returns an xs:decimal if called with two xs:integer operands and op:numeric-integer-divide which always returns an xs:integer.

If the two operands are not of the same type, subtype substitution and numeric type promotion are used to obtain two operands of the same type. Section B.1 Type PromotionXP and Section B.2 Operator MappingXP describe the semantics of these operations in detail.

The result type of operations depends on their argument datatypes and is defined in the following table:

Operator Returns
op:operation(xs:integer, xs:integer) xs:integer (except for op:numeric-divide(integer, integer), which returns xs:decimal)
op:operation(xs:decimal, xs:decimal) xs:decimal
op:operation(xs:float, xs:float) xs:float
op:operation(xs:double, xs:double) xs:double
op:operation(xs:integer) xs:integer
op:operation(xs:decimal) xs:decimal
op:operation(xs:float) xs:float
op:operation(xs:double) xs:double

These rules define any operation on any pair of arithmetic types. Consider the following example:

op:operation(xs:int, xs:double) => op:operation(xs:double, xs:double)

For this operation, xs:int must be converted to xs:double. This can be done, since by the rules above: xs:int can be substituted for xs:integer, xs:integer can be substituted for xs:decimal, xs:decimal can be promoted to xs:double. As far as possible, the promotions should be done in a single step. Specifically, when an xs:decimal is promoted to an xs:double, it should not be converted to an xs:float and then to xs:double, as this risks loss of precision.

As another example, a user may define height as a derived type of xs:integer with a minimum value of 20 and a maximum value of 100. He may then derive fenceHeight using an enumeration to restrict the permitted set of values to, say, 36, 48 and 60.

op:operation(fenceHeight, xs:integer) => op:operation(xs:integer, xs:integer)

fenceHeight can be substituted for its base type height and height can be substituted for its base type xs:integer.

On overflow and underflow situations during arithmetic operations conforming implementations ·must· behave as follows:

  • For xs:float and xs:double operations, overflow behavior ·must· be conformant with [IEEE 754-1985]. This specification allows the following options:

    • Raising an error [err:FOAR0002] via an overflow trap.

    • Returning INF or -INF.

    • Returning the largest (positive or negative) non-infinite number.

  • For xs:float and xs:double operations, underflow behavior ·must· be conformant with [IEEE 754-1985]. This specification allows the following options:

    • Raising an error [err:FOAR0002] via an underflow trap.

    • Returning 0.0E0 or +/- 2**Emin or a denormalized value; where Emin is the smallest possible xs:float or xs:double exponent.

  • For xs:decimal operations, overflow behavior ·must· raise an error [err:FOAR0002]. On underflow, 0.0 must be returned.

  • For xs:integer operations, implementations that support limited-precision integer operations ·must· select from the following options:

The functions op:numeric-add, op:numeric-subtract, op:numeric-multiply, op:numeric-divide, op:numeric-integer-divide and op:numeric-mod are each defined for pairs of numeric operands, each of which has the same type:xs:integer, xs:decimal, xs:float, or xs:double. The functions op:numeric-unary-plus and op:numeric-unary-minus are defined for a single operand whose type is one of those same numeric types.

For xs:float and xs:double arguments, if either argument is NaN, the result is NaN.

For xs:decimal values the number of digits of precision returned by the numeric operators is ·implementation-defined·. If the number of digits in the result exceeds the number of digits that the implementation supports, the result is truncated or rounded in an ·implementation-defined· manner.

6.2.1 op:numeric-add

op:numeric-add($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric

Summary: Backs up the "+" operator and returns the arithmetic sum of its operands: ($arg1 + $arg2).

Note:

For xs:float or xs:double values, if one of the operands is a zero or a finite number and the other is INF or -INF, INF or -INF is returned. If both operands are INF, INF is returned. If both operands are -INF, -INF is returned. If one of the operands is INF and the other is -INF, NaN is returned.

6.2.2 op:numeric-subtract

op:numeric-subtract($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric

Summary: Backs up the "-" operator and returns the arithmetic difference of its operands: ($arg1 - $arg2).

Note:

For xs:float or xs:double values, if one of the operands is a zero or a finite number and the other is INF or -INF, an infinity of the appropriate sign is returned. If both operands are INF or -INF, NaN is returned. If one of the operands is INF and the other is -INF, an infinity of the appropriate sign is returned.

6.2.3 op:numeric-multiply

op:numeric-multiply($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric

Summary: Backs up the "*" operator and returns the arithmetic product of its operands: ($arg1 * $arg2).

Note:

For xs:float or xs:double values, if one of the operands is a zero and the other is an infinity, NaN is returned. If one of the operands is a non-zero number and the other is an infinity, an infinity with the appropriate sign is returned.

6.2.4 op:numeric-divide

op:numeric-divide($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric

Summary: Backs up the "div" operator and returns the arithmetic quotient of its operands: ($arg1 div $arg2).

As a special case, if the types of both $arg1 and $arg2 are xs:integer, then the return type is xs:decimal.

Notes:

For xs:decimal and xs:integer operands, if the divisor is (positive or negative) zero, an error is raised [err:FOAR0001]. For xs:float and xs:double operands, floating point division is performed as specified in [IEEE 754-1985].

For xs:float or xs:double values, a positive number divided by positive zero returns INF. A negative number divided by positive zero returns -INF. Division by negative zero returns -INF and INF, respectively. Positive or negative zero divided by positive or negative zero returns NaN. Also, INF or -INF divided by INF or -INF returns NaN.

6.2.5 op:numeric-integer-divide

op:numeric-integer-divide($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:integer

Summary: This function backs up the "idiv" operator by performing an integer division.

If $arg2 is (positive or negative) zero, then an error is raised [err:FOAR0001]. If either operand is NaN or if $arg1 is INF or -INF then an error is raised [err:FOAR0002]. If $arg2 is INF or -INF (and $arg1 is not) then the result is zero.

Otherwise, subject to limits of precision and overflow/underflow conditions, the result is the largest (furthest from zero) xs:integer value $N such that fn:abs($N * $arg2) le fn:abs($arg1) and fn:compare($N * $arg2, 0) eq fn:compare($arg1, 0).

Note:

The second term in this condition ensures that the result has the correct sign.

The implementation may adopt a different algorithm provided that it is equivalent to this formulation in all cases where ·implementation-dependent· or ·implementation-defined· behavior does not affect the outcome, for example, the implementation-defined precision of the result of xs:decimal division.

Note:

Except in situations involving errors, loss of precision, or overflow/underflow, the result of $a idiv $b is the same as ($a div $b) cast as xs:integer.

Note:

The semantics of this function are different from integer division as defined in programming languages such as Java and C++.

6.2.5.1 Examples
  • op:numeric-integer-divide(10,3) returns 3

  • op:numeric-integer-divide(3,-2) returns -1

  • op:numeric-integer-divide(-3,2) returns -1

  • op:numeric-integer-divide(-3,-2) returns 1

  • op:numeric-integer-divide(9.0,3) returns 3

  • op:numeric-integer-divide(-3.5,3) returns -1

  • op:numeric-integer-divide(3.0,4) returns 0

  • op:numeric-integer-divide(3.1E1,6) returns 5

  • op:numeric-integer-divide(3.1E1,7) returns 4

6.2.6 op:numeric-mod

op:numeric-mod($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric

Summary: Backs up the "mod" operator. Informally, this function returns the remainder resulting from dividing $arg1, the dividend, by $arg2, the divisor. The operation a mod b for operands that are xs:integer or xs:decimal, or types derived from them, produces a result such that (a idiv b)*b+(a mod b) is equal to a and the magnitude of the result is always less than the magnitude of b. This identity holds even in the special case that the dividend is the negative integer of largest possible magnitude for its type and the divisor is -1 (the remainder is 0). It follows from this rule that the sign of the result is the sign of the dividend.

For xs:integer and xs:decimal operands, if $arg2 is zero, then an error is raised [err:FOAR0001].

For xs:float and xs:double operands the following rules apply:

  • If either operand is NaN, the result is NaN.

  • If the dividend is positive or negative infinity, or the divisor is positive or negative zero (0), or both, the result is NaN.

  • If the dividend is finite and the divisor is an infinity, the result equals the dividend.

  • If the dividend is positive or negative zero and the divisor is finite, the result is the same as the dividend.

  • In the remaining cases, where neither positive or negative infinity, nor positive or negative zero, nor NaN is involved, the result obeys (a idiv b)*b+(a mod b) = a. Division is truncating division, analogous to integer division, not [IEEE 754-1985] rounding division i.e. additional digits are truncated, not rounded to the required precision.

6.2.6.1 Examples
  • op:numeric-mod(10,3) returns 1.

  • op:numeric-mod(6,-2) returns 0.

  • op:numeric-mod(4.5,1.2) returns 0.9.

  • op:numeric-mod(1.23E2, 0.6E1) returns 3.0E0.

6.2.7 op:numeric-unary-plus

op:numeric-unary-plus($arg as numeric) as numeric

Summary: Backs up the unary "+" operator and returns its operand with the sign unchanged: (+ $arg).

The returned value is equal to $arg, and is an instance of xs:integer, xs:decimal, xs:double, or xs:float depending on the type of $arg.

6.2.8 op:numeric-unary-minus

op:numeric-unary-minus($arg as numeric) as numeric

Summary: Backs up the unary "-" operator and returns its operand with the sign reversed: (- $arg).

The returned value is an instance of xs:integer, xs:decimal, xs:double, or xs:float depending on the type of $arg.

For xs:integer and xs:decimal arguments, 0 and 0.0 return 0 and 0.0, respectively. For xs:float and xs:double arguments, NaN returns NaN, 0.0E0 returns -0.0E0 and vice versa. INF returns -INF. -INF returns INF.

6.3 Comparison Operators on Numeric Values

This specification defines the following comparison operators on numeric values. Comparisons take two arguments of the same type. If the arguments are of different types, one argument is promoted to the type of the other as described above in 6.2 Operators on Numeric Values. Each comparison operator returns a boolean value. If either, or both, operands are NaN, false is returned.

Operator Meaning
op:numeric-equal Equality comparison
op:numeric-less-than Less-than comparison
op:numeric-greater-than Greater-than comparison

6.3.1 op:numeric-equal

op:numeric-equal($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the value of $arg1 is equal to the value of $arg2. For xs:float and xs:double values, positive zero and negative zero compare equal. INF equals INF and -INF equals -INF. NaN does not equal itself.

This function backs up the "eq", "ne", "le" and "ge" operators on numeric values.

6.3.2 op:numeric-less-than

op:numeric-less-than($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if $arg1 is less than $arg2. For xs:float and xs:double values, positive infinity is greater than all other non-NaN values; negative infinity is less than all other non-NaN values. If $arg1 or $arg2 is NaN, the function returns false.

This function backs up the "lt" and "le" operators on numeric values.

6.3.3 op:numeric-greater-than

op:numeric-greater-than($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if $arg1 is greater than $arg2. For xs:float and xs:double values, positive infinity is greater than all other non-NaN values; negative infinity is less than all other non-NaN values. If $arg1 or $arg2 is NaN, the function returns false.

This function backs up the "gt" and "ge" operators on numeric values.

6.4 Functions on Numeric Values

The following functions are defined on numeric types. Each function returns a value of the same type as the type of its argument.

  • If the argument is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

  • For xs:float and xs:double arguments, if the argument is "NaN", "NaN" is returned.

  • Except for fn:abs(), for xs:float and xs:double arguments, if the argument is positive or negative infinity, positive or negative infinity is returned.

Function Meaning
fn:abs Returns the absolute value of the argument.
fn:ceiling Returns the smallest number with no fractional part that is greater than or equal to the argument.
fn:floor Returns the largest number with no fractional part that is less than or equal to the argument.
fn:round Rounds to the nearest number with no fractional part.
fn:round-half-to-even Takes a number and a precision and returns a number rounded to the given precision. If the fractional part is exactly half, the result is the number whose least significant digit is even.

6.4.1 fn:abs

fn:abs($arg as numeric?) as numeric?

Summary: Returns the absolute value of $arg. If $arg is negative returns -$arg otherwise returns $arg. If type of $arg is one of the four numeric types xs:float, xs:double, xs:decimal or xs:integer the type of the result is the same as the type of $arg. If the type of $arg is a type derived from one of the numeric types, the result is an instance of the base numeric type.

For xs:float and xs:double arguments, if the argument is positive zero or negative zero, then positive zero is returned. If the argument is positive or negative infinity, positive infinity is returned.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.3 The fn:abs, fn:ceiling, fn:floor, fn:round, and fn:round-half-to-even functionsFS

6.4.1.1 Examples
  • fn:abs(10.5) returns 10.5.

  • fn:abs(-10.5) returns 10.5.

6.4.2 fn:ceiling

fn:ceiling($arg as numeric?) as numeric?

Summary: Returns the smallest (closest to negative infinity) number with no fractional part that is not less than the value of $arg. If type of $arg is one of the four numeric types xs:float, xs:double, xs:decimal or xs:integer the type of the result is the same as the type of $arg. If the type of $arg is a type derived from one of the numeric types, the result is an instance of the base numeric type.

For xs:float and xs:double arguments, if the argument is positive zero, then positive zero is returned. If the argument is negative zero, then negative zero is returned. If the argument is less than zero and greater than -1, negative zero is returned.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.3 The fn:abs, fn:ceiling, fn:floor, fn:round, and fn:round-half-to-even functionsFS

6.4.2.1 Examples
  • fn:ceiling(10.5) returns 11.

  • fn:ceiling(-10.5) returns -10.

6.4.3 fn:floor

fn:floor($arg as numeric?) as numeric?

Summary: Returns the largest (closest to positive infinity) number with no fractional part that is not greater than the value of $arg. If type of $arg is one of the four numeric types xs:float, xs:double, xs:decimal or xs:integer the type of the result is the same as the type of $arg. If the type of $arg is a type derived from one of the numeric types, the result is an instance of the base numeric type.

For float and double arguments, if the argument is positive zero, then positive zero is returned. If the argument is negative zero, then negative zero is returned.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.3 The fn:abs, fn:ceiling, fn:floor, fn:round, and fn:round-half-to-even functionsFS

6.4.3.1 Examples
  • fn:floor(10.5) returns 10.

  • fn:floor(-10.5) returns -11.

6.4.4 fn:round

fn:round($arg as numeric?) as numeric?

Summary: Returns the number with no fractional part that is closest to the argument. If there are two such numbers, then the one that is closest to positive infinity is returned. If type of $arg is one of the four numeric types xs:float, xs:double, xs:decimal or xs:integer the type of the result is the same as the type of $arg. If the type of $arg is a type derived from one of the numeric types, the result is an instance of the base numeric type.

For xs:float and xs:double arguments, 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, then positive zero is returned. If the argument is negative zero, then negative zero is returned. If the argument is less than zero, but greater than or equal to -0.5, then negative zero is returned. In the cases where positive zero or negative zero is returned, negative zero or positive zero may be returned as [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] does not distinguish between the values positive zero and negative zero.

For the last two cases, note that the result is not the same as fn:floor(x+0.5).

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.3 The fn:abs, fn:ceiling, fn:floor, fn:round, and fn:round-half-to-even functionsFS

6.4.4.1 Examples
  • fn:round(2.5) returns 3.

  • fn:round(2.4999) returns 2.

  • fn:round(-2.5) returns -2 (not the possible alternative, -3).

6.4.5 fn:round-half-to-even

fn:round-half-to-even($arg as numeric?) as numeric?
fn:round-half-to-even($arg as numeric?, $precision as xs:integer) as numeric?

Summary: The value returned is the nearest (that is, numerically closest) value to $arg that is a multiple of ten to the power of minus $precision. If two such values are equally near (e.g. if the fractional part in $arg is exactly .500...), the function returns the one whose least significant digit is even.

If the type of $arg is one of the four numeric types xs:float, xs:double, xs:decimal or xs:integer the type of the result is the same as the type of $arg. If the type of $arg is a type derived from one of the numeric types, the result is an instance of the base numeric type.

The first signature of this function produces the same result as the second signature with $precision=0.

For arguments of type xs:float and xs:double, if the argument is NaN, positive or negative zero, or positive or negative infinity, then the result is the same as the argument. In all other cases, the argument is cast to xs:decimal, the function is applied to this xs:decimal value, and the resulting xs:decimal is cast back to xs:float or xs:double as appropriate to form the function result. If the resulting xs:decimal value is zero, then positive or negative zero is returned according to the sign of the original argument.

Note that the process of casting to xs:decimal may result in an error [err:FOCA0001].

If $arg is of type xs:float or xs:double, rounding occurs on the value of the mantissa computed with exponent = 0.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.3 The fn:abs, fn:ceiling, fn:floor, fn:round, and fn:round-half-to-even functionsFS

Note:

This function is typically used in financial applications where the argument is of type xs:decimal. For arguments of type xs:float and xs:double the results may be counterintuitive. For example, consider round-half-to-even(xs:float(150.0150), 2).

An implementation that supports 18 digits for xs:decimal will convert the argument to the xs:decimal 150.014999389... which will then be rounded to the xs:decimal 150.01 which will be converted back to the xs:float whose exact value is 150.0099945068... whereas round-half-to-even(xs:decimal(150.0150), 2) will result in the xs:decimal whose exact value is 150.02.

6.4.5.1 Examples
  • fn:round-half-to-even(0.5) returns 0.

  • fn:round-half-to-even(1.5) returns 2.

  • fn:round-half-to-even(2.5) returns 2.

  • fn:round-half-to-even(3.567812E+3, 2) returns 3567.81E0.

  • fn:round-half-to-even(4.7564E-3, 2) returns 0.0E0.

  • fn:round-half-to-even(35612.25, -2) returns 35600.

7 Functions on Strings

This section discusses functions and operators on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] xs:string datatype and the datatypes derived from it.

7.1 String Types

The operators described in this section are defined on the following types. Each type whose name is indented is derived from the type whose name appears nearest above with one less level of indentation.

xs:string
xs:normalizedString
xs:token
xs:language
xs:NMTOKEN
xs:Name
xs:NCName
xs:ID
xs:IDREF
xs:ENTITY

They also apply to user-defined types derived by restriction from the above types.

It is ·implementation-defined· which version of [The Unicode Standard] is supported, but it is recommended that the most recent version of Unicode be used.

Unless explicitly stated, the xs:string values returned by the functions in this document are not normalized in the sense of [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Fundamentals].

Notes:

This document uses the term "code point", sometimes spelt "codepoint" (also known as "character number" or "code position") to mean a non-negative integer that represents a character in some encoding. See [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Fundamentals]. The use of the word "character" in this document is in the sense of production [2] of [Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 Recommendation (Third Edition)]. [The Unicode Standard], defines code points that range from #x0000 to #x10FFFF inclusive and may include code points that have not yet been assigned to characters.

In functions that involve character counting such as fn:substring, fn:string-length and fn:translate, what is counted is the number of XML characters in the string (or equivalently, the number of Unicode code points). Some implementations may represent a code point above xFFFF using two 16-bit values known as a surrogate. A surrogate counts as one character, not two.

7.2 Functions to Assemble and Disassemble Strings

Function Meaning
fn:codepoints-to-string Creates an xs:string from a sequence of Unicode code points.
fn:string-to-codepoints Returns the sequence of Unicode code points that constitute an xs:string.

7.2.1 fn:codepoints-to-string

fn:codepoints-to-string($arg as xs:integer*) as xs:string

Summary: Creates an xs:string from a sequence of [The Unicode Standard] code points. Returns the zero-length string if $arg is the empty sequence. If any of the code points in $arg is not a legal XML character, an error is raised [err:FOCH0001].

7.2.1.1 Examples
  • fn:codepoints-to-string((2309, 2358, 2378, 2325)) returns "अशॊक"

7.2.2 fn:string-to-codepoints

fn:string-to-codepoints($arg as xs:string?) as xs:integer*

Summary: Returns the sequence of [The Unicode Standard] code points that constitute an xs:string. If $arg is a zero-length string or the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

7.2.2.1 Examples
  • fn:string-to-codepoints("Thérèse") returns the sequence (84, 104, 233, 114, 232, 115, 101)

7.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings

7.3.1 Collations

A collation is a specification of the manner in which character strings are compared and, by extension, ordered. When values whose type is xs:string or a type derived from xs:string are compared (or, equivalently, sorted), the comparisons are inherently performed according to some collation (even if that collation is defined entirely on code point values). The [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Fundamentals] observes that some applications may require different comparison and ordering behaviors than other applications. Similarly, some users having particular linguistic expectations may require different behaviors than other users. Consequently, the collation must be taken into account when comparing strings in any context. Several functions in this and the following section make use of a collation.

Collations can indicate that two different code points are, in fact, equal for comparison purposes (e.g., "v" and "w" are considered equivalent in Swedish). Strings can be compared codepoint-by-codepoint or in a linguistically appropriate manner, as defined by the collation.

Some collations, especially those based on the [Unicode Collation Algorithm] can be "tailored" for various purposes. This document does not discuss such tailoring, nor does it provide a mechanism to perform tailoring. Instead, it assumes that the collation argument to the various functions below is a tailored and named collation. A specific collation with a distinguished name, http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint, provides the ability to compare strings based on code point values. Every implementation of XQuery/XPath must support the collation based on code point values.

In the ideal case, a collation should treat two strings as equal if the two strings are identical after Unicode normalization. Thus, the [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Normalization] recommends that all strings be subjected to early Unicode normalization and some collations will raise runtime errors if they encounter strings that are not properly normalized. However, 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 interoperability of operations on XML documents in general, there may be collations that operate on unnormalized strings and other collations that implicitly normalize strings before comparing them. Applications may choose the kind of collation best suited for their needs. Note that collations based on the Unicode collation algorithm implicitly normalize strings before comparison and produce equivalent results regardless of a string's normalization.

This specification assumes that collations are named and that the collation name may be provided as an argument to string functions. Functions that allow specification of a collation do so with an argument whose type is xs:string but whose lexical form must conform to an xs:anyURI. If the collation is specified using a relative URI, it is assumed to be relative to the value of the base-uri property in the static context. This specification also defines the manner in which a default collation is determined if the collation argument is not specified in invocations of functions that use a collation but allow it to be omitted.

This specification does not define whether or not the collation URI is dereferenced. The collation URI may be an abstract identifier, or it may refer to an actual resource describing the collation. If it refers to a resource, this specification does not define the nature of that resource. One possible candidate is that the resource is a locale description expressed using the Locale Data Markup Language: see [Locale Data Markup Language].

Functions such as fn:compare and fn:max that compare xs:string values use a single collation URI to identify all aspects of the collation rules. This means that any parameters such as the strength of the collation must be specified as part of the collation URI. For example, suppose there is a collation " http://www.example.com/collations/French " that refers to a French collation that compares on the basis of base characters. Collations that use the same basic rules, but with higher strengths, for example, base characters and accents, or base characters, accents and case, would need to be given different names, say " http://www.example.com/collations/French1 " and " http://www.example.com/collations/French2 ". Note that some specifications use the term collation to refer to an algorithm that can be parameterized, but in this specification, each possible parameterization is considered to be a distinct collation.

The XQuery/XPath static context includes a provision for a default collation that can be used for string comparisons and ordering operations. See the description of the static context in Section 2.1.1 Static ContextXP. If the default collation is not specified by the user or the system, the default collation is the Unicode code point collation (http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint).

The decision of which collation to use for a given comparison or ordering function is determined by the following algorithm:

  1. If the function 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 [err:FOCH0002].

  2. If no collation is explicitly specified for the function and the default collation in the XQuery/XPath static context is CollationB, then:

    • If CollationB is supported by the implementation, then CollationB is used.

    • Otherwise, an error is raised [err:FOCH0002].

Note:

XML allows elements to specify the xml:lang attribute to indicate the language associated with the content of such an element. This specification does not use xml:lang to identify the default collation because using xml:lang does not produce desired effects when the two strings to be compared have different xml:lang values or when a string is multilingual.

Function Meaning
fn:compare Returns -1, 0, or 1, depending on whether the value of the first argument is respectively less than, equal to, or greater than the value of the second argument, according to the rules of the collation that is used.
fn:codepoint-equal Returns true if the two arguments are equal using the Unicode code point collation.

7.3.2 fn:compare

fn:compare($comparand1 as xs:string?, $comparand2 as xs:string?) as xs:integer?
fn:compare( $comparand1  as xs:string?,
$comparand2  as xs:string?,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:integer?

Summary: 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 7.3.1 Collations.

If either argument is the empty sequence, the result is the empty sequence.

This function, invoked with the first signature, backs up the "eq", "ne", "gt", "lt", "le" and "ge" operators on string values.

7.3.2.1 Examples
  • 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', 'deutsch') returns 0 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 the default collation includes provisions that treat differences between "ss" and the (German) character "ß" ("sharp-s") with less strength than the differences between the base characters, such as the final "n".

7.3.3 fn:codepoint-equal

fn:codepoint-equal( $comparand1  as xs:string?,
$comparand2  as xs:string?) as xs:boolean?

Summary: Returns true or false depending on whether the value of $comparand1 is equal to the value of $comparand2, according to the Unicode code point collation (http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint).

If either argument is the empty sequence, the result is the empty sequence.

Note:

This function allows xs:anyURI values to be compared without having to specify the Unicode code point collation.

7.4 Functions on String Values

The following functions are defined on values of type xs:string and types derived from it.

Function Meaning
fn:concat Concatenates two or more xs:anyAtomicType arguments cast to xs:string.
fn:string-join Returns the xs:string produced by concatenating a sequence of xs:strings using an optional separator.
fn:substring Returns the xs:string located at a specified place within an argument xs:string.
fn:string-length Returns the length of the argument.
fn:normalize-space Returns the whitespace-normalized value of the argument.
fn:normalize-unicode Returns the normalized value of the first argument in the normalization form specified by the second argument.
fn:upper-case Returns the upper-cased value of the argument.
fn:lower-case Returns the lower-cased value of the argument.
fn:translate Returns the first xs:string argument with occurrences of characters contained in the second argument replaced by the character at the corresponding position in the third argument.
fn:encode-for-uri Returns the xs:string argument with certain characters escaped to enable the resulting string to be used as a path segment in a URI.
fn:iri-to-uri Returns the xs:string argument with certain characters escaped to enable the resulting string to be used as (part of) a URI.
fn:escape-html-uri Returns the xs:string argument with certain characters escaped in the manner that html user agents handle attribute values that expect URIs.

Notes:

When the above operators and functions are applied to datatypes derived from xs:string, they are guaranteed to return legal xs:strings, but they might not return a legal value for the particular subtype to which they were applied.

The strings returned by fn:concat and fn:string-join are not guaranteed to be normalized. But see note in fn:concat.

7.4.1 fn:concat

fn:concat( $arg1  as xs:anyAtomicType?,
$arg2  as xs:anyAtomicType?,
... ) as xs:string

Summary: Accepts two or more xs:anyAtomicType arguments and casts them to xs:string. Returns the xs:string that is the concatenation of the values of its arguments after conversion. If any of the arguments is the empty sequence, the argument is treated as the zero-length string.

The fn:concat function is specified to allow two or more arguments, which are concatenated together. This is the only function specified in this document that allows a variable number of arguments. This capability is retained for compatibility with [XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0].

Note:

As mentioned in 7.1 String Types Unicode normalization is not automatically applied to the result of fn:concat. If a normalized result is required, fn:normalize-unicode can be applied to the xs:string returned by fn:concat. The following XQuery:

let $v1 := "I plan to go to Mu"
let $v2 := "?nchen in September"
return concat($v1, $v2)

where the "?" represents either the actual Unicode character COMBINING DIARESIS (Unicode codepoint U+0308) or "&#x0308;", will return:

"I plan to go to Mu?nchen in September"

where the "?" represents either the actual Unicode character COMBINING DIARESIS (Unicode codepoint U+0308) or "&#x0308;". It is worth noting that the returned value is not normalized in NFC; however, it is normalized in NFD. .

However, the following XQuery:

let $v1 := "I plan to go to Mu"
let $v2 := "?nchen in September"
return normalize-unicode(concat($v1, $v2))

where the "?" represents either the actual Unicode character COMBINING DIARESIS (Unicode codepoint U+0308) or "&#x0308;", will return:

"I plan to go to München in September"

This returned result is normalized in NFC.

7.4.1.1 Examples
  • fn:concat('un', 'grateful') returns "ungrateful".

  • fn:concat('Thy ', (), 'old ', "groans", "", ' ring', ' yet', ' in', ' my', ' ancient',' ears.') returns "Thy old groans ring yet in my ancient ears.".

  • fn:concat('Ciao!',()) returns "Ciao!".

  • fn:concat('Ingratitude, ', 'thou ', 'marble-hearted', ' fiend!') returns "Ingratitude, thou marble-hearted fiend!".

7.4.2 fn:string-join

fn:string-join($arg1 as xs:string*, $arg2 as xs:string) as xs:string

Summary: Returns a xs:string created by concatenating the members of the $arg1 sequence using $arg2 as a separator. If the value of $arg2 is the zero-length string, then the members of $arg1 are concatenated without a separator.

If the value of $arg1 is the empty sequence, the zero-length string is returned.

7.4.2.1 Examples
  • fn:string-join(('Now', 'is', 'the', 'time', '...'), ' ') returns "Now is the time ...".

  • fn:string-join(('Blow, ', 'blow, ', 'thou ', 'winter ', 'wind!'), '') returns "Blow, blow, thou winter wind!".

  • fn:string-join((), 'separator') returns "".

  • Assume a document:

    <doc>
      <chap>
        <section>
        </section>
      </chap>
    </doc>
    

    with the <section> as the context node, the [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0] expression:

    fn:string-join(for $n in ancestor-or-self::* return name($n), '/')

    returns "doc/chap/section"

7.4.3 fn:substring

fn:substring( $sourceString  as xs:string?,
$startingLoc  as xs:double) as xs:string
fn:substring( $sourceString  as xs:string?,
$startingLoc  as xs:double,
$length  as xs:double) as xs:string

Summary: 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. The characters returned do not extend beyond $sourceString. If $startingLoc is zero or negative, only those characters in positions greater than zero are returned.

More specifically, the three argument version of the function returns the characters in $sourceString whose position $p obeys:

fn:round($startingLoc) <= $p < fn:round($startingLoc) + fn:round($length)

The two argument version of the function assumes that $length is infinite and returns the characters in $sourceString whose position $p obeys:

fn:round($startingLoc) <= $p < fn:round(INF)

In the above computations, the rules for op:numeric-less-than() and op:numeric-greater-than() apply.

If the value of $sourceString is the empty sequence, the zero-length string is returned.

Note:

The first character of a string is located at position 1, not position 0.

7.4.3.1 Examples
  • fn:substring("motor car", 6) returns " car".

    Characters starting at position 6 to the end of $sourceString are selected.

  • fn:substring("metadata", 4, 3) returns "ada".

    Characters at positions greater than or equal to 4 and less than 7 are selected.

  • fn:substring("12345", 1.5, 2.6) returns "234".

    Characters at positions greater than or equal to 2 and less than 5 are selected.

  • fn:substring("12345", 0, 3) returns "12".

    Characters at positions greater than or equal to 0 and less than 3 are selected. Since the first position is 1, these are the characters at positions 1 and 2.

  • fn:substring("12345", 5, -3) returns "".

    Characters at positions greater than or equal to 5 and less than 2 are selected.

  • fn:substring("12345", -3, 5) returns "1".

    Characters at positions greater than or equal to -3 and less than 2 are selected. Since the first position is 1, this is the character at position 1.

  • fn:substring("12345", 0 div 0E0, 3) returns "".

    Since 0 div 0E0 returns NaN, and NaN compared to any other number returns false, no characters are selected.

  • fn:substring("12345", 1, 0 div 0E0) returns "".

    As above.

  • fn:substring((), 1, 3) returns "".

  • fn:substring("12345", -42, 1 div 0E0) returns "12345".

    Characters at positions greater than or equal to -42 and less than INF are selected.

  • fn:substring("12345", -1 div 0E0, 1 div 0E0) returns "".

    Since -INF + INF returns NaN, no characters are selected.

7.4.4 fn:string-length

fn:string-length() as xs:integer
fn:string-length($arg as xs:string?) as xs:integer

Summary: Returns an xs:integer equal to the length in characters of the value of $arg.

If the value of $arg is the empty sequence, the xs:integer 0 is returned.

If no argument is supplied, $arg defaults to the string value (calculated using fn:string()) of the context item (.). If no argument is supplied and the context item is undefined an error is raised: [err:XPDY0002]XP.

7.4.4.1 Examples
  • fn:string-length("Harp not on that string, madam; that is past.") returns 45.

  • fn:string-length(()) returns 0.

7.4.5 fn:normalize-space

fn:normalize-space() as xs:string
fn:normalize-space($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string

Summary: Returns the value of $arg with whitespace normalized by stripping leading and trailing whitespace and replacing sequences of one or more than one whitespace character with a single space, #x20.

The whitespace characters are defined in the metasymbol S (Production 3) of [Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 Recommendation (Third Edition)].

Note:

The definition of the metasymbol S (Production 3), is unchanged in [Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1 Recommendation].

If the value of $arg is the empty sequence, returns the zero-length string.

If no argument is supplied, then $arg defaults to the string value (calculated using fn:string()) of the context item (.). If no argument is supplied and the context item is undefined an error is raised: [err:XPDY0002]XP.

7.4.5.1 Examples
  • fn:normalize-space(" The  wealthy curled darlings of   our  nation. ") returns "The wealthy curled darlings of our nation.".

  • fn:normalize-space(()) returns "".

7.4.6 fn:normalize-unicode

fn:normalize-unicode($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:normalize-unicode( $arg  as xs:string?,
$normalizationForm  as xs:string) as xs:string

Summary: Returns the value of $arg 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 value of $arg is the empty sequence, returns the zero-length string.

See [Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Normalization] for a description of the normalization forms.

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 $arg 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 $arg 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 $arg 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 $arg in Unicode Normalization Form KD (NFKD).

  • If the effective value of $normalizationForm is "FULLY-NORMALIZED", then the value returned by the function is the value of $arg in the fully normalized form.

  • If the effective value of $normalizationForm is the zero-length string, no normalization is performed and $arg is returned.

Conforming implementations ·must· support normalization form "NFC" and ·may· support normalization forms "NFD", "NFKC", "NFKD", "FULLY-NORMALIZED". They ·may· also support other normalization forms with ·implementation-defined· semantics. If the effective value of the $normalizationForm is other than one of the values supported by the implementation, then an error is raised [err:FOCH0003].

7.4.7 fn:upper-case

fn:upper-case($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string

Summary: Returns the value of $arg after translating every character to its upper-case correspondent as defined in the appropriate case mappings section in the Unicode standard [The Unicode Standard]. For versions of Unicode beginning with the 2.1.8 update, only locale-insensitive case mappings should be applied. Beginning with version 3.2.0 (and likely future versions) of Unicode, precise mappings are described in default case operations, which are full case mappings in the absence of tailoring for particular languages and environments. Every lower-case character that does not have an upper-case correspondent, as well as every upper-case character, is included in the returned value in its original form.

If the value of $arg is the empty sequence, the zero-length string is returned.

Note:

Case mappings may change the length of a string. In general, the two functions are not inverses of each other fn:lower-case(fn:upper-case($arg)) is not guaranteed to return $arg, nor is fn:upper-case(fn:lower-case($arg)). The Latin small letter dotless i (as used in Turkish) is perhaps the most prominent lower-case letter which will not round-trip. The Latin capital letter i with dot above is the most prominent upper-case letter which will not round trip; there are others.

These functions may not always be linguistically appropriate (e.g. Turkish i without dot) or appropriate for the application (e.g. titlecase). In cases such as Turkish, a simple translation should be used first.

Results may violate user expectations (in Quebec, for example, the standard uppercase equivalent of "è" is "È", while in metropolitan France it is more commonly "E"; only one of these is supported by the functions as defined).

Many characters of class Ll lack uppercase equivalents in the Unicode case mapping tables; many characters of class Lu lack lowercase equivalents.

7.4.7.1 Examples
  • fn:upper-case("abCd0") returns "ABCD0".

7.4.8 fn:lower-case

fn:lower-case($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string

Summary: Returns the value of $arg after translating every character to its lower-case correspondent as defined in the appropriate case mappings section in the Unicode standard [The Unicode Standard]. For versions of Unicode beginning with the 2.1.8 update, only locale-insensitive case mappings should be applied. Beginning with version 3.2.0 (and likely future versions) of Unicode, precise mappings are described in default case operations, which are full case mappings in the absence of tailoring for particular languages and environments. Every upper-case character that does not have a lower-case correspondent, as well as every lower-case character, is included in the returned value in its original form.

If the value of $arg is the empty sequence, the zero-length string is returned.

Note:

Case mappings may change the length of a string. In general, the two functions are not inverses of each other fn:lower-case(fn:upper-case($arg)) is not guaranteed to return $arg, nor is fn:upper-case(fn:lower-case($arg)). The Latin small letter dotless i (as used in Turkish) is perhaps the most prominent lower-case letter which will not round-trip. The Latin capital letter i with dot above is the most prominent upper-case letter which will not round trip; there are others.

These functions may not always be linguistically appropriate (e.g. Turkish i without dot) or appropriate for the application (e.g. titlecase). In cases such as Turkish, a simple translation should be used first.

Results may violate user expectations (in Quebec, for example, the standard uppercase equivalent of "è" is "È", while in metropolitan France it is more commonly "E"; only one of these is supported by the functions as defined).

Many characters of class Ll lack uppercase equivalents in the Unicode case mapping tables; many characters of class Lu lack lowercase equivalents.

7.4.8.1 Examples
  • fn:lower-case("ABc!D") returns "abc!d".

7.4.9 fn:translate

fn:translate( $arg  as xs:string?,
$mapString  as xs:string,
$transString  as xs:string) as xs:string

Summary: Returns the value of $arg modified so that every character in the value of $arg 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.

If the value of $arg is the empty sequence, the zero-length string is returned.

Every character in the value of $arg that does not appear in the value of $mapString is unchanged.

Every character in the value of $arg 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 $mapString is the zero-length string $arg is returned.

If a character occurs more than once in $mapString, then the first occurrence determines the replacement character. If $transString is longer than $mapString, the excess characters are ignored.

7.4.9.1 Examples
  • fn:translate("bar","abc","ABC") returns "BAr"

  • fn:translate("--aaa--","abc-","ABC") returns "AAA".

  • fn:translate("abcdabc", "abc", "AB") returns "ABdAB".

7.4.10 fn:encode-for-uri

fn:encode-for-uri($uri-part as xs:string?) as xs:string

Summary: This function encodes reserved characters in an xs:string that is intended to be used in the path segment of a URI. It is invertible but not idempotent. This function applies the URI escaping rules defined in section 2 of [RFC 3986] to the xs:string supplied as $uri-part. The effect of the function is to escape reserved characters. Each such character in the string is replaced with its percent-encoded form as described in [RFC 3986].

If $uri-part is the empty sequence, returns the zero-length string.

All characters are escaped except those identified as "unreserved" by [RFC 3986], that is the upper- and lower-case letters A-Z, the digits 0-9, HYPHEN-MINUS ("-"), LOW LINE ("_"), FULL STOP ".", and TILDE "~".

Note that this function escapes URI delimiters and therefore cannot be used indiscriminately to encode "invalid" characters in a path segment.

Since [RFC 3986] recommends that, for consistency, URI producers and normalizers should use uppercase hexadecimal digits for all percent-encodings, this function must always generate hexadecimal values using the upper-case letters A-F.

7.4.10.1 Examples
  • fn:encode-for-uri("http://www.example.com/00/Weather/CA/Los%20Angeles#ocean") returns "http%3A%2F%2Fwww.example.com%2F00%2FWeather%2FCA%2FLos%2520Angeles%23ocean". This is probably not what the user intended because all of the delimiters have been encoded.

  • concat("http://www.example.com/", encode-for-uri("~bébé")) returns "http://www.example.com/~b%C3%A9b%C3%A9".

  • concat("http://www.example.com/", encode-for-uri("100% organic")) returns "http://www.example.com/100%25%20organic".

7.4.11 fn:iri-to-uri

fn:iri-to-uri($iri as xs:string?) as xs:string

Summary: This function converts an xs:string containing an IRI into a URI according to the rules spelled out in Section 3.1 of [RFC 3987]. It is idempotent but not invertible.

If $iri contains a character that is invalid in an IRI, such as the space character (see note below), the invalid character is replaced by its percent-encoded form as described in [RFC 3986] before the conversion is performed.

If $iri is the empty sequence, returns the zero-length string.

Since [RFC 3986] recommends that, for consistency, URI producers and normalizers should use uppercase hexadecimal digits for all percent-encodings, this function must always generate hexadecimal values using the upper-case letters A-F.

Notes:

This function does not check whether $iri is a legal IRI. It treats it as an xs:string and operates on the characters in the xs:string.

The following printable ASCII characters are invalid in an IRI: "<", ">", " " " (double quote), space, "{", "}", "|", "\", "^", and "`". Since these characters should not appear in an IRI, if they do appear in $iri they will be percent-encoded. In addition, characters outside the range x20-x7E will be percent-encoded because they are invalid in a URI.

Since this function does not escape the PERCENT SIGN "%" and this character is not allowed in data within a URI, users wishing to convert character strings, such as file names, that include "%" to a URI should manually escape "%" by replacing it with "%25".

7.4.11.1 Examples
  • fn:iri-to-uri ("http://www.example.com/00/Weather/CA/Los%20Angeles#ocean") returns "http://www.example.com/00/Weather/CA/Los%20Angeles#ocean".

  • fn:iri-to-uri ("http://www.example.com/~bébé") returns "http://www.example.com/~b%C3%A9b%C3%A9".

7.4.12 fn:escape-html-uri

fn:escape-html-uri($uri as xs:string?) as xs:string

Summary: This function escapes all characters except printable characters of the US-ASCII coded character set, specifically the octets ranging from 32 to 126 (decimal). The effect of the function is to escape a URI in the manner html user agents handle attribute values that expect URIs. Each character in $uri to be escaped is replaced by an escape sequence, which is formed by encoding the character as a sequence of octets in UTF-8, and then representing each of these octets in the form %HH, where HH is the hexadecimal representation of the octet. This function must always generate hexadecimal values using the upper-case letters A-F.

If $uri is the empty sequence, returns the zero-length string.

Note:

The behavior of this function corresponds to the recommended handling of non-ASCII characters in URI attribute values as described in [HTML 4.0] Appendix B.2.1.

7.4.12.1 Examples
  • fn:escape-html-uri ("http://www.example.com/00/Weather/CA/Los Angeles#ocean") returns "http://www.example.com/00/Weather/CA/Los Angeles#ocean".

  • fn:escape-html-uri ("javascript:if (navigator.browserLanguage == 'fr') window.open('http://www.example.com/~bébé');") returns "javascript:if (navigator.browserLanguage == 'fr') window.open('http://www.example.com/~b%C3%A9b%C3%A9');".

7.5 Functions Based on Substring Matching

The functions described in the section examine a string $arg1 to see whether it contains another string $arg2 as a substring. The result depends on whether $arg2 is a substring of $arg1, and if so, on the range of characters in $arg1 which $arg2 matches.

When the Unicode code point collation is used, this simply involves determining whether $arg1 contains a contiguous sequence of characters whose code points are the same, one for one, with the code points of the characters in $arg2.

When a collation is specified, the rules are more complex.

All collations support the capability of deciding whether two strings are considered equal, and if not, which of the strings should be regarded as preceding the other. For functions such as fn:compare(), this is all that is required. For other functions, such as fn:contains(), the collation needs to support an additional property: it must be able to decompose the string into a sequence of collation units, each unit consisting of one or more characters, such that two strings can be compared by pairwise comparison of these units. ("collation unit" is equivalent to "collation element" as defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].) The string $arg1 is then considered to contain $arg2 as a substring if the sequence of collation units corresponding to $arg2 is a subsequence of the sequence of the collation units corresponding to $arg1. The characters in $arg1 that match are the characters corresponding to these collation units.

This rule may occasionally lead to surprises. For example, consider a collation that treats "Jaeger" and "Jäger" as equal. It might do this by treating "ä" as representing two collation units, in which case the expression fn:contains("Jäger", "eg") will return true. Alternatively, a collation might treat "ae" as a single collation unit, in which case the expression fn:contains("Jaeger", "eg") will return false. The results of these functions thus depend strongly on the properties of the collation that is used. In addition, collations may specify that some collation units should be ignored during matching.

In the definitions below, we refer to the terms match and minimal match as defined in definitions DS2 and DS4 of [Unicode Collation Algorithm]. In applying these definitions:

  • C is the collation; that is, the value of the $collation argument if specified, otherwise the default collation.

  • P is the (candidate) substring $arg2

  • Q is the (candidate) containing string $arg1

  • The boundary condition B is satisfied at the start and end of a string, and between any two characters that belong to different collation units (collation elements in the language of [Unicode Collation Algorithm]). It is not satisfied between two characters that belong to the same collation unit.

It is possible to define collations that do not have the ability to decompose a string into units suitable for substring matching. An argument to a function defined in this section may be a URI that identifies a collation that is able to compare two strings, but that does not have the capability to split the string into collation units. Such a collation may cause the function to fail, or to give unexpected results or it may be rejected as an unsuitable argument. The ability to decompose strings into collation units is an ·implementation-defined· property of the collation.

Function Meaning
fn:contains Indicates whether one xs:string contains another xs:string. A collation may be specified.
fn:starts-with Indicates whether the value of one xs:string begins with the collation units of another xs:string. A collation may be specified.
fn:ends-with Indicates whether the value of one xs:string ends with the collation units of another xs:string. A collation may be specified.
fn:substring-before Returns the collation units of one xs:string that precede in that xs:string the collation units of another xs:string. A collation may be specified.
fn:substring-after Returns the collation units of xs:string that follow in that xs:string the collation units of another xs:string. A collation may be specified.

7.5.1 fn:contains

fn:contains($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
fn:contains( $arg1  as xs:string?,
$arg2  as xs:string?,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns an xs:boolean indicating whether or not the value of $arg1 contains (at the beginning, at the end, or anywhere within) at least one sequence of collation units that provides a minimal match to the collation units in the value of $arg2, according to the collation that is used.

Note:

"Minimal match" is defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].

If the value of $arg1 or $arg2 is the empty sequence, or contains only ignorable collation units, it is interpreted as the zero-length string.

If the value of $arg2 is the zero-length string, then the function returns true.

If the value of $arg1 is the zero-length string, the function returns false.

The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 7.3.1 Collations. If the specified collation does not support collation units an error ·may· be raised [err:FOCH0004].

7.5.1.1 Examples

CollationA used in these examples is a collation in which both "-" and "*" are ignorable collation units.

Note:

"Ignorable collation unit" is equivalent to "ignorable collation element" in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].

  • fn:contains ( "tattoo", "t") returns true.

  • fn:contains ( "tattoo", "ttt") returns false.

  • fn:contains ( "", ()) returns true. The first rule is applied, followed by the second rule.

  • fn:contains ( "abcdefghi", "-d-e-f-", "CollationA") returns true.

  • fn:contains ( "a*b*c*d*e*f*g*h*i*", "d-ef-", "CollationA") returns true.

  • fn:contains ( "abcd***e---f*--*ghi", "def", "CollationA") returns true.

  • fn:contains ( (), "--***-*---", "CollationA") returns true. The second argument contains only ignorable collation units and is equivalent to the zero-length string.

7.5.2 fn:starts-with

fn:starts-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
fn:starts-with( $arg1  as xs:string?,
$arg2  as xs:string?,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns an xs:boolean indicating whether or not the value of $arg1 starts with a sequence of collation units that provides a match to the collation units of $arg2 according to the collation that is used.

Note:

"Match" is defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].

If the value of $arg1 or $arg2 is the empty sequence, or contains only ignorable collation units, it is interpreted as the zero-length string.

If the value of $arg2 is the zero-length string, then the function returns true. If the value of $arg1 is the zero-length string and the value of $arg2 is not the zero-length string, then the function returns false.

The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 7.3.1 Collations. If the specified collation does not support collation units an error ·may· be raised [err:FOCH0004].

7.5.2.1 Examples

CollationA used in these examples is a collation in which both "-" and "*" are ignorable collation units.

Note:

"Ignorable collation unit" is equivalent to "ignorable collation element" in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].

  • fn:starts-with("tattoo", "tat") returns true.

  • fn:starts-with ( "tattoo", "att") returns false.

  • fn:starts-with ((), ()) returns true.

  • fn:starts-with ( "abcdefghi", "-a-b-c-", "CollationA") returns true.

  • fn:starts-with ( "a*b*c*d*e*f*g*h*i*", "a-bc-", "CollationA") returns true.

  • fn:starts-with ( "abcd***e---f*--*ghi", "abcdef", "CollationA") returns true.

  • fn:starts-with ( (), "--***-*---", "CollationA") returns true. The second argument contains only ignorable collation units and is equivalent to the zero-length string.

  • fn:starts-with ( "-abcdefghi", "-abc", "CollationA") returns true.

7.5.3 fn:ends-with

fn:ends-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
fn:ends-with( $arg1  as xs:string?,
$arg2  as xs:string?,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns an xs:boolean indicating whether or not the value of $arg1 starts with a sequence of collation units that provides a match to the collation units of $arg2 according to the collation that is used.

Note:

"Match" is defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].

If the value of $arg1 or $arg2 is the empty sequence, or contains only ignorable collation units, it is interpreted as the zero-length string.

If the value of $arg2 is the zero-length string, then the function returns true. If the value of $arg1 is the zero-length string and the value of $arg2 is not the zero-length string, then the function returns false.

The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 7.3.1 Collations. If the specified collation does not support collation units an error ·may· be raised [err:FOCH0004].

7.5.3.1 Examples

CollationA used in these examples is a collation in which both "-" and "*" are ignorable collation units.

Note:

"Ignorable collation unit" is equivalent to "ignorable collation element" in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].

  • fn:ends-with ( "tattoo", "tattoo") returns true.

  • fn:ends-with ( "tattoo", "atto") returns false.

  • fn:ends-with ((), ()) returns true.

  • fn:ends-with ( "abcdefghi", "-g-h-i-", "CollationA") returns true.

  • fn:ends-with ( "abcd***e---f*--*ghi", "defghi", "CollationA") returns true.

  • fn:ends-with ( "abcd***e---f*--*ghi", "defghi", "CollationA") returns true.

  • fn:ends-with ( (), "--***-*---", "CollationA") returns true. The second argument contains only ignorable collation units and is equivalent to the zero-length string.

  • fn:ends-with ( "abcdefghi", "ghi-", "CollationA") returns true.

7.5.4 fn:substring-before

fn:substring-before($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:substring-before( $arg1  as xs:string?,
$arg2  as xs:string?,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:string

Summary: Returns the substring of the value of $arg1 that precedes in the value of $arg1 the first occurrence of a sequence of collation units that provides a minimal match to the collation units of $arg2 according to the collation that is used.

Note:

"Minimal match" is defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].

If the value of $arg1 or $arg2 is the empty sequence, or contains only ignorable collation units, it is interpreted as the zero-length string.

If the value of $arg2 is the zero-length string, then the function returns the zero-length string.

If the value of $arg1 does not contain a string that is equal to the value of $arg2, then the function returns the zero-length string.

The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 7.3.1 Collations If the specified collation does not support collation units an error ·may· be raised [err:FOCH0004].

7.5.4.1 Examples

CollationA used in these examples is a collation in which both "-" and "*" are ignorable collation units.

Note:

"Ignorable collation unit" is equivalent to "ignorable collation element" in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].

  • fn:substring-before ( "tattoo", "attoo") returns "t".

  • fn:substring-before ( "tattoo", "tatto") returns "".

  • fn:substring-before ((), ()) returns "".

  • fn:substring-before ( "abcdefghi", "--d-e-", "CollationA") returns "abc".

  • fn:substring-before ( "abc--d-e-fghi", "--d-e-", "CollationA") returns "abc--".

  • fn:substring-before ( "a*b*c*d*e*f*g*h*i*", "***cde", "CollationA") returns "a*b*".

  • fn:substring-before ( "Eureka!", "--***-*---", "CollationA") returns "". The second argument contains only ignorable collation units and is equivalent to the zero-length string.

7.5.5 fn:substring-after

fn:substring-after($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:substring-after( $arg1  as xs:string?,
$arg2  as xs:string?,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:string

Summary: Returns the substring of the value of $arg1 that follows in the value of $arg1 the first occurrence of a sequence of collation units that provides a minimal match to the collation units of $arg2 according to the collation that is used.

Note:

"Minimal match" is defined in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].

If the value of $arg1 or $arg2 is the empty sequence, or contains only ignorable collation units, it is interpreted as the zero-length string.

If the value of $arg2 is the zero-length string, then the function returns the value of $arg1.

If the value of $arg1 does not contain a string that is equal to the value of $arg2, then the function returns the zero-length string.

The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 7.3.1 Collations If the specified collation does not support collation units an error ·may· be raised [err:FOCH0004].

7.5.5.1 Examples

CollationA used in these examples is a collation in which both "-" and "*" are ignorable collation units.

Note:

"Ignorable collation unit" is equivalent to "ignorable collation element" in [Unicode Collation Algorithm].

  • fn:substring-after("tattoo", "tat") returns "too".

  • fn:substring-after ( "tattoo", "tattoo") returns "".

  • fn:substring-after ((), ()) returns "".

  • fn:substring-after ( "abcdefghi", "--d-e-", "CollationA") returns "fghi".

  • fn:substring-after ( "abc--d-e-fghi", "--d-e-", "CollationA") returns "-fghi ".

  • fn:substring-after ( "a*b*c*d*e*f*g*h*i*", "***cde***", "CollationA") returns "*f*g*h*i*".

  • fn:substring-after ( "Eureka!", "--***-*---", "CollationA") returns "Eureka!". The second argument contains only ignorable collation units and is equivalent to the zero-length string.

7.6 String Functions that Use Pattern Matching

The three functions described in this section make use of a regular expression syntax for pattern matching. This is described below.

Function Meaning
fn:matches Returns an xs: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.
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.
fn:tokenize Returns a sequence of one or more xs: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.

7.6.1 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 Second Edition]), which in turn is based on the established conventions of languages such as Perl. However, because XML Schema uses regular expressions only for validity checking, it omits some facilities that are widely-used with languages such as Perl. This section, therefore, describes extensions to the XML Schema regular expressions syntax that reinstate these capabilities.

Note:

It is recommended that implementers consult [Unicode Regular Expressions] for information on using regular expression processing on Unicode characters.

The regular expression syntax and semantics are identical to those defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] with the following additions:

  • Two meta-characters, ^ and $ are added. By default, the meta-character ^ matches the start of the entire string, while $ matches the end of the entire string. In multi-line mode, ^ matches the start of any line (that is, the start of the entire string, and the position immediately after a newline character), while $ matches the end of any line (that is, the end of the entire string, and the position immediately before a newline character). Newline here means the character #x0A only.

    This means that the production in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]:

    [10] Char ::= [^.\?*+()|#x5B#x5D]

    is modified to read:

    [10] Char ::= [^.\?*+{}()|^$#x5B#x5D]

    The characters #x5B and #x5D correspond to "[" and "]" respectively.

    Note:

    The definition of Char (production [10]) in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] has a known error in which it omits the left brace ("{") and right brace ("}"). That error is corrected here.

    The following production:

    [11] charClass ::= charClassEsc | charClassExpr | WildCardEsc

    is modified to read:

    [11] charClass ::= charClassEsc | charClassExpr | WildCardEsc | "^" | "$"

  • Reluctant quantifiers are supported. They are indicated by a " ? " following a quantifier. Specifically:

    • X?? matches X, once or not at all

    • X*? matches X, zero or more times

    • X+? matches X, one or more times

    • X{n}? matches X, exactly n times

    • X{n,}? matches X, at least n times

    • X{n,m}? matches X, at least n times, but not more than m times

    The effect of these quantifiers is that the regular expression matches the shortest possible substring consistent with the match as a whole succeeding. Without the " ? ", the regular expression matches the longest possible substring.

    To achieve this, the production in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]:

    [4] quantifier ::= [?*+] | ( '{' quantity '}' )

    is changed to:

    [4] quantifier ::= ( [?*+] | ( '{' quantity '}' ) ) '?'?

    Note:

    Reluctant quantifiers have no effect on the results of the boolean fn:matches function, since this function is only interested in discovering whether a match exists, and not where it exists.

  • Sub-expressions (groups) within the regular expression are recognized. The regular expression syntax defined by [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] allows a regular expression to contain parenthesized sub-expressions, but attaches no special significance to them. The fn:replace() function described below allows access to the parts of the input string that matched a sub-expression (called captured substrings). The sub-expressions are numbered according to the position of the opening parenthesis in left-to-right order within the top-level regular expression: the first opening parenthesis identifies captured substring 1, the second identifies captured substring 2, and so on. 0 identifies the substring captured by the entire regular expression. 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.

  • Back-references are allowed outside a character class expression. A back-reference is an additional kind of atom. The construct \N where N is a single digit is always recognized as a back-reference; if this is followed by further digits, these digits are taken to be part of the back-reference if and only if the resulting number NN is such that the back-reference is preceded by NN or more unescaped opening parentheses. The regular expression is invalid if a back-reference refers to a subexpression that does not exist or whose closing right parenthesis occurs after the back-reference.

    A back-reference matches the string that was matched by the Nth capturing subexpression within the regular expression, that is, the parenthesized subexpression whose opening left parenthesis is the Nth unescaped left parenthesis within the regular expression. For example, the regular expression ('|").*\1 matches a sequence of characters delimited either by an apostrophe at the start and end, or by a quotation mark at the start and end.

    If no string is matched by the Nth capturing subexpression, the back-reference is interpreted as matching a zero-length string.

    Back-references change the following production:

    [9] atom ::= Char | charClass | ( '(' regExp ')' )

    to

    [9] atom ::= Char | charClass | ( '(' regExp ')' ) | backReference

    [9a] backReference ::= "\" [1-9][0-9]*

    Note:

    Within a character class expression, \ followed by a digit is invalid. Some other regular expression languages interpret this as an octal character reference.

  • Single character escapes are extended to allow the $ character to be escaped. The following production is changed:

    [24]SingleCharEsc ::= '\' [nrt\|.?*+(){}#x2D#x5B#x5D#x5E]

    to

    [24]SingleCharEsc ::= '\' [nrt\|.?*+(){}$#x2D#x5B#x5D#x5E]

7.6.1.1 Flags

All these functions provide an optional parameter, $flags, to set options for the interpretation of the regular expression. The parameter accepts a xs:string, in which individual letters are used to set options. The presence of a letter within the string indicates that the option is on; its absence indicates that the option is off. Letters may appear in any order and may be repeated. If there are characters present that are not defined here as flags, then an error is raised [err:FORX0001].

The following options are defined:

  • s: If present, the match operates in "dot-all" mode. (Perl calls this the single-line mode.) If the s flag is not specified, the meta-character . matches any character except a newline (#x0A) character. In dot-all mode, the meta-character . matches any character whatsoever. Suppose the input contains "hello" and "world" on two lines. This will not be matched by the regular expression "hello.*world" unless dot-all mode is enabled.

  • m: If present, the match operates in multi-line mode. By default, the meta-character ^ matches the start of the entire string, while $ matches the end of the entire string. In multi-line mode, ^ matches the start of any line (that is, the start of the entire string, and the position immediately after a newline character other than a newline that appears as the last character in the string), while $ matches the end of any line (that is, the position immediately before a newline character, and the end of the entire string if there is no newline character at the end of the string). Newline here means the character #x0A only.

  • i: If present, the match operates in case-insensitive mode. The detailed rules are as follows. In these rules, a character C2 is considered to be a case-variant of another character C1 if the following XPath expression returns true when the two characters are considered as strings of length one, and the Unicode codepoint collation is used:

    fn:lower-case(C1) eq fn:lower-case(C2)

    or

    fn:upper-case(C1) eq fn:upper-case(C2)

    Note that the case-variants of a character under this definition are always single characters.

    1. When a normal character (Char) is used as an atom, it represents the set containing that character and all its case-variants. For example, the regular expression "z" will match both "z" and "Z".

    2. A character range (charRange) represents the set containing all the characters that it would match in the absence of the "i" flag, together with their case-variants. For example, the regular expression "[A-Z]" will match all the letters A-Z and all the letters a-z. It will also match certain other characters such as #x212A (KELVIN SIGN), since fn:lower-case("#x212A") is "k".

      This rule applies also to a character range used in a character class subtraction (charClassSub): thus [A-Z-[IO]] will match characters such as "A", "B", "a", and "b", but will not match "I", "O", "i", or "o".

      The rule also applies to a character range used as part of a negative character group: thus [^Q] will match every character except "Q" and "q" (these being the only case-variants of "Q" in Unicode).

    3. A back-reference is compared using case-blind comparison: that is, each character must either be the same as the corresponding character of the previously matched string, or must be a case-variant of that character. For example, the strings "Mum", "mom", "Dad", and "DUD" all match the regular expression "([md])[aeiou]\1" when the "i" flag is used.

    4. All other constructs are unaffected by the "i" flag. For example, "\p{Lu}" continues to match upper-case letters only.

  • x: If present, whitespace characters (#x9, #xA, #xD and #x20) in the regular expression are removed prior to matching with one exception: whitespace characters within character class expressions (charClassExpr) are not removed. This flag can be used, for example, to break up long regular expressions into readable lines.

    Examples:

    fn:matches("helloworld", "hello world", "x") returns true

    fn:matches("helloworld", "hello[ ]world", "x") returns false

    fn:matches("hello world", "hello\ sworld", "x") returns true

    fn:matches("hello world", "hello world", "x") returns false

7.6.2 fn:matches

fn:matches($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string) as xs:boolean
fn:matches( $input  as xs:string?,
$pattern  as xs:string,
$flags  as xs:string) as xs:boolean

Summary: The function returns true if $input matches the regular expression supplied as $pattern as influenced by the value of $flags, if present; otherwise, it returns false.

The effect of calling the first version of this function (omitting the argument $flags) is the same as the effect of calling the second version with the $flags argument set to a zero-length string. Flags are defined in 7.6.1.1 Flags.

If $input is the empty sequence, it is interpreted as the zero-length string.

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 Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition], where regular expressions are implicitly anchored.

An error is raised [err:FORX0002] if the value of $pattern is invalid according to the rules described in section 7.6.1 Regular Expression Syntax.

An error is raised [err:FORX0001] if the value of $flags is invalid according to the rules described in section 7.6.1 Regular Expression Syntax.

7.6.2.1 Examples
  • 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 false

  • fn:matches(., "Kaum.*krähen", "s") returns true

  • 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.

7.6.3 fn:replace

fn:replace( $input  as xs:string?,
$pattern  as xs:string,
$replacement  as xs:string) as xs:string
fn:replace( $input  as xs:string?,
$pattern  as xs:string,
$replacement  as xs:string,
$flags  as xs:string) as xs:string

Summary: The function returns the xs:string that is obtained by replacing each non-overlapping substring of $input that matches the given $pattern with an occurrence of the $replacement string.

The effect of calling the first version of this function (omitting the argument $flags) is the same as the effect of calling the second version with the $flags argument set to a zero-length string. Flags are defined in 7.6.1.1 Flags.

The $flags argument is interpreted in the same manner as for the fn:matches() function.

If $input is the empty sequence, it is interpreted as the zero-length string.

If two overlapping substrings of $input both match the $pattern, then only the first one (that is, the one whose first character comes first in the $input string) is replaced.

Within the $replacement string, a variable $N may be used to refer to the substring captured by the Nth parenthesized sub-expression in the regular expression. For each match of the pattern, these variables are assigned the value of the content matched by the relevant sub-expression, and the modified replacement string is then substituted for the characters in $input that matched the pattern. $0 refers to the substring captured by the regular expression as a whole.

More specifically, the rules are as follows, where S is the number of parenthesized sub-expressions in the regular expression, and N is the decimal number formed by taking all the digits that consecutively follow the $ character:

  1. If N=0, then the variable is replaced by the substring matched by the regular expression as a whole.

  2. If 1<=N<=S, then the variable is replaced by the substring captured by the Nth parenthesized sub-expression. If the Nth parenthesized sub-expression was not matched, then the variable is replaced by the zero-length string.

  3. If S<N<=9, then the variable is replaced by the zero-length string.

  4. Otherwise (if N>S and N>9), the last digit of N is taken to be a literal character to be included "as is" in the replacement string, and the rules are reapplied using the number N formed by stripping off this last digit.

For example, if the replacement string is "$23" and there are 5 substrings, the result contains the value of the substring that matches the second sub-expression, followed by the digit "3".

A literal "$" symbol must be written as "\$".

A literal "\" symbol must be written as "\\".

If two alternatives within the pattern both match at the same position in the $input, then the match that is chosen is the one matched by the first alternative. For example:

 fn:replace("abcd", "(ab)|(a)", "[1=$1][2=$2]") returns "[1=ab][2=]cd"

An error is raised [err:FORX0002] if the value of $pattern is invalid according to the rules described in section 7.6.1 Regular Expression Syntax.

An error is raised [err:FORX0001] if the value of $flags is invalid according to the rules described in section 7.6.1 Regular Expression Syntax.

An error is raised [err:FORX0003] if the pattern matches a zero-length string, that is, if the expression fn:matches("", $pattern, $flags) returns true. It is not an error, however, if a captured substring is zero-length.

An error is raised [err:FORX0004] if the value of $replacement contains a "$" character that is not immediately followed by a digit 0-9 and not immediately preceded by a "\".

An error is raised [err:FORX0004] if the value of $replacement contains a "\" character that is not part of a "\\" pair, unless it is immediately followed by a "$" character.

7.6.3.1 Examples
  • replace("abracadabra", "bra", "*") returns "a*cada*"

  • replace("abracadabra", "a.*a", "*") returns "*"

  • replace("abracadabra", "a.*?a", "*") returns "*c*bra"

  • replace("abracadabra", "a", "") returns "brcdbr"

  • replace("abracadabra", "a(.)", "a$1$1") returns "abbraccaddabbra"

  • replace("abracadabra", ".*?", "$1") raises an error, because the pattern matches the zero-length string

  • replace("AAAA", "A+", "b") returns "b"

  • replace("AAAA", "A+?", "b") returns "bbbb"

  • replace("darted", "^(.*?)d(.*)$", "$1c$2") returns "carted". The first d is replaced.

7.6.4 fn:tokenize

fn:tokenize($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string) as xs:string*
fn:tokenize( $input  as xs:string?,
$pattern  as xs:string,
$flags  as xs:string) as xs:string*

Summary: 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 effect of calling the first version of this function (omitting the argument $flags) is the same as the effect of calling the second version with the $flags argument set to a zero-length string. Flags are defined in 7.6.1.1 Flags.

The $flags argument is interpreted in the same way as for the fn:matches() function.

If $input is the empty sequence, or if $input is the zero-length string, the result is the empty sequence.

If the supplied $pattern matches a zero-length string, that is, if fn:matches("", $pattern, $flags) returns true, then an error is raised: [err:FORX0003].

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.

If two alternatives within the supplied $pattern both match at the same position in the $input string, then the match that is chosen is the first. For example:

 fn:tokenize("abracadabra", "(ab)|(a)") returns ("", "r", "c", "d", "r", "")

An error is raised [err:FORX0002] if the value of $pattern is invalid according to the rules described in section 7.6.1 Regular Expression Syntax.

An error is raised [err:FORX0001] if the value of $flags is invalid according to the rules described in section 7.6.1 Regular Expression Syntax.

7.6.4.1 Examples
  • fn:tokenize("The cat sat on the mat", "\s+") returns ("The", "cat", "sat", "on", "the", "mat")

  • fn:tokenize("1, 15, 24, 50", ",\s*") returns ("1", "15", "24", "50")

  • fn:tokenize("1,15,,24,50,", ",") returns ("1", "15", "", "24", "50", "")

  • fn:tokenize("abba", ".?") raises the error [err:FORX0003].

  • fn:tokenize("Some unparsed <br> HTML <BR> text", "\s*<br>\s*", "i") returns ("Some unparsed", "HTML", "text")

8 Functions on anyURI

This section specifies functions that take anyURI as arguments.

Function Meaning
fn:resolve-uri Returns an xs:anyURI representing an absolute xs:anyURI given a base URI and a relative URI.

8.1 fn:resolve-uri

fn:resolve-uri($relative as xs:string?) as xs:anyURI?
fn:resolve-uri($relative as xs:string?, $base as xs:string) as xs:anyURI?

Summary: This function enables a relative URI reference to be resolved against an absolute URI.

The first form of this function resolves $relative against the value of the base-uri property from the static context. If the base-uri property is not initialized in the static context an error is raised [err:FONS0005].

If $relative is a relative URI reference, it is resolved against $base, or against the base-uri property from the static context, using an algorithm such as those described in [RFC 2396] or [RFC 3986], and the resulting absolute URI reference is returned.

If $relative is an absolute URI reference, it is returned unchanged.

If $relative is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

If $relative is not a valid URI according to the rules of the xs:anyURI data type, or if it is not a suitable relative reference to use as input to the chosen resolution algorithm, then an error is raised [err:FORG0002].

If $base is not a valid URI according to the rules of the xs:anyURI data type, if it is not a suitable URI to use as input to the chosen resolution algorithm (for example, if it is a relative URI reference, if it is a non-hierarchic URI, or if it contains a fragment identifier), then an error is raised [err:FORG0002].

If the chosen resolution algorithm fails for any other reason then an error is raised [err:FORG0009].

Note:

Resolving a URI does not dereference it. This is merely a syntactic operation on two character strings.

Note:

The algorithms in the cited RFCs include some variations that are optional or recommended rather than mandatory; they also describe some common practices that are not recommended, but which are permitted for backwards compatibility. Where the cited RFCs permit variations in behavior, so does this specification.

9 Functions and Operators on Boolean Values

This section defines functions and operators on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] boolean datatype.

9.1 Additional Boolean Constructor Functions

The following additional constructor functions are defined on the boolean type.

Function Meaning
fn:true Constructs the xs:boolean value 'true'.
fn:false Constructs the xs:boolean value 'false'.

9.1.1 fn:true

fn:true() as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns the xs:boolean value true. Equivalent to xs:boolean("1").

9.1.1.1 Examples
  • fn:true() returns true.

9.1.2 fn:false

fn:false() as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns the xs:boolean value false. Equivalent to xs:boolean("0").

9.1.2.1 Examples
  • fn:false() returns false.

9.2 Operators on Boolean Values

The following functions define the semantics of operators on boolean values in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] and [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0]:

Operator Meaning
op:boolean-equal Equality of xs:boolean values
op:boolean-less-than A less-than operator on xs:boolean values: false is less than true.
op:boolean-greater-than A greater-than operator on xs:boolean values: true is greater than false.

The ordering operators op:boolean-less-than and op:boolean-greater-than are provided for application purposes and for compatibility with [XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0]. The [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] datatype xs:boolean is not ordered.

9.2.1 op:boolean-equal

op:boolean-equal($value1 as xs:boolean, $value2 as xs:boolean) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if both arguments are true or if both arguments are false. Returns false if one of the arguments is true and the other argument is false.

This function backs up the "eq" operator on xs:boolean values.

9.2.2 op:boolean-less-than

op:boolean-less-than($arg1 as xs:boolean, $arg2 as xs:boolean) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if $arg1 is false and $arg2 is true. Otherwise, returns false.

This function backs up the "lt" and "ge" operators on xs:boolean values.

9.2.3 op:boolean-greater-than

op:boolean-greater-than($arg1 as xs:boolean, $arg2 as xs:boolean) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if $arg1 is true and $arg2 is false. Otherwise, returns false.

This function backs up the "gt" and "le" operators on xs:boolean values.

9.3 Functions on Boolean Values

The following functions are defined on boolean values:

Function Meaning
fn:not Inverts the xs:boolean value of the argument.

9.3.1 fn:not

fn:not($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean

Summary: $arg is first reduced to an effective boolean value by applying the fn:boolean() function. Returns true if the effective boolean value is false, and false if the effective boolean value is true.

9.3.1.1 Examples
  • fn:not(fn:true()) returns false.

  • fn:not("false") returns false.

10 Functions and Operators on Durations, Dates and Times

This section discusses operations on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] date and time types. It also discusses operations on two subtypes of xs:duration that are defined in Section 2.6 TypesDM. See 10.3 Two Totally Ordered Subtypes of Duration.

See [Working With Timezones] for a disquisition on working with date and time values with and without timezones.

10.1 Duration, Date and Time Types

The operators described in this section are defined on the following date and time types:

  • xs:dateTime

  • xs:date

  • xs:time

  • xs:gYearMonth

  • xs:gYear

  • xs:gMonthDay

  • xs:gMonth

  • xs:gDay

Note that only equality is defined on xs:gYearMonth, xs:gYear, xs:gMonthDay, xs:gMonth and xs:gDay values.

In addition, operators are defined on:

  • xs:duration

and on the 10.3 Two Totally Ordered Subtypes of Duration:

  • xs:yearMonthDuration

  • xs:dayTimeDuration

Note that no ordering relation is defined on xs:duration values.Two xs:duration values may however be compared for equality. Operations on durations (including equality comparison, casting to string, and extraction of components) all treat the duration as normalized. This means that the seconds and minutes components will always be less than 60, the hours component less than 24, and the months component less than 12. Thus, for example, a duration of 120 seconds always gives the same result as a duration of two minutes.

10.1.1 Limits and Precision

For a number of the above datatypes [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] extends the basic [ISO 8601] lexical representations, such as YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.s for dateTime, by allowing a preceding minus sign, more than four digits to represent the year field — no maximum is specified — and an unlimited number of digits for fractional seconds. Leap seconds are not supported.

All minimally conforming processors ·must· support positive year values with a minimum of 4 digits (i.e., YYYY) and a minimum fractional second precision of 1 millisecond or three digits (i.e., s.sss). However, conforming processors ·may· set larger ·implementation-defined· limits on the maximum number of digits they support in these two situations. Processors ·may· also choose to support the year 0000 and years with negative values. The results of operations on dates that cross the year 0000 are ·implementation-defined·.

A processor that limits the number of digits in date and time datatype representations may encounter overflow and underflow conditions when it tries to execute the functions in 10.8 Arithmetic Operators on Durations, Dates and Times. In these situations, the processor ·must· return P0M or PT0S in case of duration underflow and 00:00:00 in case of time underflow. It ·must· raise an error [err:FODT0001] in case of overflow.

The value spaces of the two totally ordered subtypes of xs:duration described in 10.3 Two Totally Ordered Subtypes of Duration are xs:integer months for xs:yearMonthDuration and xs:decimal seconds for xs:dayTimeDuration. If a processor limits the number of digits allowed in the representation of xs:integer and xs:decimal then overflow and underflow situations can arise when it tries to execute the functions in 10.6 Arithmetic Operators on Durations. In these situations the processor ·must· return zero in case of numeric underflow and P0M or PT0S in case of duration underflow. It ·must· raise an error [err:FODT0002] in case of overflow.

10.2 Date/time datatype values

As defined in Section 3.3.2 Dates and TimesDM, xs:dateTime, xs:date, xs:time, xs:gYearMonth, xs:gYear, xs:gMonthDay, xs:gMonth, xs:gDay values, referred to collectively as date/time values, are represented as seven components or properties: year, month, day, hour, minute, second and timezone. The value of the first five components are xs:integers. The value of the second component is an xs:decimal and the value of the timezone component is an xs:dayTimeDuration. For all the date/time datatypes, the timezone property is optional and may or may not be present. Depending on the datatype, some of the remaining six properties must be present and some must be absent. Absent, or missing, properties are represented by the empty sequence. This value is referred to as the local value in that the value is in the given timezone. Before comparing or subtracting xs:dateTime values, this local value ·must· be translated or normalized to UTC.

For xs:time, "00:00:00" and "24:00:00" are alternate lexical forms for the same value, whose canonical representation is "00:00:00". For xs:dateTime, a time component "24:00:00" translates to "00:00:00" of the following day.

10.2.1 Examples

  • An xs:dateTime with lexical representation 1999-05-31T05:00:00 is represented in the datamodel by {1999, 5, 31, 5, 0, 0.0, ()}.

  • An xs:dateTime with lexical representation 1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00 is represented by {1999, 5, 31, 13, 20, 0.0, -PT5H}.

  • An xs:dateTime with lexical representation 1999-12-31T24:00:00 is represented by {2000, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0.0, ()}.

  • An xs:date with lexical representation 2005-02-28+8:00 is represented by {2005, 2, 28, (), (), (), PT8H}.

  • An xs:time with lexical representation 24:00:00 is represented by {(), (), (), 0, 0, 0, ()}.

10.3 Two Totally Ordered Subtypes of Duration

Two totally ordered subtypes of xs:duration are defined in Section 2.6 TypesDM specification using the mechanisms described in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] for defining user-defined types. Additional details about these types is given below.

10.3.1 xs:yearMonthDuration

[Definition] xs:yearMonthDuration is derived from xs:duration by restricting its lexical representation to contain only the year and month components. The value space of xs:yearMonthDuration is the set of xs:integer month values. The year and month components of xs:yearMonthDuration correspond to the Gregorian year and month components defined in section 5.5.3.2 of [ISO 8601], respectively.

10.3.1.1 Lexical representation

The lexical representation for xs: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 xs: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 xs:yearMonthDuration of 1 year, 2 months, one would write: P1Y2M. One could also indicate a xs: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 allowed; P-1347M is not allowed, although -P1347M is allowed. P1Y2MT is not allowed. Also, P24YM is not allowed, nor is PY43M since Y must have at least one preceding digit and M must have one preceding digit.

10.3.1.2 Calculating the value from the lexical representation

The value of a xs:yearMonthDuration lexical form is obtained by multiplying the value of the years component by 12 and adding the value of the months component. The value is positive or negative depending on the preceding sign.

10.3.1.3 Canonical representation

The canonical representation of xs:yearMonthDuration restricts the value of the months component to xs: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 xs:integer 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. For negative durations, the canonical form is calculated using the absolute value of the duration and a negative sign is prepended to it. If a component has the value zero (0), then the number and the designator for that component ·must· be omitted. However, if the value is zero (0) months, the canonical form is "P0M".

10.3.1.4 Order relation on xs:yearMonthDuration

Let the function that calculates the value of an xs:yearMonthDuration in the manner described above be called V(d). Then for two xs:yearMonthDuration values x and y, x > y if and only if V(x) > V(y). The order relation on yearMonthDuration is a total order.

10.3.2 xs:dayTimeDuration

[Definition] xs:dayTimeDuration is derived from xs:duration by restricting its lexical representation to contain only the days, hours, minutes and seconds components. The value space of xs:dayTimeDuration is the set of fractional second values. The components of xs:dayTimeDuration correspond to the day, hour, minute and second components defined in Section 5.5.3.2 of [ISO 8601], respectively.

10.3.2.1 Lexical representation

The lexical representation for xs: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 xs:integer. Similarly, the value of the seconds component allows an arbitrary unsigned xs:decimal. 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, P3DT2H, -PT35.89S and P4DT251M are all allowed. P-134D is not allowed (invalid location of minus sign), although -P134D is allowed.

10.3.2.2 Calculating the value of a xs:dayTimeDuration from the lexical representation

The value of a xs:dayTimeDuration lexical form in fractional seconds is obtained by converting the days, hours, minutes and seconds value to fractional seconds using the conversion rules: 24 hours = 1 day, 60 minutes = 1 hour and 60 seconds = 1 minute.

10.3.2.3 Canonical representation

The canonical representation of xs:dayTimeDuration restricts the value of the hours component to xs:integer values between 0 and 23, both inclusive; the value of the minutes component to xs:integer values between 0 and 59; both inclusive; and the value of the seconds component to xs:decimal valued from 0.0 to 59.999... (see [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition], Appendix D).

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 86,400 (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 3,600 (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. For negative durations, the canonical form is calculated using the absolute value of the duration and a negative sign is prepended to it. If a component has the value zero (0) then the number and the designator for that component must be omitted. However, if all the components of the lexical form are zero (0), the canonical form is "PT0S".

10.3.2.4 Order relation on xs:dayTimeDuration

Let the function that calculates the value of a xs:dayTimeDuration in the manner described above be called V(d). Then for two xs:dayTimeDuration values x and y, x > y if and only if V(x) > V(y). The order relation on xs:dayTimeDuration is a total order.

10.4 Comparison Operators on Duration, Date and Time Values

Operator Meaning
op:yearMonthDuration-less-than Less-than comparison on xs:yearMonthDuration values
op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than Greater-than comparison on xs:yearMonthDuration values
op:dayTimeDuration-less-than Less-than comparison on xs:dayTimeDuration values
op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than Greater-than comparison on xs:dayTimeDuration values
op:duration-equal Equality comparison on xs:duration values
op:dateTime-equal Equality comparison on xs:dateTime values
op:dateTime-less-than Less-than comparison on xs:dateTime values
op:dateTime-greater-than Greater-than comparison on xs:dateTime values
op:date-equal Equality comparison on xs:date values
op:date-less-than Less-than comparison on xs:date values
op:date-greater-than Greater-than comparison on xs:date values
op:time-equal Equality comparison on xs:time values
op:time-less-than Less-than comparison on xs:time values
op:time-greater-than Greater-than comparison on xs:time values
op:gYearMonth-equal Equality comparison on xs:gYearMonth values
op:gYear-equal Equality comparison on xs:gYear values
op:gMonthDay-equal Equality comparison on xs:gMonthDay values
op:gMonth-equal Equality comparison on xs:gMonth values
op:gDay-equal Equality comparison on xs:gDay values

The following comparison operators are defined on the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] date, time and duration datatypes. Each operator takes two operands of the same type and returns an xs:boolean result. As discussed in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition], the order relation on xs:duration is not a total order but, rather, a partial order. For this reason, only equality is defined on xs:duration. A full complement of comparison and arithmetic functions are defined on the two subtypes of duration described in 10.3 Two Totally Ordered Subtypes of Duration which do have a total order.

[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] also states that the order relation on date and time datatypes is not a total order but a partial order because these datatypes may or may not have a timezone. This is handled as follows. If either operand to a comparison function on date or time values does not have an (explicit) timezone then, for the purpose of the operation, an implicit timezone, provided by the dynamic context Section C.2 Dynamic Context ComponentsXP, is assumed to be present as part of the value. This creates a total order for all date and time values.

An xs:dateTime can be considered to consist of seven components: year, month, day, hour, minute, second and timezone. For xs:dateTime six components: year, month, day, hour, minute and second are required and timezone is optional. For other date/time values, of the first six components, some are required and others must be absent or missing. Timezone is always optional. For example, for xs:date, the year, month and day components are required and hour, minute and second components must be absent; for xs:time the hour, minute and second components are required and year, month and day are missing; for xs:gDay, day is required and year, month, hour, minute and second are missing.

Values of the date/time datatypes xs:time, xs:gMonthDay, xs:gMonth, and xs:gDay, can be considered to represent a sequence of recurring time instants or time periods. An xs:time occurs every day. An xs:gMonth occurs every year. Comparison operators on these datatypes compare the starting instants of equivalent occurrences in the recurring series. These xs:dateTime values are calculated as described below.

Comparison operators on xs:date, xs:gYearMonth and xs:gYear compare their starting instants. These xs:dateTime values are calculated as described below.

The starting instant of an occurrence of a date/time value is an xs:dateTime calculated by filling in the missing components of the local value from a reference xs:dateTime. If the value filled in for a missing day component exceeds the maximum day value for the month, the last day of the month is used. Suppose, for example, that the reference xs:dateTime is 1972-12-31T00:00:00 and the xs:date value to be compared is 1993-03-31. Filling in the time components from the reference xs:dateTime we get 1993-03-31T00:00:00 which is the starting instant of that day. Similarly, if the xs:time value 12:30:00 is to be compared, we fill in the missing components from the reference xs:dateTime and we get 1972-12-31T12:30:00 which is the time on that day. For an xs:gYearMonth value of 1976-02 we fill in the missing components, adjust for the last day in the month and get 1976-02-29T00:00:00.

If the xs:time value written as 24:00:00 is to be compared, filling in the missing components gives 1972-12-31T00:00:00, because 24:00:00 is an alternative representation of 00:00:00 (the lexical value "24:00:00" is converted to the time components {0,0,0} before the missing components are filled in). This has the consequence that when ordering xs:time values, 24:00:00 is considered to be earlier than 23:59:59. However, when ordering xs:dateTime values, a time component of 24:00:00 is considered equivalent to 00:00:00 on the following day.

Note that the reference xs:dateTime does not have a timezone. The timezone component is never filled in from the reference xs:dateTime. In some cases, if the date/time value does not have a timezone, the implicit timezone from the dynamic context is used as the timezone.

Note:

This proposal uses the reference xs:dateTime 1972-12-31T00:00:00 in the description of the comparison operators. Implementations are allowed to use other reference xs:dateTime values as long as they yield the same results. The reference xs:dateTime used must meet the following constraints: when it is used to supply components into xs:gMonthDay values, the year must allow for February 29 and so must be a leap year; when it is used to supply missing components into xs:gDay values, the month must allow for 31 days. Different reference xs:dateTime values may be used for different operators.

10.4.1 op:yearMonthDuration-less-than

op:yearMonthDuration-less-than( $arg1  as xs:yearMonthDuration,
$arg2  as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if $arg1 is less than $arg2. Returns false otherwise.

This function backs up the "lt" and "le" operators on xs:yearMonthDuration values.

10.4.2 op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than

op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than( $arg1  as xs:yearMonthDuration,
$arg2  as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if $arg1 is greater than $arg2. Returns false otherwise.

This function backs up the "gt" and "ge" operators on xs:yearMonthDuration values.

10.4.3 op:dayTimeDuration-less-than

op:dayTimeDuration-less-than( $arg1  as xs:dayTimeDuration,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if $arg1 is less than $arg2. Returns false otherwise.

This function backs up the "lt" and "le" operators on xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.4.4 op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than

op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than( $arg1  as xs:dayTimeDuration,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if $arg1 is greater than $arg2. Returns false otherwise.

This function backs up the "gt" and "ge" operators on xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.4.5 op:duration-equal

op:duration-equal($arg1 as xs:duration, $arg2 as xs:duration) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the xs:yearMonthDuration and the xs:dayTimeDuration components of $arg1 and $arg2 compare equal respectively. Returns false otherwise.

This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on xs:duration values.

Note that this function, like any other, may be applied to arguments that are derived from the types given in the function signature, including the two subtypes xs:dayTimeDuration and xs:yearMonthDuration. With the exception of the zero-length duration, no instance of xs:dayTimeDuration can ever be equal to an instance of xs:yearMonthDuration.

The semantics of this function are:

xs:yearMonthDuration($arg1) div xs:yearMonthDuration('P1M')  eq
xs:yearMonthDuration($arg2) div xs:yearMonthDuration('P1M')
    and
xs:dayTimeDuration($arg1) div xs:dayTimeDuration('PT1S')  eq
xs:dayTimeDuration($arg2) div xs:dayTimeDuration('PT1S')

that is, the function returns true if the months and seconds values of the two durations are equal.

10.4.5.1 Examples
  • op:duration-equal(xs:duration("P1Y"), xs:duration("P12M")) returns true.

  • op:duration-equal(xs:duration("PT24H"), xs:duration("P1D")) returns true.

  • op:duration-equal(xs:duration("P1Y"), xs:duration("P365D")) returns false.

  • op:duration-equal(xs:yearMonthDuration("P0Y"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P0D")) returns true.

  • op:duration-equal(xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P365D")) returns false.

  • op:duration-equal(xs:yearMonthDuration("P2Y"), xs:yearMonthDuration("P24M")) returns true.

  • op:duration-equal(xs:dayTimeDuration("P10D"), xs:dayTimeDuration("PT240H")) returns true.

  • op:duration-equal(xs:duration("P2Y0M0DT0H0M0S"), xs:yearMonthDuration("P24M")) returns true.

  • op:duration-equal(xs:duration("P0Y0M10D"), xs:dayTimeDuration("PT240H")) returns true.

10.4.6 op:dateTime-equal

op:dateTime-equal($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dateTime) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the value of $arg1 is equal to the value of $arg2 according to the algorithm defined in section 3.2.7.4 of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] "Order relation on dateTime" for xs:dateTime values with timezones. Returns false otherwise.

This function backs up the "eq", "ne", "le" and "ge" operators on xs:dateTime values.

10.4.6.1 Examples

Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of -05:00.

  • op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00:00-01:00"), xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T17:00:00+04:00")) returns true.

  • op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00:00"), xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T23:00:00+06:00")) returns true.

  • op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00:00"), xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T17:00:00")) returns false.

  • op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00:00"), xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T12:00:00")) returns true.

  • op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2002-04-02T23:00:00-04:00"), xs:dateTime("2002-04-03T02:00:00-01:00")) returns true.

  • op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T24:00:00"), xs:dateTime("2000-01-01T00:00:00")) returns true.

  • op:dateTime-equal(xs:dateTime("2005-04-04T24:00:00"), xs:dateTime("2005-04-04T00:00:00")) returns false.

10.4.7 op:dateTime-less-than

op:dateTime-less-than($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dateTime) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the value of $arg1 is less than the value of $arg2 according to the algorithm defined in section 3.2.7.4 of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] "Order relation on dateTime" for xs:dateTime values with timezones. Returns false otherwise.

This function backs up the "lt" and "le" operators on xs:dateTime values.

10.4.8 op:dateTime-greater-than

op:dateTime-greater-than( $arg1  as xs:dateTime,
$arg2  as xs:dateTime) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the value of $arg1 is greater than the value of $arg2 according to the algorithm defined in section 3.2.7.4 of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] "Order relation on dateTime" for xs:dateTime values with timezones. Returns false otherwise.

This function backs up the "gt" and "ge" operators on xs:dateTime values.

10.4.9 op:date-equal

op:date-equal($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the starting instant of $arg1 is equal to starting instant of $arg2. Returns false otherwise.

The starting instant of an xs:date is the xs:dateTime at time 00:00:00 on that date.

The two starting instants are compared using op:dateTime-equal.

This function backs up the "eq", "ne", "le" and "ge" operators on xs:date values.

10.4.9.1 Examples
  • op:date-equal(xs:date("2004-12-25Z"), xs:date("2004-12-25+07:00")) returns false. The starting instants are xs:dateTime("2004-12-25T00:00:00Z") and xs:dateTime("2004-12-25T00:00:00+07:00"). These are normalized to xs:dateTime("2004-12-25T00:00:00Z") and xs:dateTime("2004-12-24T17:00:00Z").

  • op:date-equal(xs:date("2004-12-25-12:00"), xs:date("2004-12-26+12:00")) returns true.

10.4.10 op:date-less-than

op:date-less-than($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the starting instant of $arg1 is less than the starting instant of $arg2. Returns false otherwise.

The starting instant of an xs:date is the xs:dateTime at time 00:00:00 on that date.

The two starting instants are compared using op:dateTime-less-than.

This function backs up the "lt" and "le" operators on xs:date values.

10.4.10.1 Examples
  • op:date-less-than(xs:date("2004-12-25Z"), xs:date("2004-12-25-05:00")) returns true.

  • op:date-less-than(xs:date("2004-12-25-12:00"), xs:date("2004-12-26+12:00")) returns false.

10.4.11 op:date-greater-than

op:date-greater-than($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the starting instant of $arg1 is greater than the starting instant of $arg2. Returns false otherwise.

The starting instant of an xs:date is the xs:dateTime at time 00:00:00 on that date.

The two starting instants are compared using op:dateTime-greater-than.

This function backs up the "gt" and "ge" operators on xs:date values.

10.4.11.1 Examples
  • op:date-greater-than(xs:date("2004-12-25Z"), xs:date("2004-12-25+07:00")) returns true.

  • op:date-greater-than(xs:date("2004-12-25-12:00"), xs:date("2004-12-26+12:00")) returns false.

10.4.12 op:time-equal

op:time-equal($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the value of $arg1 converted to an xs:dateTime using the date components from the reference xs:dateTime is equal to the value of $arg2 converted to an xs:dateTime using the date components from the same reference xs:dateTime. Returns false otherwise.

The two xs:dateTime values are compared using op:dateTime-equal.

This function backs up the "eq", "ne", "le" and "ge" operators on xs:time values.

10.4.12.1 Examples

Assume that the date components from the reference xs:dateTime correspond to 1972-12-31.

  • op:time-equal(xs:time("08:00:00+09:00"), xs:time("17:00:00-06:00")) returns false. The xs:dateTimes calculated using the reference date components are 1972-12-31T08:00:00+09:00 and 1972-12-31T17:00:00-06:00. These normalize to 1972-12-30T23:00:00Z and 1972-12-31T23:00:00.

  • op:time-equal(xs:time("21:30:00+10:30"), xs:time("06:00:00-05:00")) returns true.

  • op:time-equal(xs:time("24:00:00+01:00"), xs:time("00:00:00+01:00")) returns true. This not the result one might expect. For xs:dateTime values, a time of 24:00:00 is equivalent to 00:00:00 on the following day. For xs:time, the normalization from 24:00:00 to 00:00:00 happens before the xs:time is converted into an xs:dateTime for the purpose of the equality comparison. For xs:time, any operation on 24:00:00 produces the same result as the same operation on 00:00:00 because these are two different lexical representations of the same value.

10.4.13 op:time-less-than

op:time-less-than($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the value of $arg1 converted to an xs:dateTime using the date components from the reference xs:dateTime is less than the normalized value of $arg2 converted to an xs:dateTime using the date components from the same reference xs:dateTime. Returns false otherwise.

The two xs:dateTime values are compared using op:dateTime-less-than.

This function backs up the "lt" and "le" operators on xs:time values.

10.4.13.1 Examples

Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of -05:00.

  • op:time-less-than(xs:time("12:00:00"), xs:time("23:00:00+06:00")) returns false.

  • op:time-less-than(xs:time("11:00:00"), xs:time("17:00:00Z")) returns true.

  • op:time-less-than(xs:time("23:59:59"), xs:time("24:00:00")) returns false.

10.4.14 op:time-greater-than

op:time-greater-than($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the value of $arg1 converted to an xs:dateTime using the date components from the reference xs:dateTime is greater than the value of $arg2 converted to an xs:dateTime using the date components from the same reference xs:dateTime. Returns false otherwise.

The two xs:dateTime values are compared using op:dateTime-greater-than.

This function backs up the "gt" and "ge" operators on xs:time values.

10.4.14.1 Examples
  • op:time-greater-than(xs:time("08:00:00+09:00"), xs:time("17:00:00-06:00")) returns false.

10.4.15 op:gYearMonth-equal

op:gYearMonth-equal( $arg1  as xs:gYearMonth,
$arg2  as xs:gYearMonth) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the xs:dateTimes representing the starting instants of $arg1 and $arg2 compare equal. The starting instants of $arg1 and $arg2 are calculated by adding the missing components of $arg1 and $arg2 from the xs:dateTime template xxxx-xx-ddT00:00:00 where dd represents the last day of the month component in $arg1 or $arg2. Returns false otherwise.

The two xs:dateTime values representing the starting instants of $arg1 and $arg2 are compared using op:dateTime-equal.

This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on xs:gYearMonth values.

10.4.15.1 Examples

Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of -05:00.

  • op:gYearMonth-equal(xs:gYearMonth("1976-02"), xs:gYearMonth("1976-03Z")) returns false. The starting instants are 1972-02-29T00:00:00-05:00 and 1972-03-31T00:00:00Z, respectively.

  • op:gYearMonth-equal(xs:gYearMonth("1976-03"), xs:gYearMonth("1976-03Z")) returns false.

10.4.16 op:gYear-equal

op:gYear-equal($arg1 as xs:gYear, $arg2 as xs:gYear) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the xs:dateTimes representing the starting instants of $arg1 and $arg2 compare equal. The starting instants of $arg1 and $arg2 are calculated by adding the missing components of $arg1 and $arg2 from a xs:dateTime template such as xxxx-01-01T00:00:00. Returns false otherwise.

The two xs:dateTime values representing the starting instants of $arg1 and $arg2 are compared using op:dateTime-equal.

This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on xs:gYear values.

10.4.16.1 Examples

Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of -05:00. Assume, also, that the xs:dateTime template is xxxx-01-01T00:00:00.

  • op:gYear-equal(xs:gYear("2005-12:00"), xs:gYear("2005+12:00")) returns false. The starting instants are 2005-01-01T00:00:00-12:00 and 2005-01-01T00:00:00+12:00, respectively, and normalize to 2005-01-01T12:00:00Z and 2004-12-31T12:00:00Z.

  • op:gYear-equal(xs:gYear("1976-05:00"), xs:gYear("1976")) returns true.

10.4.17 op:gMonthDay-equal

op:gMonthDay-equal($arg1 as xs:gMonthDay, $arg2 as xs:gMonthDay) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the xs:dateTimes representing the starting instants of equivalent occurrences of $arg1 and $arg2 compare equal. The starting instants of equivalent occurrences of $arg1 and $arg2 are calculated by adding the missing components of $arg1 and $arg2 from an xs:dateTime template such as 1972-xx-xxT00:00:00. Returns false otherwise.

The two xs:dateTime values representing the starting instants of equivalent occurrences of $arg1 and $arg2 are compared using op:dateTime-equal.

This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on xs:gMonthDay values.

10.4.17.1 Examples

Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of -05:00. Assume, also, that the xs:dateTime template is 1976-xx-xxT00:00:00.

  • op:gMonthDay-equal(xs:gMonthDay("--12-25-14:00"), xs:gMonthDay("--12-26+10:00")) returns true. The starting instants are 1976-12-25T00:00:00-14:00 and 1976-12-26T00:00:00+10:00, respectively, and normalize to 1976-12-25T14:00:00Z and 1976-12-25T14:00:00Z.

  • op:gMonthDay-equal(xs:gMonthDay("--12-25"), xs:gMonthDay("--12-26Z")) returns false.

10.4.18 op:gMonth-equal

op:gMonth-equal($arg1 as xs:gMonth, $arg2 as xs:gMonth) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the xs:dateTimes representing the starting instants of equivalent occurrences of $arg1 and $arg2 compare equal. The starting instants of equivalent occurrences of $arg1 and $arg2 are calculated by adding the missing components of $arg1 and $arg2 from an xs:dateTime template such as 1972-xx-ddT00:00:00 where dd represents the last day of the month component in $arg1 or $arg2. Returns false otherwise.

The two xs:dateTime values representing the starting instants of equivalent occurrences of $arg1 and $arg2 are compared using op:dateTime-equal.

This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on xs:gMonth values.

10.4.18.1 Examples

Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of -05:00. Assume, also, that the xs:dateTime template is 1972-xx-29T00:00:00.

  • op:gMonth-equal(xs:gMonth("--12-14:00"), xs:gMonth("--12+10:00")) returns false. The starting instants are 1972-12-29T00:00:00-14:00 and 1972-12-29T00:00:00+10:00, respectively, and normalize to 1972-12-29T14:00:00Z and 1972-12-28T14:00:00Z.

  • op:gMonth-equal(xs:gMonth("--12"), xs:gMonth("--12Z")) returns false.

10.4.19 op:gDay-equal

op:gDay-equal($arg1 as xs:gDay, $arg2 as xs:gDay) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if and only if the xs:dateTimes representing the starting instants of equivalent occurrences of $arg1 and $arg2 compare equal. The starting instants of equivalent occurrences of $arg1 and $arg2 are calculated by adding the missing components of $arg1 and $arg2 from an xs:dateTime template such as 1972-12-xxT00:00:00. Returns false otherwise.

The two xs:dateTime values representing the starting instants of equivalent occurrences of $arg1 and $arg2 are compared using op:dateTime-equal.

This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on xs:gDay values.

10.4.19.1 Examples

Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of -05:00. Assume, also, that the xs:dateTime template is 1976-12-xxT00:00:00.

  • op:gDay-equal(xs:gDay("---25-14:00"), xs:gDay("---25+10:00")) returns false. The starting instants are 1972-12-25T00:00:00-14:00 and 1972-12-25T00:00:00+10:00, respectively, and normalize to 1972-12-25T14:00:00Z and 1972-12-24T14:00:00Z.

  • op:gDay-equal(xs:gDay("---12"), xs:gDay("---12Z")) returns false.

10.5 Component Extraction Functions on Durations, Dates and Times

The duration, date and time datatypes may be considered to be composite datatypes in that they contain distinct properties or components. The extraction functions specified below extract a single component from a duration, date or time value. For the date/time datatypes the local value is used. For xs:duration and its subtypes, including the two subtypes xs:yearMonthDuration and xs:dayTimeDuration, the components are normalized: this means that the seconds and minutes components will always be less than 60, the hours component less than 24, and the months component less than 12.

Function Meaning
fn:years-from-duration Returns the year component of an xs:duration value.
fn:months-from-duration Returns the months component of an xs:duration value.
fn:days-from-duration Returns the days component of an xs:duration value.
fn:hours-from-duration Returns the hours component of an xs:duration value.
fn:minutes-from-duration Returns the minutes component of an xs:duration value.
fn:seconds-from-duration Returns the seconds component of an xs:duration value.
fn:year-from-dateTime Returns the year from an xs:dateTime value.
fn:month-from-dateTime Returns the month from an xs:dateTime value.
fn:day-from-dateTime Returns the day from an xs:dateTime value.
fn:hours-from-dateTime Returns the hours from an xs:dateTime value.
fn:minutes-from-dateTime Returns the minutes from an xs:dateTime value.
fn:seconds-from-dateTime Returns the seconds from an xs:dateTime value.
fn:timezone-from-dateTime Returns the timezone from an xs:dateTime value.
fn:year-from-date Returns the year from an xs:date value.
fn:month-from-date Returns the month from an xs:date value.
fn:day-from-date Returns the day from an xs:date value.
fn:timezone-from-date Returns the timezone from an xs:date value.
fn:hours-from-time Returns the hours from an xs:time value.
fn:minutes-from-time Returns the minutes from an xs:time value.
fn:seconds-from-time Returns the seconds from an xs:time value.
fn:timezone-from-time Returns the timezone from an xs:time value.

10.5.1 fn:years-from-duration

fn:years-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer representing the years component in the value of $arg. The result is obtained by casting $arg to an xs:yearMonthDuration (see 17.1.4 Casting to duration types) and then computing the years component as described in 10.3.1.3 Canonical representation.

The result may be negative.

If $arg is an xs:dayTimeDuration returns 0.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.1.1 Examples
  • fn:years-from-duration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P20Y15M")) returns 21.

  • fn:years-from-duration(xs:yearMonthDuration("-P15M")) returns -1.

  • fn:years-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("-P2DT15H")) returns 0.

10.5.2 fn:months-from-duration

fn:months-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer representing the months component in the value of $arg. The result is obtained by casting $arg to an xs:yearMonthDuration (see 17.1.4 Casting to duration types) and then computing the months component as described in 10.3.1.3 Canonical representation.

The result may be negative.

If $arg is an xs:dayTimeDuration returns 0.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.2.1 Examples
  • fn:months-from-duration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P20Y15M")) returns 3.

  • fn:months-from-duration(xs:yearMonthDuration("-P20Y18M")) returns -6.

  • fn:months-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("-P2DT15H0M0S")) returns 0.

10.5.3 fn:days-from-duration

fn:days-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer representing the days component in the value of $arg. The result is obtained by casting $arg to an xs:dayTimeDuration (see 17.1.4 Casting to duration types) and then computing the days component as described in 10.3.2.3 Canonical representation.

The result may be negative.

If $arg is an xs:yearMonthDuration returns 0.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.3.1 Examples
  • fn:days-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT10H")) returns 3.

  • fn:days-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT55H")) returns 5.

  • fn:days-from-duration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P3Y5M")) returns 0.

10.5.4 fn:hours-from-duration

fn:hours-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer representing the hours component in the value of $arg. The result is obtained by casting $arg to an xs:dayTimeDuration (see 17.1.4 Casting to duration types) and then computing the hours component as described in 10.3.2.3 Canonical representation.

The result may be negative.

If $arg is an xs:yearMonthDuration returns 0.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.4.1 Examples
  • fn:hours-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT10H")) returns 10.

  • fn:hours-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT12H32M12S")) returns 12.

  • fn:hours-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("PT123H")) returns 3.

  • fn:hours-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("-P3DT10H")) returns -10.

10.5.5 fn:minutes-from-duration

fn:minutes-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer representing the minutes component in the value of $arg. The result is obtained by casting $arg to an xs:dayTimeDuration (see 17.1.4 Casting to duration types) and then computing the minutes component as described in 10.3.2.3 Canonical representation.

The result may be negative.

If $arg is an xs:yearMonthDuration returns 0.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.5.1 Examples
  • fn:minutes-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT10H")) returns 0.

  • fn:minutes-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("-P5DT12H30M")) returns -30.

10.5.6 fn:seconds-from-duration

fn:seconds-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:decimal?

Summary: Returns an xs:decimal representing the seconds component in the value of $arg. The result is obtained by casting $arg to an xs:dayTimeDuration (see 17.1.4 Casting to duration types) and then computing the seconds component as described in 10.3.2.3 Canonical representation.

The result may be negative.

If $arg is an xs:yearMonthDuration returns 0.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.6.1 Examples
  • fn:seconds-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT10H12.5S")) returns 12.5.

  • fn:seconds-from-duration(xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT256S")) returns -16.0.

10.5.7 fn:year-from-dateTime

fn:year-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer representing the year component in the localized value of $arg. The result may be negative.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.7.1 Examples
  • fn:year-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00")) returns 1999.

  • fn:year-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T21:30:00-05:00")) returns 1999.

  • fn:year-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T19:20:00")) returns 1999.

  • fn:year-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T24:00:00")) returns 2000.

10.5.8 fn:month-from-dateTime

fn:month-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer between 1 and 12, both inclusive, representing the month component in the localized value of $arg.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.8.1 Examples
  • fn:month-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00")) returns 5.

  • fn:month-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T19:20:00-05:00")) returns 12.

  • fn:month-from-dateTime(fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T19:20:00-05:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S"))) returns 1.

10.5.9 fn:day-from-dateTime

fn:day-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer between 1 and 31, both inclusive, representing the day component in the localized value of $arg.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.9.1 Examples
  • fn:day-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00")) returns 31.

  • fn:day-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T20:00:00-05:00")) returns 31.

  • fn:day-from-dateTime(fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T19:20:00-05:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S"))) returns 1.

10.5.10 fn:hours-from-dateTime

fn:hours-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer between 0 and 23, both inclusive, representing the hours component in the localized value of $arg.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.10.1 Examples
  • fn:hours-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T08:20:00-05:00")) returns 8.

  • fn:hours-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T21:20:00-05:00")) returns 21.

  • fn:hours-from-dateTime(fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T21:20:00-05:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S"))) returns 2.

  • fn:hours-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T12:00:00")) returns 12.

  • fn:hours-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-12-31T24:00:00")) returns 0.

10.5.11 fn:minutes-from-dateTime

fn:minutes-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer value between 0 and 59, both inclusive, representing the minute component in the localized value of $arg.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.11.1 Examples
  • fn:minutes-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00")) returns 20 .

  • fn:minutes-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:30:00+05:30")) returns 30 .

10.5.12 fn:seconds-from-dateTime

fn:seconds-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:decimal?

Summary: Returns an xs:decimal value greater than or equal to zero and less than 60, representing the seconds and fractional seconds in the localized value of $arg.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.12.1 Examples
  • fn:seconds-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00")) returns 0.

10.5.13 fn:timezone-from-dateTime

fn:timezone-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:dayTimeDuration?

Summary: Returns the timezone component of $arg if any. If $arg has a timezone component, then the result is an xs:dayTimeDuration that indicates deviation from UTC; its value may range from +14:00 to -14:00 hours, both inclusive. Otherwise, the result is the empty sequence.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.13.1 Examples
  • fn:timezone-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("1999-05-31T13:20:00-05:00")) returns the xs:dayTimeDuration whose value is -PT5H.

  • fn:timezone-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2000-06-12T13:20:00Z")) returns the xs:dayTimeDuration whose value is PT0S.

  • fn:timezone-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2004-08-27T00:00:00")) returns ().

10.5.14 fn:year-from-date

fn:year-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer representing the year in the localized value of $arg. The value may be negative.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.14.1 Examples
  • fn:year-from-date(xs:date("1999-05-31")) returns 1999.

  • fn:year-from-date(xs:date("2000-01-01+05:00")) returns 2000.

10.5.15 fn:month-from-date

fn:month-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer between 1 and 12, both inclusive, representing the month component in the localized value of $arg.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.15.1 Examples
  • fn:month-from-date(xs:date("1999-05-31-05:00")) returns 5 .

  • fn:month-from-date(xs:date("2000-01-01+05:00")) returns 1.

10.5.16 fn:day-from-date

fn:day-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer between 1 and 31, both inclusive, representing the day component in the localized value of $arg.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.16.1 Examples
  • fn:day-from-date(xs:date("1999-05-31-05:00")) returns 31.

  • fn:day-from-date(xs:date("2000-01-01+05:00")) returns 1.

10.5.17 fn:timezone-from-date

fn:timezone-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:dayTimeDuration?

Summary: Returns the timezone component of $arg if any. If $arg has a timezone component, then the result is an xs:dayTimeDuration that indicates deviation from UTC; its value may range from +14:00 to -14:00 hours, both inclusive. Otherwise, the result is the empty sequence.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.17.1 Examples
  • fn:timezone-from-date(xs:date("1999-05-31-05:00")) returns the xs:dayTimeDuration whose value is -PT5H.

  • fn:timezone-from-date(xs:date("2000-06-12Z")) returns the xs:dayTimeDuration with value PT0S.

10.5.18 fn:hours-from-time

fn:hours-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer between 0 and 23, both inclusive, representing the value of the hours component in the localized value of $arg.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.18.1 Examples

Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of -05:00.

  • fn:hours-from-time(xs:time("11:23:00")) returns 11.

  • fn:hours-from-time(xs:time("21:23:00")) returns 21.

  • fn:hours-from-time(xs:time("01:23:00+05:00")) returns 1.

  • fn:hours-from-time(fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("01:23:00+05:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("PT0S"))) returns 20.

  • fn:hours-from-time(xs:time("24:00:00")) returns 0.

10.5.19 fn:minutes-from-time

fn:minutes-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:integer?

Summary: Returns an xs:integer value between 0 and 59, both inclusive, representing the value of the minutes component in the localized value of $arg.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.19.1 Examples
  • fn:minutes-from-time(xs:time("13:00:00Z")) returns 0 .

10.5.20 fn:seconds-from-time

fn:seconds-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:decimal?

Summary: Returns an xs:decimal value greater than or equal to zero and less than 60, representing the seconds and fractional seconds in the localized value of $arg.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.20.1 Examples
  • fn:seconds-from-time(xs:time("13:20:10.5")) returns 10.5.

10.5.21 fn:timezone-from-time

fn:timezone-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:dayTimeDuration?

Summary: Returns the timezone component of $arg if any. If $arg has a timezone component, then the result is an xs:dayTimeDuration that indicates deviation from UTC; its value may range from +14:00 to -14:00 hours, both inclusive. Otherwise, the result is the empty sequence.

If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

10.5.21.1 Examples
  • fn:timezone-from-time(xs:time("13:20:00-05:00")) returns xs:dayTimeDuration whose value is -PT5H.

  • fn:timezone-from-time(xs:time("13:20:00")) returns ().

10.6 Arithmetic Operators on Durations

Function Meaning
op:add-yearMonthDurations Adds two xs:yearMonthDurations. Returns an xs:yearMonthDuration.
op:subtract-yearMonthDurations Subtracts one xs:yearMonthDuration from another. Returns an xs:yearMonthDuration.
op:multiply-yearMonthDuration Multiplies a xs:yearMonthDuration by an xs:double. Returns an xs:yearMonthDuration.
op:divide-yearMonthDuration Divides an xs:yearMonthDuration by an xs:double. Returns an xs:yearMonthDuration.
op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration Divides an xs:yearMonthDuration by an xs:yearMonthDuration. Returns an xs:decimal.
op:add-dayTimeDurations Adds two xs:dayTimeDurations. Returns an xs:dayTimeDuration.
op:subtract-dayTimeDurations Subtracts one xs:dayTimeDuration from another. Returns an xs:dayTimeDuration.
op:multiply-dayTimeDuration Multiplies an xs:dayTimeDuration by a xs:double. Returns an xs:dayTimeDuration.
op:divide-dayTimeDuration Divides an xs:dayTimeDuration by an xs:double. Returns an xs:dayTimeDuration.
op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration Divides an xs:dayTimeDuration by an xs:dayTimeDuration. Returns an xs:decimal.

10.6.1 op:add-yearMonthDurations

op:add-yearMonthDurations( $arg1  as xs:yearMonthDuration,
$arg2  as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:yearMonthDuration

Summary: Returns the result of adding the value of $arg1 to the value of $arg2. Backs up the "+" operator on xs:yearMonthDuration values.

10.6.1.1 Examples
  • op:add-yearMonthDurations(xs:yearMonthDuration("P2Y11M"), xs:yearMonthDuration("P3Y3M")) returns a xs:yearMonthDuration value corresponding to 6 years and 2 months.

10.6.2 op:subtract-yearMonthDurations

op:subtract-yearMonthDurations( $arg1  as xs:yearMonthDuration,
$arg2  as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:yearMonthDuration

Summary: Returns the result of subtracting the value of $arg2 from the value of $arg1. Backs up the "-" operator on xs:yearMonthDuration values.

10.6.2.1 Examples
  • op:subtract-yearMonthDurations(xs:yearMonthDuration("P2Y11M"), xs:yearMonthDuration("P3Y3M")) returns a xs:yearMonthDuration value corresponding to negative 4 months.

10.6.3 op:multiply-yearMonthDuration

op:multiply-yearMonthDuration( $arg1  as xs:yearMonthDuration,
$arg2  as xs:double) as xs:yearMonthDuration

Summary: Returns the result of multiplying the value of $arg1 by $arg2. The result is rounded to the nearest month.

The result is the xs:yearMonthDuration whose length in months is equal to the result of applying the fn:round function to the value obtained by multiplying the length in months of $arg1 by the value of $arg2.

If $arg2 is positive or negative zero, the result is a zero-length duration. If $arg2 is positive or negative infinity, the result overflows and is handled as discussed in 10.1.1 Limits and Precision. If $arg2 is NaN an error is raised [err:FOCA0005]

Backs up the "*" operator on xs:yearMonthDuration values.

10.6.3.1 Examples
  • op:multiply-yearMonthDuration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P2Y11M"), 2.3) returns a xs:yearMonthDuration value corresponding to 6 years and 9 months.

10.6.4 op:divide-yearMonthDuration

op:divide-yearMonthDuration( $arg1  as xs:yearMonthDuration,
$arg2  as xs:double) as xs:yearMonthDuration

Summary: Returns the result of dividing the value of $arg1 by $arg2. The result is rounded to the nearest month.

The result is the xs:yearMonthDuration whose length in months is equal to the result of applying the fn:round function to the value obtained by dividing the length in months of $arg1 by the value of $arg2.

If $arg2 is positive or negative infinity, the result is a zero-length duration. If $arg2 is positive or negative zero, the result overflows and is handled as discussed in 10.1.1 Limits and Precision. If $arg2 is NaN an error is raised [err:FOCA0005]

Backs up the "div" operator on xs:yearMonthDuration and numeric values.

10.6.4.1 Examples
  • op:divide-yearMonthDuration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P2Y11M"), 1.5) returns a xs:yearMonthDuration value corresponding to 1 year and 11 months.

10.6.5 op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration

op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration( $arg1  as xs:yearMonthDuration,
$arg2  as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:decimal

Summary: Returns the result of dividing the value of $arg1 by $arg2. Since the values of both operands are integers, the semantics of the division is identical to op:numeric-divide with xs:integer operands.

Backs up the "div" operator on xs:yearMonthDuration values.

10.6.5.1 Examples
  • op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration(xs:yearMonthDuration("P3Y4M"), xs:yearMonthDuration("-P1Y4M")) returns -2.5.

10.6.6 op:add-dayTimeDurations

op:add-dayTimeDurations( $arg1  as xs:dayTimeDuration,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dayTimeDuration

Summary: Returns the result of adding the value of $arg1 to the value of $arg2. Backs up the "+" operator on xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.6.6.1 Examples
  • op:add-dayTimeDurations(xs:dayTimeDuration("P2DT12H5M"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P5DT12H")) returns a xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to 8 days and 5 minutes.

10.6.7 op:subtract-dayTimeDurations

op:subtract-dayTimeDurations( $arg1  as xs:dayTimeDuration,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dayTimeDuration

Summary: Returns the result of subtracting the value of $arg2 from the value of $arg1. Backs up the "-" operator on xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.6.7.1 Examples
  • op:subtract-dayTimeDurations(xs:dayTimeDuration("P2DT12H"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P1DT10H30M")) returns a xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to 1 day, 1 hour and 30 minutes.

10.6.8 op:multiply-dayTimeDuration

op:multiply-dayTimeDuration( $arg1  as xs:dayTimeDuration,
$arg2  as xs:double) as xs:dayTimeDuration

Summary: Returns the result of multiplying the value of $arg1 by $arg2.

If $arg2 is positive or negative zero, the result is a zero-length duration. If $arg2 is positive or negative infinity, the result overflows and is handled as discussed in 10.1.1 Limits and Precision. If $arg2 is NaN an error is raised [err:FOCA0005]

Backs up the "*" operator on xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.6.8.1 Examples
  • op:multiply-dayTimeDuration(xs:dayTimeDuration("PT2H10M"), 2.1) returns a xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to 4 hours and 33 minutes.

10.6.9 op:divide-dayTimeDuration

op:divide-dayTimeDuration( $arg1  as xs:dayTimeDuration,
$arg2  as xs:double) as xs:dayTimeDuration

Summary: Returns the result of dividing the value of $arg1 by $arg2.

If $arg2 is positive or negative infinity, the result is a zero-length duration. If $arg2 is positive or negative zero, the result overflows and is handled as discussed in 10.1.1 Limits and Precision. If $arg2 is NaN an error is raised [err:FOCA0005]

Backs up the "div" operator on xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.6.9.1 Examples
  • op:divide-dayTimeDuration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P1DT2H30M10.5S"), 1.5) returns an xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to 17 hours, 40 minutes and 7 seconds.

10.6.10 op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration

op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration( $arg1  as xs:dayTimeDuration,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:decimal

Summary: Returns the result of dividing the value of $arg1 by $arg2. Since the values of both operands are decimals, the semantics of the division is identical to op:numeric-divide with xs:decimal operands.

Backs up the "div" operator on xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.6.10.1 Examples
  • op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration(xs:dayTimeDuration("P2DT53M11S"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P1DT10H")) returns 1.4378349...

10.7 Timezone Adjustment Functions on Dates and Time Values

Function Meaning
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone Adjusts an xs:dateTime value to a specific timezone, or to no timezone at all.
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone Adjusts an xs:date value to a specific timezone, or to no timezone at all.
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone Adjusts an xs:time value to a specific timezone, or to no timezone at all.

These functions adjust the timezone component of an xs:dateTime, xs:date or xs:time value. The $timezone argument to these functions is defined as an xs:dayTimeDuration but must be a valid timezone value.

10.7.1 fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone

fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:dateTime?
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone( $arg  as xs:dateTime?,
$timezone  as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:dateTime?

Summary: Adjusts an xs:dateTime value to a specific timezone, or to no timezone at all. If $timezone is the empty sequence, returns an xs:dateTime without a timezone. Otherwise, returns an xs:dateTime with a timezone.

If $timezone is not specified, then $timezone is the value of the implicit timezone in the dynamic context.

If $arg is the empty sequence, then the result is the empty sequence.

A dynamic error is raised [err:FODT0003] if $timezone is less than -PT14H or greater than PT14H or if does not contain an integral number of minutes.

If $arg does not have a timezone component and $timezone is the empty sequence, then the result is $arg.

If $arg does not have a timezone component and $timezone is not the empty sequence, then the result is $arg with $timezone as the timezone component.

If $arg has a timezone component and $timezone is the empty sequence, then the result is the localized value of $arg without its timezone component.

If $arg has a timezone component and $timezone is not the empty sequence, then the result is an xs:dateTime value with a timezone component of $timezone that is equal to $arg.

10.7.1.1 Examples

Assume the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone of -05:00 (-PT5H0M).

let $tz := xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")

  • fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00")) returns 2002-03-07T10:00:00-05:00

  • fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00")) returns 2002-03-07T12:00:00-05:00

  • fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00"), $tz) returns 2002-03-07T10:00:00-10:00

  • fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00"), $tz) returns 2002-03-07T07:00:00-10:00

  • fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("PT10H")) returns 2002-03-08T03:00:00+10:00

  • fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T00:00:00+01:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT8H")) returns 2002-03-06T15:00:00-08:00

  • fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00"), ()) returns 2002-03-07T10:00:00

  • fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone(xs:dateTime("2002-03-07T10:00:00-07:00"), ()) returns 2002-03-07T10:00:00

10.7.2 fn:adjust-date-to-timezone

fn:adjust-date-to-timezone($arg as xs:date?) as xs:date?
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone( $arg  as xs:date?,
$timezone  as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:date?

Summary: Adjusts an xs:date value to a specific timezone, or to no timezone at all. If $timezone is the empty sequence, returns an xs:date without a timezone. Otherwise, returns an xs:date with a timezone. For purposes of timezone adjustment, an xs:date is treated as an xs:dateTime with time 00:00:00.

If $timezone is not specified, then $timezone is the value of the implicit timezone in the dynamic context.

If $arg is the empty sequence, then the result is the empty sequence.

A dynamic error is raised [err:FODT0003] if $timezone is less than -PT14H or greater than PT14H or if does not contain an integral number of minutes.

If $arg does not have a timezone component and $timezone is the empty sequence, then the result is the value of $arg.

If $arg does not have a timezone component and $timezone is not the empty sequence, then the result is $arg with $timezone as the timezone component.

If $arg has a timezone component and $timezone is the empty sequence, then the result is the localized value of $arg without its timezone component.

If $arg has a timezone component and $timezone is not the empty sequence, then:

  • Let $srcdt be an xs:dateTime value, with 00:00:00 for the time component and date and timezone components that are the same as the date and timezone components of $arg.

  • Let $r be the result of evaluating fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone($srcdt, $timezone)

  • The result of this function will be a date value that has date and timezone components that are the same as the date and timezone components of $r.

10.7.2.1 Examples

Assume the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone of -05:00 (-PT5H0M).

let $tz := xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")

  • fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07")) returns 2002-03-07-05:00.

  • fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07-07:00")) returns 2002-03-07-05:00. $arg is converted to the xs:dateTime "2002-03-07T00:00:00-07:00". This is adjusted to the implicit timezone, giving "2002-03-07T02:00:00-05:00".

  • fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07"), $tz) returns 2002-03-07-10:00.

  • fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07-07:00"), $tz) returns 2002-03-06-10:00. $arg is converted to the xs:dateTime "2002-03-07T00:00:00-07:00". This is adjusted to the given timezone, giving "2002-03-06T21:00:00-10:00".

  • fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07"), ()) returns 2002-03-07.

  • fn:adjust-date-to-timezone(xs:date("2002-03-07-07:00"), ()) returns 2002-03-07.

10.7.3 fn:adjust-time-to-timezone

fn:adjust-time-to-timezone($arg as xs:time?) as xs:time?
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone( $arg  as xs:time?,
$timezone  as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:time?

Summary: Adjusts an xs:time value to a specific timezone, or to no timezone at all. If $timezone is the empty sequence, returns an xs:time without a timezone. Otherwise, returns an xs:time with a timezone.

If $timezone is not specified, then $timezone is the value of the implicit timezone in the dynamic context.

If $arg is the empty sequence, then the result is the empty sequence.

A dynamic error is raised [err:FODT0003] if $timezone is less than -PT14H or greater than PT14H or if does not contain an integral number of minutes.

If $arg does not have a timezone component and $timezone is the empty sequence, then the result is $arg.

If $arg does not have a timezone component and $timezone is not the empty sequence, then the result is $arg with $timezone as the timezone component.

If $arg has a timezone component and $timezone is the empty sequence, then the result is the localized value of $arg without its timezone component.

If $arg has a timezone component and $timezone is not the empty sequence, then:

  • Let $srcdt be an xs:dateTime value, with an arbitrary date for the date component and time and timezone components that are the same as the time and timezone components of $arg.

  • Let $r be the result of evaluating

    fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone($srcdt, $timezone)

  • The result of this function will be a time value that has time and timezone components that are the same as the time and timezone components of $r.

10.7.3.1 Examples

Assume the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone of -05:00 (-PT5H0M).

let $tz := xs:dayTimeDuration("-PT10H")

  • fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00")) returns 10:00:00-05:00

  • fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00-07:00")) returns 12:00:00-05:00

  • fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00"), $tz) returns 10:00:00-10:00

  • fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00-07:00"), $tz) returns 07:00:00-10:00

  • fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00"), ()) returns 10:00:00

  • fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00-07:00"), ()) returns 10:00:00

  • fn:adjust-time-to-timezone(xs:time("10:00:00-07:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("PT10H")) returns 03:00:00+10:00

10.8 Arithmetic Operators on Durations, Dates and Times

These functions support adding or subtracting a duration value to or from an xs:dateTime, an xs:date or an xs:time value. Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] describes an algorithm for performing such operations.

Function Meaning
op:subtract-dateTimes Returns the difference between two xs:dateTimes as an xs:dayTimeDuration.
op:subtract-dates Returns the difference between two xs:dateTimes as an xs:dayTimeDuration.
op:subtract-times Returns the difference between two xs:times as an xs:dayTimeDuration.
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime Returns the end of a time period by adding an xs:yearMonthDuration to the xs:dateTime that starts the period.
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime Returns the end of a time period by adding an xs:dayTimeDuration to the xs:dateTime that starts the period.
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime Returns the beginning of a time period by subtracting an xs:yearMonthDuration from the xs:dateTime that ends the period.
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime Returns the beginning of a time period by subtracting an xs:dayTimeDuration from the xs:dateTime that ends the period.
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date Returns the end of a time period by adding an xs:yearMonthDuration to the xs:date that starts the period.
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date Returns the end of a time period by adding an xs:dayTimeDuration to the xs:date that starts the period.
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date Returns the beginning of a time period by subtracting an xs:yearMonthDuration from the xs:date that ends the period.
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date Returns the beginning of a time period by subtracting an xs:dayTimeDuration from the xs:date that ends the period.
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time Adds the value of the hours, minutes and seconds components of an xs:dayTimeDuration to an xs:time value.
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time Subtracts the value of the hours, minutes and seconds components of an xs:dayTimeDuration to an xs:time value.

10.8.1 op:subtract-dateTimes

op:subtract-dateTimes( $arg1  as xs:dateTime,
$arg2  as xs:dateTime) as xs:dayTimeDuration

Summary: Returns the xs:dayTimeDuration that corresponds to the difference between the normalized value of $arg1 and the normalized value of $arg2. If either $arg1 or $arg2 do not contain an explicit timezone then, for the purpose of the operation, the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic context (See Section C.2 Dynamic Context ComponentsXP.) is assumed to be present as part of the value.

If the normalized value of $arg1 precedes in time the normalized value of $arg2, then the returned value is a negative duration.

Backs up the subtract, "-", operator on xs:dateTime values.

10.8.1.1 Examples

Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of -05:00.

  • op:subtract-dateTimes(xs:dateTime("2000-10-30T06:12:00"), xs:dateTime("1999-11-28T09:00:00Z")) returns an xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to 337 days, 2 hours and 12 minutes.

10.8.2 op:subtract-dates

op:subtract-dates($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:dayTimeDuration

Summary: Returns the xs:dayTimeDuration that corresponds to the difference between the starting instant of $arg1 and the the starting instant of $arg2. If either $arg1 or $arg2 do not contain an explicit timezone then, for the purpose of the operation, the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic context (See Section C.2 Dynamic Context ComponentsXP.) is assumed to be present as part of the value.

The starting instant of an xs:date is the xs:dateTime at 00:00:00 on that date.

The result is the result of subtracting the two starting instants using op:subtract-dateTimes.

If the starting instant of $arg1 precedes in time the starting instant of $arg2, then the returned value is a negative duration.

Backs up the subtract, "-", operator on xs:date values.

10.8.2.1 Examples
  • Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of Z. op:subtract-dates(xs:date("2000-10-30"), xs:date("1999-11-28")) returns an xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to 337 days. The normalized values of the two starting instants are {2000, 10, 30, 0, 0, 0, PT0S} and {1999, 11, 28, 0, 0, 0, PT0S}.

  • If the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of +05:00, op:subtract-dates(xs:date("2000-10-30"), xs:date("1999-11-28Z")) returns an xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to 336 days and 19 hours. The normalized values of the two starting instants are {2000, 10, 29, 19, 0, 0, PT0S} and {1999, 11, 28, 0, 0, 0, PT0S}.

  • op:subtract-dates(xs:date("2000-10-15-05:00"), xs:date("2000-10-10+02:00")) returns an xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to lexical form "P5DT7H".

10.8.3 op:subtract-times

op:subtract-times($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:dayTimeDuration

Summary: Returns the xs:dayTimeDuration that corresponds to the difference between the value of $arg1 converted to an xs:dateTime using the date components from the reference xs:dateTime and the value of $arg2 converted to an xs:dateTime using the date components from the same reference xs:dateTime . If either $arg1 or $arg2 do not contain an explicit timezone then, for the purpose of the operation, the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic context (See Section C.2 Dynamic Context ComponentsXP.) is assumed to be present as part of the value.

The result is the result of subtracting the two xs:dateTimes using op:subtract-dateTimes.

If the value of $arg1 converted to an xs:dateTime using the date components from the reference xs:dateTime precedes in time the value of $arg2 converted to an xs:dateTime using the date components from the same reference xs:dateTime , then the returned value is a negative duration.

Backs up the subtract, "-", operator on xs:time values.

10.8.3.1 Examples

Assume that the dynamic context provides an implicit timezone value of -05:00. Assume, also, that the date components of the reference xs:dateTime correspond to "1972-12-31".

  • op:subtract-times(xs:time("11:12:00Z"), xs:time("04:00:00")) returns an xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to 2 hours and 12 minutes. This is obtained by subtracting from the xs:dateTime value {1972, 12, 31, 11, 12, 0, PT0S} the xs:dateTime value {1972, 12, 31, 9, 0, 0, PT0S}.

  • op:subtract-times(xs:time("11:00:00-05:00"), xs:time("21:30:00+05:30")) returns a zero xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to the lexical representation "PT0S". The two xs:dateTime values are {1972, 12, 31, 11, 0, 0, -PT5H} and {1972, 12, 31, 21, 30, 0, PT5H30M}. These normalize to {1972, 12, 31, 16, 0, 0, PT0S} and {1972, 12, 31, 16, 0, 0, PT0S}.

  • op:subtract-times(xs:time("17:00:00-06:00"), xs:time("08:00:00+09:00")) returns an xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to one day or 24 hours. The two normalized xs:dateTime values are {1972, 12, 31, 23, 0, 0, PT0S} and {1972, 12, 30, 23, 0, 0, PT0S}.

  • op:subtract-times(xs:time("24:00:00"), xs:time("23:59:59")) returns an xs:dayTimeDuration value corresponding to "-PT23H59M59S". The two normalized xs:dateTime values are {1972, 12, 31, 0, 0, 0, ()} and {1972, 12, 31, 23, 59, 59.0, ()}.

10.8.4 op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime

op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime( $arg1  as xs:dateTime,
$arg2  as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:dateTime

Summary: Returns the xs:dateTime computed by adding $arg2 to the value of $arg1 using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] disregarding the rule about leap seconds. If $arg2 is negative, then the result xs:dateTime precedes $arg1.

The result has the same timezone as $arg1. If $arg1 has no timezone, the result has no timezone.

This functions backs up the "+" operator on xs:dateTime and xs:yearMonthDuration values.

10.8.4.1 Examples
  • op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2000-10-30T11:12:00"), xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y2M")) returns an xs:dateTime value corresponding to the lexical representation "2001-12-30T11:12:00".

10.8.5 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime

op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime( $arg1  as xs:dateTime,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dateTime

Summary: Returns the xs:dateTime computed by adding $arg2 to the value of $arg1 using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] disregarding the rule about leap seconds. If $arg2 is negative, then the result xs:dateTime precedes $arg1.

The result has the same timezone as $arg1. If $arg1 has no timezone, the result has no timezone.

This functions backs up the "+" operator on xs:dateTime and xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.8.5.1 Examples
  • op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2000-10-30T11:12:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT1H15M")) returns an xs:dateTime value corresponding to the lexical representation "2000-11-02T12:27:00".

10.8.6 op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime

op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime( $arg1  as xs:dateTime,
$arg2  as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:dateTime

Summary: Returns the xs:dateTime computed by negating $arg2 and adding the result to the value of $arg1 using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] disregarding the rule about leap seconds. If $arg2 is negative, then the xs:dateTime returned follows $arg1.

The result has the same timezone as $arg1. If $arg1 has no timezone, the result has no timezone.

This functions backs up the "-" operator on xs:dateTime and xs:yearMonthDuration values.

10.8.6.1 Examples
  • op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2000-10-30T11:12:00"), xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y2M")) returns an xs:dateTime value corresponding to the lexical representation "1999-08-30T11:12:00".

10.8.7 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime

op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime( $arg1  as xs:dateTime,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dateTime

Summary: Returns the xs:dateTime computed by negating $arg2 and adding the result to the value of $arg1 using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] disregarding the rule about leap seconds. If $arg2 is negative, then the xs:dateTime returned follows $arg1.

The result has the same timezone as $arg1. If $arg1 has no timezone, the result has no timezone.

This functions backs up the "-" operator on xs:dateTime and xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.8.7.1 Examples
  • op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime(xs:dateTime("2000-10-30T11:12:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT1H15M")) returns an xs:dateTime value corresponding to the lexical representation "2000-10-27T09:57:00".

10.8.8 op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date

op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date( $arg1  as xs:date,
$arg2  as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:date

Summary: Returns the xs:date computed by adding $arg2 to the starting instant of $arg1 using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] and discarding the time components from the resulting xs:dateTime. If $arg2 is negative, then the xs:date returned precedes $arg1.

The starting instant of an xs:date is the xs:dateTime at time 00:00:00 on that date.

The result has the same timezone as $arg1. If $arg1 has no timezone, the result has no timezone.

This functions backs up the "+" operator on xs:date and xs:yearMonthDuration values.

10.8.8.1 Examples
  • op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date(xs:date("2000-10-30"), xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y2M")) returns the xs:date corresponding to December 30, 2001.

10.8.9 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date

op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date( $arg1  as xs:date,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:date

Summary: Returns the xs:date computed by adding $arg2 to the starting instant of $arg1 using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] and discarding the time components from the resulting xs:dateTime. If $arg2 is negative, then the xs:date returned precedes $arg1.

The starting instant of an xs:date is the xs:dateTime at time 00:00:00 on that date.

The result has the same timezone as $arg1. If $arg1 has no timezone, the result has no timezone.

This functions backs up the "+" operator on xs:date and xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.8.9.1 Examples
  • op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date(xs:date("2004-10-30Z"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P2DT2H30M0S")) returns the xs:date November 1, 2004. The starting instant of the first argument is the xs:dateTime value {2004, 10, 30, 0, 0, 0, PT0S}. Adding the second argument to this, gives the xs:dateTime value {2004, 11, 1, 2, 30, 0, PT0S}. The time components are then discarded.

10.8.10 op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date

op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date( $arg1  as xs:date,
$arg2  as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:date

Summary: Returns the xs:date computed by negating $arg2 and adding the result to the starting instant of $arg1 using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] and discarding the time components from the resulting xs:dateTime. If $arg2 is positive, then the xs:date returned precedes $arg1.

The starting instant of an xs:date is the xs:dateTime at 00:00:00 on that date.

The result has the same timezone as $arg1. If $arg1 has no timezone, the result has no timezone.

This functions backs up the "-" operator on xs:date and xs:yearMonthDuration values.

10.8.10.1 Examples
  • op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date(xs:date("2000-10-30"), xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y2M")) returns the xs:date August 30, 1999.

  • op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date(xs:date("2000-02-29Z"), xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y")) returns the xs:date February 28, 1999 in timezone Z.

  • op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date(xs:date("2000-10-31-05:00"), xs:yearMonthDuration("P1Y1M")) returns the xs:date September 30, 1999 in timezone -05:00.

10.8.11 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date

op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date( $arg1  as xs:date,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:date

Summary: Returns the xs:date computed by negating $arg2 and adding the result to the starting instant of $arg1 using the algorithm described in Appendix E of [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] and discarding the time components from the resulting xs:dateTime. If $arg2 is positive, then the xs:date returned precedes $arg1.

The starting instant of an xs:date is the xs:dateTime at 00:00:00 on that date.

The result has the same timezone as $arg1. If $arg1 has no timezone, the result has no timezone.

This functions backs up the "-" operator on xs:date and xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.8.11.1 Examples
  • op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date(xs:date("2000-10-30"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT1H15M")) returns the xs:date October 26, 2000.

10.8.12 op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time

op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time( $arg1  as xs:time,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:time

Summary: First, the days component in the canonical lexical representation of $arg2 is set to zero (0) and the value of the resulting xs:dayTimeDuration is calculated. Alternatively, the value of $arg2 modulus 86,400 is used as the second argument. This value is added to the value of $arg1 converted to an xs:dateTime using a reference date such as 1972-12-31 and the time components of the result returned. Note that the xs:time returned may occur in a following or preceding day and may be less than $arg1.

The result has the same timezone as $arg1. If $arg1 has no timezone, the result has no timezone.

This functions backs up the "+" operator on xs:time and xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.8.12.1 Examples
  • op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time(xs:time("11:12:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT1H15M")) returns the xs:time value corresponding to the lexical representation "12:27:00".

  • op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time(xs:time("23:12:00+03:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P1DT3H15M")) returns the xs:time value corresponding to the lexical representation "02:27:00+03:00", i.e. {0, 0, 0, 2, 27, 0, PT3H}.

10.8.13 op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time

op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time( $arg1  as xs:time,
$arg2  as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:time

Summary: The result is calculated by first setting the day component in the canonical lexical representation of $arg2 to zero (0) and calculating the value of the resulting xs:dayTimeDuration. Alternatively, the value of $arg2 modulus 86,400 is used as the second argument. This value is subtracted from the value of $arg1 converted to an xs:dateTime using a reference date such as 1972-12-31 and the time components of the result are returned. Note that the xs:time returned may occur in a preceding or following day and may be greater than $arg1.

The result has the same timezone as $arg1. If $arg1 has no timezone, the result has no timezone.

This functions backs up the "-" operator on xs:time and xs:dayTimeDuration values.

10.8.13.1 Examples
  • op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time(xs:time("11:12:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P3DT1H15M")) returns an xs:time value corresponding to the lexical representation "09:57:00".

  • op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time(xs:time("08:20:00-05:00"), xs:dayTimeDuration("P23DT10H10M")) returns the xs:time value corresponding to the lexical representation "22:10:00-05:00" i.e. {0, 0, 0, 22, 10, 0, -PT5H}

11 Functions Related to QNames

11.1 Additional Constructor Functions for QNames

This section defines additional constructor functions for QName as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]. Leading and trailing whitespace, if present, is stripped from string arguments before the result is constructed.

Function Meaning
fn:resolve-QName Returns an xs:QName with the lexical form given in the first argument. The prefix is resolved using the in-scope namespaces for a given element.
fn:QName Returns an xs:QName with the namespace URI given in the first argument and the local name and prefix in the second argument.

11.1.1 fn:resolve-QName

fn:resolve-QName($qname as xs:string?, $element as element()) as xs:QName?

Summary: Returns an xs:QName value (that is, an expanded-QName) by taking an xs:string that has the lexical form of an xs:QName (a string in the form "prefix:local-name" or "local-name") and resolving it using the in-scope namespaces for a given element.

If $qname does not have the correct lexical form for xs:QName an error is raised [err:FOCA0002].

If $qname is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

More specifically, the function searches the namespace bindings of $element for a binding whose name matches the prefix of $qname, or the zero-length string if it has no prefix, and constructs an expanded-QName whose local name is taken from the supplied $qname, and whose namespace URI is taken from the string value of the namespace binding.

If the $qname has a prefix and if there is no namespace binding for $element that matches this prefix, then an error is raised [err:FONS0004].

If the $qname has no prefix, and there is no namespace binding for $element corresponding to the default (unnamed) namespace, then the resulting expanded-QName has no namespace part.

The prefix (or absence of a prefix) in the supplied $qname argument is retained in the returned expanded-QName, as discussed in Section 2.1 TerminologyDM.

11.1.1.1 Usage Note

Sometimes the requirement is to construct an xs:QName without using the default namespace. This can be achieved by writing:

 if (contains($qname, ":")) then fn:resolve-QName($qname, $element) else
                            fn:QName("", $qname)

If the requirement is to construct an xs:QName using the namespaces in the static context, then the xs:QName constructor should be used.

11.1.1.2 Examples

Assume that the element bound to $element has a single namespace binding bound to the prefix eg.

  • fn:resolve-QName("hello", $element) returns a QName with local name "hello" that is in no namespace.

  • fn:resolve-QName("eg:myFunc", $element) returns an xs:QName whose namespace URI is specified by the namespace binding corresponding to the prefix "eg" and whose local name is "myFunc".

11.1.2 fn:QName

fn:QName($paramURI as xs:string?, $paramQName as xs:string) as xs:QName

Summary: Returns an xs:QName with the namespace URI given in $paramURI. If $paramURI is the zero-length string or the empty sequence, it represents "no namespace"; in this case, if the value of $paramQName contains a colon (:), an error is raised [err:FOCA0002]. The prefix (or absence of a prefix) in $paramQName is retained in the returned xs:QName value. The local name in the result is taken from the local part of $paramQName.

If $paramQName does not have the correct lexical form for xs:QName an error is raised [err:FOCA0002].

Note that unlike xs:QName this function does not require a xs:string literal as the argument.

11.1.2.1 Examples
  • fn:QName("http://www.example.com/example", "person") returns an xs:QName with namespace URI = "http://www.example.com/example", local name = "person" and prefix = "".

  • fn:QName("http://www.example.com/example", "ht:person") returns an xs:QName with namespace URI = "http://www.example.com/example", local name = "person" and prefix = "ht".

11.2 Functions and Operators Related to QNames

This section discusses functions on QNames as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition].

Function Meaning
op:QName-equal Returns true if the local names and namespace URIs of the two arguments are equal.
fn:prefix-from-QName Returns an xs:NCName representing the prefix of the xs:QName argument.
fn:local-name-from-QName Returns an xs:NCName representing the local name of the xs:QName argument.
fn:namespace-uri-from-QName Returns the namespace URI for the xs:QName argument. If the xs:QName is in no namespace, the zero-length string is returned.
fn: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:in-scope-prefixes Returns the prefixes of the in-scope namespaces for the given element.

11.2.1 op:QName-equal

op:QName-equal($arg1 as xs:QName, $arg2 as xs:QName) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if the namespace URIs of $arg1 and $arg2 are equal and the local names of $arg1 and $arg2 are identical based on the Unicode code point collation (http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint). Otherwise, returns false. Two namespace URIs are considered equal if they are either both absent or both present and identical based on the Unicode code point collation. The prefix parts of $arg1 and $arg2, if any, are ignored.

Backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on values of type xs:QName.

11.2.2 fn:prefix-from-QName

fn:prefix-from-QName($arg as xs:QName?) as xs:NCName?

Summary: Returns an xs:NCName representing the prefix of $arg. The empty sequence is returned if $arg is the empty sequence or if the value of $arg contains no prefix.

11.2.3 fn:local-name-from-QName

fn:local-name-from-QName($arg as xs:QName?) as xs:NCName?

Summary: Returns an xs:NCName representing the local part of $arg. If $arg is the empty sequence, returns the empty sequence.

11.2.3.1 Examples
  • fn:local-name-from-QName(fn:QName("http://www.example.com/example", "person")) returns "person".

11.2.4 fn:namespace-uri-from-QName

fn:namespace-uri-from-QName($arg as xs:QName?) as xs:anyURI?

Summary: Returns the namespace URI for $arg as an xs:anyURI. If $arg is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned. If $arg is in no namespace, the zero-length xs:anyURI is returned.

11.2.4.1 Examples
  • fn:namespace-uri-from-QName(fn:QName("http://www.example.com/example", "person")) returns the namespace URI corresponding to "http://www.example.com/example".

11.2.5 fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix

fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix( $prefix  as xs:string?,
$element  as element()) as xs:anyURI?

Summary: 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 or the empty sequence, it returns the namespace URI of the default (unnamed) namespace. Otherwise, it returns the empty sequence.

Prefixes are equal only if their Unicode code points match exactly.

11.2.6 fn:in-scope-prefixes

fn:in-scope-prefixes($element as element()) as xs:string*

Summary: Returns the prefixes of the in-scope namespaces for $element. For namespaces that have a prefix, it returns the prefix as an xs:NCName. For the default namespace, which has no prefix, it returns the zero-length string.

12 Operators on base64Binary and hexBinary

12.1 Comparisons of base64Binary and hexBinary Values

The following comparison operators on xs:base64Binary and xs:hexBinary values are defined. Comparisons take two operands of the same type; that is, both operands must be xs:base64Binary or both operands may be xs:hexBinary. Each returns a boolean value.

A value of type xs:hexBinary can be compared with a value of type xs:base64Binary by casting one value to the other type. See 17.1.7 Casting to xs:base64Binary and xs:hexBinary.

Function Meaning
op:hexBinary-equal Returns true if the two arguments are equal.
op:base64Binary-equal Returns true if the two arguments are equal.

12.1.1 op:hexBinary-equal

op:hexBinary-equal( $value1  as xs:hexBinary,
$value2  as xs:hexBinary) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if $value1 and $value2 are of the same length, measured in binary octets, and contain the same octets in the same order. Otherwise, returns false.

This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on xs:hexBinary values.

12.1.2 op:base64Binary-equal

op:base64Binary-equal( $value1  as xs:base64Binary,
$value2  as xs:base64Binary) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if $value1 and $value2 are of the same length, measured in binary octets, and contain the same octets in the same order. Otherwise, returns false.

This function backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on xs:base64Binary values.

13 Operators on NOTATION

13.1 Operators on NOTATION

This section discusses functions that take NOTATION as arguments.

Function Meaning
op:NOTATION-equal Returns true if the two arguments are op:QName-equal.

13.1.1 op:NOTATION-equal

op:NOTATION-equal($arg1 as xs:NOTATION, $arg2 as xs:NOTATION) as xs:boolean

Summary: Returns true if the namespace URIs of $arg1 and $arg2 are equal and the local names of $arg1 and $arg2 are identical based on the Unicode code point collation: http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint. Otherwise, returns false. Two namespace URIs are considered equal if they are either both absent or both present and identical based on the Unicode code point collation. The prefix parts of $arg1 and $arg2, if any, are ignored.

Backs up the "eq" and "ne" operators on values of type xs:NOTATION.

14 Functions and Operators on Nodes

This section discusses functions and operators on nodes. Nodes are formally defined in Section 6 NodesDM.

Function Meaning
fn:name Returns the name of the context node or the specified node as an xs:string.
fn:local-name Returns the local name of the context node or the specified node as an xs:NCName.
fn:namespace-uri Returns the namespace URI as an xs:anyURI for the xs:QName of the argument node or the context node if the argument is omitted. This may be the URI corresponding to the zero-length string if the xs:QName is in no namespace.
fn:number Returns the value of the context item after atomization or the specified argument converted to an xs:double.
fn:lang Returns true or false, depending on whether the language of the given node or the context node, as defined using the xml:lang attribute, is the same as, or a sublanguage of, the language specified by the argument.
op:is-same-node Returns true if the two arguments have the same identity.
op:node-before Indicates whether one node appears before another node in document order.
op:node-after Indicates whether one node appears after another node in document order.
fn:root Returns the root of the tree to which the node argument belongs.

For the illustrative examples below assume an XQuery or transformation operating on a PurchaseOrder document containing a number of line-item elements. Each line-item has child elements called description, price, quantity, etc. whose content is different for each line-item. Quantity has simple content of type xs:decimal. Further assume that variables $item1, $item2, etc. are each bound to single line-item element nodes in the document in sequence and that the value of the quantity child of the first line-item is 5.0.

<PurchaseOrder>
  <line-item>
    <description> ... </description>
    <price> ... </price>
    <quantity>5.0</quantity>
      ...
  </line-item>
  <line-item>
      ...
  </line-item>
      ...
</PurchaseOrder>

14.1 fn:name

fn:name() as xs:string
fn:name($arg as node()?) as xs:string

Summary: Returns the name of a node, as an xs:string that is either the zero-length string, or has the lexical form of an xs:QName.

If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context item (.). The behavior of the function if the argument is omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed as the argument.

The following errors may be raised: if the context item is undefined [err:XPDY0002]XP; if the context item is not a node [err:XPTY0004]XP.

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 binding having no name), the function returns the zero-length string.

Otherwise, the value returned is fn:string(fn:node-name($arg)).

14.2 fn:local-name

fn:local-name() as xs:string
fn:local-name($arg as node()?) as xs:string

Summary: Returns the local part of the name of $arg as an xs:string that will either be the zero-length string or will have the lexical form of an xs:NCName.

If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context item (.). The behavior of the function if the argument is omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed as the argument.

The following errors may be raised: if the context item is undefined [err:XPDY0002]XP; if the context item is not a node [err:XPTY0004]XP.

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 dm:node-name accessor in Section 5.11 node-name AccessorDM). This will be an xs:string whose lexical form is an xs:NCName.

14.3 fn:namespace-uri

fn:namespace-uri() as xs:anyURI
fn:namespace-uri($arg as node()?) as xs:anyURI

Summary: Returns the namespace URI part of the name of $arg, as an xs:anyURI value.

If the argument is omitted, it defaults to the context node (.). The behavior of the function if the argument is omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed as the argument.

The following errors may be raised: if the context item is undefined [err:XPDY0002]XP; if the context item is not a node [err:XPTY0004]XP.

If $arg is neither an element nor an attribute node, or if it is an element or attribute node whose expanded-QName (as determined by the dm:node-name accessor in the Section 5.11 node-name AccessorDM) is in no namespace, then the function returns the xs:anyURI corresponding to the zero-length string.

14.4 fn:number

fn:number() as xs:double
fn:number($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:double

Summary: Returns the value indicated by $arg or, if $arg is not specified, the context item after atomization, converted to an xs:double

Calling the zero-argument version of the function is defined to give the same result as calling the single-argument version with the context item (.). That is, fn:number() is equivalent to fn:number(.).

If $arg is the empty sequence or if $arg or the context item cannot be converted to an xs:double, the xs:double value NaN is returned. If the context item is undefined an error is raised: [err:XPDY0002]XP.

If $arg is the empty sequence, NaN is returned. Otherwise, $arg, or the context item after atomization, is converted to an xs:double following the rules of 17.1.3.2 Casting to xs:double. If the conversion to xs:double fails, the xs:double value NaN is returned.

14.4.1 Examples

  • fn:number($item1/quantity) returns 5.0.

  • fn:number($item2/description) returns NaN (assuming the description is non-numeric).

  • Assume that the context item is the xs:string "15". fn:number() returns 1.5E1.

14.5 fn:lang

fn:lang($testlang as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
fn:lang($testlang as xs:string?, $node as node()) as xs:boolean

Summary: This function tests whether the language of $node, or the context item if the second argument is omitted, as specified by xml:lang attributes is the same as, or is a sublanguage of, the language specified by $testlang. The behavior of the function if the second argument is omitted is exactly the same as if the context item (.) had been passed as the second argument. The language of the argument node, or the context item if the second argument is omitted, is determined by the value of the xml:lang attribute on the node, or, if the node has no such attribute, by the value of the xml:lang attribute on the nearest ancestor of the node that has an xml:lang attribute. If there is no such ancestor, then the function returns false

The following errors may be raised: if the context item is undefined [err:XPDY0002]XP; if the context item is not a node [err:XPTY0004]XP.

If $testlang is the empty sequence it is interpreted as the zero-length string.

The relevant xml:lang attribute is determined by the value of the XPath expression:

(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, based on a caseless default match as specified in section 3.13 of [The Unicode Standard], either:

  1. $testlang is equal to the string-value of the relevant xml:lang attribute, or

  2. $testlang is equal to some substring of the string-value of the relevant xml:lang attribute that starts at the start of the string-value and ends immediately before a hyphen, "-" (The character "-" is HYPHEN-MINUS, #x002D).

14.5.1 Examples

  • The expression fn:lang("en") would return true if the context node were any of the following four elements:

    • <para xml:lang="en"/>

    • <div xml:lang="en"><para>And now, and forever!</para></div>

    • <para xml:lang="EN"/>

    • <para xml:lang="en-us"/>

  • The expression fn:lang("fr") would return false if the context node were <para xml:lang="EN"/>

14.6 op:is-same-node

op:is-same-node($parameter1 as node(), $parameter2 as node()) as xs:boolean

Summary: 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" operator on nodes.

14.6.1 Examples

  • op:is-same-node($item1, $item1) returns true.

  • op:is-same-node($item1, $item2) returns false.

14.7 op:node-before

op:node-before($parameter1 as node(), $parameter2 as node()) as xs:boolean

Summary: 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 Section 2.4 Document OrderDM. This function backs up the "<<" operator.

14.7.1 Examples

  • op:node-before($item1, $item2) returns true.

  • op:node-before($item1, $item1) returns false.

14.8 op:node-after

op:node-after($parameter1 as node(), $parameter2 as node()) as xs:boolean

Summary: If the node identified by the value of $parameter1 occurs in document order 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 Section 2.4 Document OrderDM. This function backs up the ">>" operator.

14.8.1 Examples

  • op:node-after($item1, $item2) returns false.

  • op:node-after($item1, $item1) returns false.

  • op:node-after($item2, $item1) returns true.

14.9 fn:root

fn:root() as node()
fn:root($arg as node()?) as node()?

Summary: Returns the root of the tree to which $arg belongs. This will usually, but not necessarily, be a document node.

If $arg is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

If $arg is a document node, $arg is returned.

If the function is called without an argument, the context item (.) is used as the default argument. The behavior of the function if the argument is omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed as the argument.

The following errors may be raised: if the context item is undefined [err:XPDY0002]XP; if the context item is not a node [err:XPTY0004]XP.

14.9.1 Examples

These examples use some variables which could be defined in [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] as:

let $i := <tool>wrench</tool>
let $o := <order> {$i} <quantity>5</quantity> </order>
let $odoc := document {$o}
let $newi := $o/tool

Or they could be defined in [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0] as:

<xsl:variable name="i" as="element()">
  <tool>wrench</tool>
</xsl:variable>

<xsl:variable name="o" as="element()">
  <order>
    <xsl:copy-of select="$i"/>
    <quantity>5</quantity>
  </order>
</xsl:variable>

<xsl:variable name="odoc">
  <xsl:copy-of select="$o"/>
</xsl:variable>

<xsl:variable name="newi" select="$o/tool"/>
  • fn:root($i) returns $i

  • fn:root($o/quantity) returns $o

  • fn:root($odoc//quantity) returns $odoc

  • fn:root($newi) returns $o

Note:

The final three examples could be made type-safe by wrapping their operands with fn:exactly-one().

15 Functions and Operators on Sequences

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 [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0].

15.1 General Functions and Operators on Sequences

The following functions are defined on sequences.

Function Meaning
fn:boolean Computes the effective boolean value of the argument sequence.
op:concatenate Concatenates two sequences.
fn:index-of Returns a sequence of xs:integers, each of which is the index of a member of the sequence specified as the first argument that is equal to the value of the second argument. If no members of the specified sequence are equal to the value of the second argument, the empty sequence is returned.
fn:empty Indicates whether or not the provided sequence is empty.
fn:exists Indicates whether or not the provided sequence is not empty.
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·.
fn:insert-before Inserts an item or sequence of items at a specified position in a sequence.
fn:remove Removes an item from a specified position in a sequence.
fn:reverse Reverses the order of items in a sequence.
fn:subsequence Returns the subsequence of a given sequence, identified by location.
fn:unordered Returns the items in the given sequence in a non-deterministic order.

As in the previous section, for the illustrative examples below, assume an XQuery or transformation operating on a non-empty Purchase Order document containing a number of line-item elements. The variable $seq is bound to the sequence of line-item nodes in document order. The variables $item1, $item2, etc. are bound to separate, individual line-item nodes in the sequence.

15.1.1 fn:boolean

fn:boolean($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean

Summary: Computes the effective boolean value of the sequence $arg. See Section 2.4.3 Effective Boolean ValueXP

  • If $arg is the empty sequence, fn:boolean returns false.

  • If $arg is a sequence whose first item is a node, fn:boolean returns true.

  • If $arg is a singleton value of type xs:boolean or a derived from xs:boolean, fn:boolean returns $arg.

  • If $arg is a singleton value of type xs:string or a type derived from xs:string, xs:anyURI or a type derived from xs:anyURI or xs:untypedAtomic, fn:boolean returns false if the operand value has zero length; otherwise it returns true.

  • If $arg is a singleton value of any numeric type or a type derived from a numeric type, fn:boolean returns false if the operand value is NaN or is numerically equal to zero; otherwise it returns true.

  • In all other cases, fn:boolean raises a type error [err:FORG0006].

The static semantics of this function are described in Section 7.2.4 The fn:boolean and fn:not functionsFS.

Note:

The result of this function is not necessarily the same as " $arg cast as xs:boolean ". For example, fn:boolean("false") returns the value "true" whereas "false" cast as xs:boolean returns false.

15.1.1.1 Examples

let $x := ("a", "b", "c")

  • fn:boolean($x) raises a type error [err:FORG0006].

  • fn:boolean($x[1]) returns true.

  • fn:boolean($x[0]) returns false.

15.1.2 op:concatenate

op:concatenate($seq1 as item()*, $seq2 as item()*) as item()*

Summary: 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.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 4.3.1 Constructing SequencesFS

15.1.2.1 Examples
  • op:concatenate((1, 2, 3), (4, 5)) returns (1, 2, 3, 4, 5).

  • op:concatenate((1, 2, 3), ()) returns (1, 2, 3).

  • op:concatenate((), ()) returns ().

15.1.3 fn:index-of

fn:index-of( $seqParam  as xs:anyAtomicType*,
$srchParam  as xs:anyAtomicType) as xs:integer*
fn:index-of( $seqParam  as xs:anyAtomicType*,
$srchParam  as xs:anyAtomicType,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:integer*

Summary: Returns a sequence of positive integers giving the positions within the sequence $seqParam of items that are equal to $srchParam.

The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 7.3.1 Collations. The collation is used when string comparison is required.

The items in the sequence $seqParam are compared with $srchParam under the rules for the eq operator. Values of type xs:untypedAtomic are compared as if they were of type xs:string. Values that cannot be compared, i.e. the eq operator is not defined for their types, are considered to be distinct. If an item compares equal, then the position of that item in the sequence $seqParam is included in the result.

If the value of $seqParam is the empty sequence, or if no item in $seqParam matches $srchParam, then the empty sequence is returned.

The first item in a sequence is at position 1, not position 0.

The result sequence is in ascending numeric order.

15.1.3.1 Examples
  • fn:index-of ((10, 20, 30, 40), 35) returns ().

  • fn:index-of ((10, 20, 30, 30, 20, 10), 20) returns (2, 5).

  • fn:index-of (("a", "sport", "and", "a", "pastime"), "a") returns (1, 4).

  • If @a is an attribute of type xs:NMTOKENS whose string value is "red green blue", and whose typed value is therefore the sequence of three xs:NMTOKEN values ("red", "green", "blue"), then fn:index-of(@a, "blue") returns 3.

    This is because the function calling mechanism atomizes the attribute node to produce a sequence of three xs:NMTOKENs.

15.1.4 fn:empty

fn:empty($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean

Summary: If the value of $arg is the empty sequence, the function returns true; otherwise, the function returns false.

15.1.4.1 Examples
  • fn:empty(fn:remove(("hello", "world"), 1)) returns false.

15.1.5 fn:exists

fn:exists($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean

Summary: If the value of $arg is not the empty sequence, the function returns true; otherwise, the function returns false.

15.1.5.1 Examples
  • fn:exists(fn:remove(("hello"), 1)) returns false.

15.1.6 fn:distinct-values

fn:distinct-values($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType*
fn:distinct-values( $arg  as xs:anyAtomicType*,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:anyAtomicType*

Summary: Returns the sequence that results from removing from $arg all but one of a set of values that are eq to one other. Values of type xs:untypedAtomic are compared as if they were of type xs:string. Values that cannot be compared, i.e. the eq operator is not defined for their types, are considered to be distinct. The order in which the sequence of values is returned is ·implementation dependent·.

The static type of the result is a sequence of prime types as defined in Section 7.2.7 The fn:distinct-values functionFS.

The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 7.3.1 Collations. The collation is used when string comparison is required.

If $arg is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

For xs:float and xs:double values, positive zero is equal to negative zero and, although NaN does not equal itself, if $arg contains multiple NaN values a single NaN is returned.

If xs:dateTime, xs:date or xs:time values do not have a timezone, they are considered to have the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic context for the purpose of comparison. Note that xs:dateTime, xs:date or xs:time values can compare equal even if their timezones are different.

Which value of a set of values that compare equal is returned is ·implementation dependent·.

If the input sequence contains values of different numeric types that differ from each other by small amounts, then the eq operator is not transitive, because of rounding effects occurring during type promotion. In the situation where the input contains three values A, B, and C such that A eq B, B eq C, but A ne C, then the number of items in the result of the function (as well as the choice of which items are returned) is ·implementation-dependent·, subject only to the constraints that (a) no two items in the result sequence compare equal to each other, and (b) every input item that does not appear in the result sequence compares equal to some item that does appear in the result sequence.

For example, this arises when computing:

      distinct-values(
         (xs:float('1.0'),
          xs:decimal('1.0000000000100000000001',
          xs:double( '1.00000000001'))

because the values of type xs:float and xs:double both compare equal to the value of type xs:decimal but not equal to each other.

15.1.6.1 Examples
  • fn:distinct-values((1, 2.0, 3, 2)) might return (1, 3, 2.0).

  • The following query:

    let $x as xs:untypedAtomic*
        := (xs:untypedAtomic("cherry"),
            xs:untypedAtomic("bar"),
            xs:untypedAtomic("bar"))
    return fn:distinct-values ($x)
                                        
    

    returns a sequence containing two items of type xs:untypedAtomic.

15.1.7 fn:insert-before

fn:insert-before( $target  as item()*,
$position  as xs:integer,
$inserts  as item()*) as item()*

Summary: 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.)

If $target is the empty sequence, $inserts is returned. If $inserts is the empty sequence, $target is returned.

The value returned by the function consists of all items of $target whose index is less than $position, followed by all items of $inserts, followed by the remaining elements of $target, in that sequence.

If $position is less than one (1), the first position, the effective value of $position is one (1). If $position is greater than the number of items in $target, then the effective value of $position is equal to the number of items in $target plus 1.

For detailed semantics see, Section 7.2.15 The fn:insert-before functionFS.

15.1.7.1 Examples

let $x := ("a", "b", "c")

  • fn:insert-before($x, 0, "z") returns ("z", "a", "b", "c")

  • fn:insert-before($x, 1, "z") returns ("z", "a", "b", "c")

  • fn:insert-before($x, 2, "z") returns ("a", "z", "b", "c")

  • fn:insert-before($x, 3, "z") returns ("a", "b", "z", "c")

  • fn:insert-before($x, 4, "z") returns ("a", "b", "c", "z")

15.1.8 fn:remove

fn:remove($target as item()*, $position as xs:integer) as item()*

Summary: Returns a new sequence constructed from the value of $target with the item at the position specified by the value of $position removed.

If $position is less than 1 or greater than the number of items in $target, $target is returned. Otherwise, the value returned by the function consists of all items of $target whose index is less than $position, followed by all items of $target whose index is greater than $position. If $target is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.11 The fn:remove functionFS

15.1.8.1 Examples

let $x := ("a", "b", "c")

  • fn:remove($x, 0) returns ("a", "b", "c")

  • fn:remove($x, 1) returns ("b", "c")

  • fn:remove($x, 6) returns ("a", "b", "c")

  • fn:remove((), 3) returns ()

15.1.9 fn:reverse

fn:reverse($arg as item()*) as item()*

Summary: Reverses the order of items in a sequence. If $arg is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.12 The fn:reverse functionFS

15.1.9.1 Examples

let $x := ("a", "b", "c")

  • fn:reverse($x) returns ("c", "b", "a")

  • fn:reverse(("hello")) returns ("hello")

  • fn:reverse(()) returns ()

15.1.10 fn:subsequence

fn:subsequence($sourceSeq as item()*, $startingLoc as xs:double) as item()*
fn:subsequence( $sourceSeq  as item()*,
$startingLoc  as xs:double,
$length  as xs:double) as item()*

Summary: 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.

In the two-argument case, returns:

$sourceSeq[fn:round($startingLoc) le position()]

In the three-argument case, returns:

$sourceSeq[fn:round($startingLoc) le position() 
    and position() lt fn:round($startingLoc) + fn:round($length)]

Notes:

If $sourceSeq is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

If $startingLoc is zero or negative, the subsequence includes items from the beginning of the $sourceSeq.

If $length is not specified, the subsequence includes items to the end of $sourceSeq.

If $length is greater than the number of items in the value of $sourceSeq following $startingLoc, the subsequence includes items to the end of $sourceSeq.

The first item of a sequence is located at position 1, not position 0.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.13 The fn:subsequence functionFS.

The reason the function accepts arguments of type xs:double is that many computations on untyped data return an xs:double result; and the reason for the rounding rules is to compensate for any imprecision in these floating-point computations.

15.1.10.1 Examples

Assume $seq = ($item1, $item2, $item3, $item4, ...)

  • fn:subsequence($seq, 4) returns ($item4, ...)

  • fn:subsequence($seq, 3, 2) returns ($item3, $item4)

15.1.11 fn:unordered

fn:unordered($sourceSeq as item()*) as item()*

Summary: Returns the items of $sourceSeq in an ·implementation dependent· order.

Note:

Query optimizers may be able to do a better job if the order of the output sequence is not specified. For example, when retrieving prices from a purchase order, if an index exists on prices, it may be more efficient to return the prices in index order rather than in document order.

15.2 Functions That Test the Cardinality of Sequences

The following functions test the cardinality of their sequence arguments.

Function Meaning
fn:zero-or-one Returns the input sequence if it contains zero or one items. Raises an error otherwise.
fn:one-or-more Returns the input sequence if it contains one or more items. Raises an error otherwise.
fn:exactly-one Returns the input sequence if it contains exactly one item. Raises an error otherwise.

The functions fn:zero-or-one, fn:one-or-more, and fn:exactly-one defined in this section, check that the cardinality of a sequence is in the expected range. They are particularly useful with regard to static typing. For example, the XML Schema [XML Schema Part 1: Structures Second Edition] describing the output of a query may require a sequence of length one-or-more in some position, but the static type system may not be able to infer this; inserting a call to fn:one-or-more at the appropriate place will provide a suitable static type at query analysis time, and confirm that the length is correct with a dynamic check at query execution time.

15.2.1 fn:zero-or-one

fn:zero-or-one($arg as item()*) as item()?

Summary: Returns $arg if it contains zero or one items. Otherwise, raises an error [err:FORG0003].

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.16 The fn:zero-or-one, fn:one-or-more, and fn:exactly-one functionsFS

15.2.2 fn:one-or-more

fn:one-or-more($arg as item()*) as item()+

Summary: Returns $arg if it contains one or more items. Otherwise, raises an error [err:FORG0004].

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.16 The fn:zero-or-one, fn:one-or-more, and fn:exactly-one functionsFS

15.2.3 fn:exactly-one

fn:exactly-one($arg as item()*) as item()

Summary: Returns $arg if it contains exactly one item. Otherwise, raises an error [err:FORG0005].

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.16 The fn:zero-or-one, fn:one-or-more, and fn:exactly-one functionsFS

15.3 Equals, Union, Intersection and Except

Function Meaning
fn:deep-equal Returns true if the two arguments have items that compare equal in corresponding positions.
op:union Returns the union of the two sequence arguments, eliminating duplicates.
op:intersect Returns the intersection of the two sequence arguments, eliminating duplicates.
op:except Returns the difference of the two sequence arguments, eliminating duplicates.

As in the previous sections, for the illustrative examples below, assume an XQuery or transformation operating on a Purchase Order document containing a number of line-item elements. The variables $item1, $item2, etc. are bound to individual line-item nodes in the sequence. We use sequences of these nodes in some of the examples below.

15.3.1 fn:deep-equal

fn:deep-equal($parameter1 as item()*, $parameter2 as item()*) as xs:boolean
fn:deep-equal( $parameter1  as item()*,
$parameter2  as item()*,
$collation  as string) as xs:boolean

Summary: This function assesses whether two sequences are deep-equal to each other. To be deep-equal, they must contain items that are pairwise deep-equal; and for two items to be deep-equal, they must either be atomic values that compare equal, or nodes of the same kind, with the same name, whose children are deep-equal. This is defined in more detail below. The $collation argument identifies a collation which is used at all levels of recursion when strings are compared (but not when names are compared), according to the rules in 7.3.1 Collations.

If the two sequences are both empty, the function returns true.

If the two sequences are of different lengths, the function returns false.

If the two sequences are of the same length, the function returns true if and only if every item in the sequence $parameter1 is deep-equal to the item at the same position in the sequence $parameter2. The rules for deciding whether two items are deep-equal follow.

Call the two items $i1 and $i2 respectively.

If $i1 and $i2 are both atomic values, they are deep-equal if and only if ($i1 eq $i2) is true, or if both values are NaN. If the eq operator is not defined for $i1 and $i2, the function returns false.

If one of the pair $i1 or $i2 is an atomic value and the other is a node, the function returns false.

If $i1 and $i2 are both nodes, they are compared as described below:

If the two nodes are of different kinds, the result is false.

If the two nodes are both document nodes then they are deep-equal if and only if the sequence $i1/(*|text()) is deep-equal to the sequence $i2/(*|text()).

If the two nodes are both element nodes then they are deep-equal if and only if all of the following conditions are satisfied:

  1. the two nodes have the same name, that is (node-name($i1) eq node-name($i2)).

  2. the two nodes are both annotated as having simple content or both nodes are annotated as having complex content.

  3. the two nodes have the same number of attributes, and for every attribute $a1 in $i1/@* there exists an attribute $a2 in $i2/@* such that $a1 and $a2 are deep-equal.

  4. One of the following conditions holds:

    • Both element nodes have a type annotation that is simple content, and the typed value of $i1 is deep-equal to the typed value of $i2.

    • Both element nodes have a type annotation that is complex content with elementOnly content, and each child element of $i1 is deep-equal to the corresponding child element of $i2.

    • Both element nodes have a type annotation that is complex content with mixed content, and the sequence $i1/(*|text()) is deep-equal to the sequence $i2/(*|text()).

    • Both element nodes have a type annotation that is complex content with empty content.

If the two nodes are both attribute nodes then they are deep-equal if and only if both the following conditions are satisfied:

  1. the two nodes have the same name, that is (node-name($i1) eq node-name($i2)).

  2. the typed value of $i1 is deep-equal to the typed value of $i2.

If the two nodes are both processing instruction nodes, then they are deep-equal if and only if both the following conditions are satisfied:

  1. the two nodes have the same name, that is (fn:node-name($i1) eq fn:node-name($i2)).

  2. the string value of $i1 is equal to the string value of $i2.

If the two nodes are both namespace nodes, then they are deep-equal if and only if both the following conditions are satisfied:

  1. the two nodes either have the same name or are both nameless, that is fn:deep-equal(fn:node-name($i1), fn:node-name($i2)).

  2. the string value of $i1 is equal to the string value of $i2 when compared using the Unicode codepoint collation.

If the two nodes are both text nodes or comment nodes, then they are deep-equal if and only if their string-values are equal.

Notes:

The two nodes are not required to have the same type annotation, and they are not required to have the same in-scope namespaces. They may also differ in their parent, their base URI, and the values returned by the is-id and is-idrefs accessors (see Section 5.5 is-id AccessorDM and Section 5.6 is-idrefs AccessorDM). The order of children is significant, but the order of attributes is insignificant.

The contents of comments and processing instructions are significant only if these nodes appear directly as items in the two sequences being compared. The content of a comment or processing instruction that appears as a descendant of an item in one of the sequences being compared does not affect the result. However, the presence of a comment or processing instruction, if it causes a text node to be split into two text nodes, may affect the result.

The result of fn:deep-equal(1, current-dateTime()) is false; it does not raise an error.

15.3.1.1 Examples
let $at := <attendees> <name last='Parker'
                                first='Peter'/> <name last='Barker' first='Bob'/>
                                <name last='Parker' first='Peter'/> </attendees>
  • fn:deep-equal($at, $at/*) returns false.

  • fn:deep-equal($at/name[1], $at/name[2]) returns false.

  • fn:deep-equal($at/name[1], $at/name[3]) returns true.

  • fn:deep-equal($at/name[1], 'Peter Parker') returns false.

15.3.2 op:union

op:union($parameter1 as node()*, $parameter2 as node()*) as node()*

Summary: Constructs a sequence containing every node that occurs in the values of either $parameter1 or $parameter2, eliminating duplicate nodes. Nodes are returned in document order. Two nodes are duplicates if they are op:is-same-node().

If either operand is the empty sequence, a sequence is returned containing the nodes in the other operand in document order after eliminating duplicates.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.14 The op:union, op:intersect, and op:except operatorsFS

This function backs up the "union" or "|" operator.

15.3.2.1 Examples

Assume $seq1 = ($item1, $item2), $seq2 = ($item1, $item2) and $seq3 = ($item2, $item3).

  • op:union($seq1, $seq1) returns the sequence ($item1, $item2).

  • op:union($seq2, $seq3) returns the sequence consisting of ($item1, $item2, $item3).

15.3.3 op:intersect

op:intersect($parameter1 as node()*, $parameter2 as node()*) as node()*

Summary: 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 duplicates if they are op:is-same-node().

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.14 The op:union, op:intersect, and op:except operatorsFS.

This function backs up the "intersect" operator.

15.3.3.1 Examples

Assume $seq1 = ($item1, $item2), $seq2 = ($item1, $item2) and $seq3 = ($item2, $item3).

  • op:intersect($seq1, $seq1) returns the sequence ($item1, $item2).

  • op:intersect($seq2, $seq3) returns the sequence ($item2).

15.3.4 op:except

op:except($parameter1 as node()*, $parameter2 as node()*) as node()*

Summary: Constructs a sequence containing every node that occurs in the value 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 sequence is returned containing the nodes in $parameter1 in document order after eliminating duplicates.

Two nodes are duplicates if they are op:is-same-node().

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.14 The op:union, op:intersect, and op:except operatorsFS.

This function backs up the "except" operator.

15.3.4.1 Examples

Assume $seq1 = ($item1, $item2), $seq2 = ($item1, $item2) and $seq3 = ($item2, $item3).

  • op:except($seq1, $seq2) returns the empty sequence.

  • op:except($seq2, $seq3) returns the sequence ($item1).

15.4 Aggregate Functions

Aggregate functions take a sequence as argument and return a single value computed from values in the sequence. Except for fn:count, the sequence must consist of values of a single type or one if its subtypes, or they must be numeric. xs:untypedAtomic values are permitted in the input sequence and handled by special conversion rules. The type of the items in the sequence must also support certain operations.

Function Meaning
fn:count Returns the number of items in a sequence.
fn:avg Returns the average of a sequence of values.
fn:max Returns the maximum value from a sequence of comparable values.
fn:min Returns the minimum value from a sequence of comparable values.
fn:sum Returns the sum of a sequence of values.

15.4.1 fn:count

fn:count($arg as item()*) as xs:integer

Summary: Returns the number of items in the value of $arg.

Returns 0 if $arg is the empty sequence.

15.4.1.1 Examples

Assume $seq1 = ($item1, $item2) and $seq3 = (), the empty sequence.

  • fn:count($seq1) returns 2.

  • fn:count($seq3) returns 0.

Assume $seq2 = (98.5, 98.3, 98.9).

  • fn:count($seq2) returns 3.

  • fn:count($seq2[. > 100]) returns 0.

15.4.2 fn:avg

fn:avg($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType?

Summary: Returns the average of the values in the input sequence $arg, that is, the sum of the values divided by the number of values.

If $arg is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned.

If $arg contains values of type xs:untypedAtomic they are cast to xs:double.

Duration values must either all be xs:yearMonthDuration values or must all be xs:dayTimeDuration values. For numeric values, the numeric promotion rules defined in 6.2 Operators on Numeric Values are used to promote all values to a single common type. After these operations, $arg must contain items of a single type, which must be one of the four numeric types, xs:yearMonthDuration or xs:dayTimeDuration or one if its subtypes.

If the above conditions are not met, then a type error is raised [err:FORG0006].

Otherwise, returns the average of the values as sum($arg) div count($arg); but the implementation may use an otherwise equivalent algorithm that avoids arithmetic overflow.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.10 The fn:min, fn:max, fn:avg, and fn:sum functionsFS.

15.4.2.1 Examples

Assume $d1 = xs:yearMonthDuration("P20Y") and $d2 = xs:yearMonthDuration("P10M") and $seq3 = (3, 4, 5).

  • fn:avg($seq3) returns 4.0.

  • fn:avg(($d1, $d2)) returns a yearMonthDuration with value 125 months.

  • fn:avg(($d1, $seq3)) raises a type error [err:FORG0006].

  • fn:avg(()) returns ().

  • fn:avg((xs:float('INF'), xs:float('-INF'))) returns NaN.

  • fn:avg(($seq3, xs:float('NaN'))) returns NaN.

15.4.3 fn:max

fn:max($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType?
fn:max($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*, $collation as string) as xs:anyAtomicType?

Summary: Selects an item from the input sequence $arg whose value is greater than or equal to the value of every other item in the input sequence. If there are two or more such items, then the specific item whose value is returned is ·implementation dependent·.

The following rules are applied to the input sequence:

  • Values of type xs:untypedAtomic in $arg are cast to xs:double.

  • Numeric values are converted to their least common type reachable by a combination of type promotion and subtype substitution. See Section B.1 Type PromotionXP and Section B.2 Operator MappingXP.

  • Values of type xs:anyURI are cast to xs:string

The items in the resulting sequence may be reordered in an arbitrary order. The resulting sequence is referred to below as the converted sequence. This function returns an item from the converted sequence rather than the input sequence.

If the converted sequence is empty, the empty sequence is returned.

All items in the converted sequence must be derived from a single base type for which the le operator is defined. In addition, the values in the sequence must have a total order. If date/time values do not have a timezone, they are considered to have the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic context for the purpose of comparison. Duration values must either all be xs:yearMonthDuration values or must all be xs:dayTimeDuration values.

If any of these conditions is not met, then a type error is raised [err:FORG0006].

If the converted sequence contains the value NaN, the value NaN is returned.

If the items in the converted sequence are of type xs:string or types derived by restriction from xs:string, then the determination of the item with the smallest value is made according to the collation that is used. If the type of the items in the converted sequence is not xs:string and $collation is specified, the collation is ignored.

The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 7.3.1 Collations.

Otherwise, the result of the function is the result of the expression:

   if (every $v in $c satisfies $c[1] ge $v)
   then $c[1] 
   else fn:max(fn:subsequence($c, 2))

evaluated with $collation as the default collation if specified, and with $c as the converted sequence.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.10 The fn:min, fn:max, fn:avg, and fn:sum functionsFS.

Notes:

If the converted sequence contains exactly one value then that value is returned.

The default type when the fn:max function is applied to xs:untypedAtomic values is xs:double. This differs from the default type for operators such as gt, and for sorting in XQuery and XSLT, which is xs:string.

15.4.3.1 Examples
  • fn:max((3,4,5)) returns 5.

  • fn:max((5, 5.0e0)) returns 5.0e0.

  • fn:max((3,4,"Zero")) raises a type error [err:FORG0006].

  • fn:max((fn:current-date(), xs:date("2001-01-01"))) typically returns the current date.

  • fn:max(("a", "b", "c")) returns "c" under a typical default collation.

15.4.4 fn:min

fn:min($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType?
fn:min($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*, $collation as string) as xs:anyAtomicType?

Summary: selects an item from the input sequence $arg whose value is less than or equal to the value of every other item in the input sequence. If there are two or more such items, then the specific item whose value is returned is ·implementation dependent·.

The following rules are applied to the input sequence:

  • Values of type xs:untypedAtomic in $arg are cast to xs:double.

  • Numeric values are converted to their least common type reachable by a combination of type promotion and subtype substitution. See Section B.1 Type PromotionXP and Section B.2 Operator MappingXP.

  • Values of type xs:anyURI are cast to xs:string

The items in the resulting sequence may be reordered in an arbitrary order. The resulting sequence is referred to below as the converted sequence. This function returns an item from the converted sequence rather than the input sequence.

If the converted sequence is empty, the empty sequence is returned.

All items in the converted sequence must be derived from a single base type for which the le operator is defined. In addition, the values in the sequence must have a total order. If date/time values do not have a timezone, they are considered to have the implicit timezone provided by the dynamic context for the purpose of comparison. Duration values must either all be xs:yearMonthDuration values or must all be xs:dayTimeDuration values.

If any of these conditions is not met, a type error is raised [err:FORG0006].

If the converted sequence contains the value NaN, the value NaN is returned.

If the items in the converted sequence are of type xs:string or types derived by restriction from xs:string, then the determination of the item with the smallest value is made according to the collation that is used. If the type of the items in the converted sequence is not xs:string and $collation is specified, the collation is ignored.

The collation used by the invocation of this function is determined according to the rules in 7.3.1 Collations.

Otherwise, the result of the function is the result of the expression:

   if (every $v in $c satisfies $c[1] le $v) 
   then $c[1] 
   else fn:min(fn:subsequence($c, 2))

evaluated with $collation as the default collation if specified, and with $c as the converted sequence.

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.10 The fn:min, fn:max, fn:avg, and fn:sum functionsFS.

Notes:

If the converted sequence contains exactly one value then that value is returned.

The default type when the fn:min function is applied to xs:untypedAtomic values is xs:double. This differs from the default type for operators such as lt, and for sorting in XQuery and XSLT, which is xs:string.

15.4.4.1 Examples
  • fn:min((3,4,5)) returns 3.

  • fn:min((5, 5.0e0)) returns 5.0e0.

  • fn:min((3,4,"Zero")) raises a type error [err:FORG0006].

  • fn:min((xs:float(0.0E0), xs:float(-0.0E0))) can return either positive or negative zero. [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] does not distinguish between the values positive zero and negative zero. The result is ·implementation dependent·.

  • fn:min((fn:current-date(), xs:date("2001-01-01"))) typically returns xs:date("2001-01-01").

  • fn:min(("a", "b", "c")) returns "a" under a typical default collation.

15.4.5 fn:sum

fn:sum($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType
fn:sum( $arg  as xs:anyAtomicType*,
$zero  as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:anyAtomicType?

Summary: Returns a value obtained by adding together the values in $arg. If $zero is not specified, then the value returned for an empty sequence is the xs:integer value 0. If $zero is specified, then the value returned for an empty sequence is $zero.

Any values of type xs:untypedAtomic in $arg are cast to xs:double. The items in the resulting sequence may be reordered in an arbitrary order. The resulting sequence is referred to below as the converted sequence.

If the converted sequence is empty, then the single-argument form of the function returns the xs:integer value 0; the two-argument form returns the value of the argument $zero.

If the converted sequence contains the value NaN, NaN is returned.

All items in $arg must be numeric or derived from a single base type. In addition, the type must support addition. Duration values must either all be xs:yearMonthDuration values or must all be xs:dayTimeDuration values. For numeric values, the numeric promotion rules defined in 6.2 Operators on Numeric Values are used to promote all values to a single common type. The sum of a sequence of integers will therefore be an integer, while the sum of a numeric sequence that includes at least one xs:double will be an xs:double.

If the above conditions are not met, a type error is raised [err:FORG0006].

Otherwise, the result of the function, using the second signature, is the result of the expression:

if (fn:count($c) eq 0) then
    $zero
else if (fn:count($c) eq 1) then
    $c[1]
else
    $c[1] + fn:sum(subsequence($c, 2))

where $c is the converted sequence.

The result of the function, using the first signature, is the result of the expression: fn:sum($arg, 0).

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.10 The fn:min, fn:max, fn:avg, and fn:sum functionsFS.

Notes:

The second argument allows an appropriate value to be defined to represent the sum of an empty sequence. For example, when summing a sequence of durations it would be appropriate to return a zero-length duration of the appropriate type. This argument is necessary because a system that does dynamic typing cannot distinguish "an empty sequence of integers", for example, from "an empty sequence of durations".

If the converted sequence contains exactly one value then that value is returned.

15.4.5.1 Examples

Assume:

$d1 = xs:yearMonthDuration("P20Y")
$d2 = xs:yearMonthDuration("P10M")
$seq1 = ($d1, $d2)
$seq3 = (3, 4, 5)
  • fn:sum(($d1, $d2)) returns an xs:yearMonthDuration with a value of 250 months.

  • fn:sum($seq1[. < xs:yearMonthDuration('P3M')], xs:yearMonthDuration('P0M')) returns an xs:yearMonthDuration with a value of 0 months.

  • fn:sum($seq3) returns 12.

  • fn:sum(()) returns 0.

  • fn:sum((),()) returns ().

  • fn:sum((1 to 100)[.<0], 0) returns 0.

  • fn:sum(($d1, 9E1)) raises an error [err:FORG0006].

15.5 Functions and Operators that Generate Sequences

Function Meaning
op:to Returns the sequence containing every xs:integer between the values of the operands.
fn:id Returns the sequence of element nodes having an ID value matching the one or more of the supplied IDREF values.
fn:idref Returns the sequence of element or attribute nodes with an IDREF value matching one or more of the supplied ID values.
fn:doc Returns a document node retrieved using the specified URI.
fn:doc-available Returns true if a document node can be retrieved using the specified URI.
fn:collection Returns a sequence of nodes retrieved using the specified URI or the nodes in the default collection.

15.5.1 op:to

op:to($firstval as xs:integer, $lastval as xs:integer) as xs:integer*

Summary: Returns the sequence containing every xs: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 greater than the value of the second, the empty sequence is returned. If the values of the two operands are equal, a sequence containing a single xs:integer equal to the value is returned.

This function backs up the "to" operator.

15.5.1.1 Examples
  • 1 to 3 returns (1, 2, 3)

  • 3 to 1 returns ()

  • 5 to 5 returns 5

15.5.2 fn:id

fn:id($arg as xs:string*) as element()*
fn:id($arg as xs:string*, $node as node()) as element()*

Summary: Returns the sequence of element nodes that have an ID value matching the value of one or more of the IDREF values supplied in $arg .

Note:

This function does not have the desired effect when searching a document in which elements of type xs:ID are used as identifiers. To preserve backwards compatibility, a new function fn:element-with-id is therefore being introduced; it behaves the same way as fn:id in the case of ID-valued attributes.

The function returns a sequence, in document order with duplicates eliminated, containing every element node E that satisfies all the following conditions:

  1. E is in the target document. The target document is the document containing $node, or the document containing the context item (.) if the second argument is omitted. The behavior of the function if $node is omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed as $node. If $node, or the context item if the second argument is omitted, is a node in a tree whose root is not a document node [err:FODC0001] is raised. If the second argument is the context item, or is omitted, the following errors may be raised: if there is no context item, [err:XPDY0002]XP; if the context item is not a node [err:XPTY0004]XP.

  2. E has an ID value equal to one of the candidate IDREF values, where:

    • An element has an ID value equal to V if either or both of the following conditions are true:

      • The is-id property (See Section 5.5 is-id AccessorDM.) of the element node is true, and the typed value of the element node is equal to V under the rules of the eq operator using the Unicode code point collation (http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint).

      • The element has an attribute node whose is-id property (See Section 5.5 is-id AccessorDM.) is true and whose typed value is equal to V under the rules of the eq operator using the Unicode code point collation (http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint).

    • Each xs:string in $arg is treated as a whitespace-separated sequence of tokens, each token acting as an IDREF. These tokens are then included in the list of candidate IDREF values. If any of the tokens is not a lexically valid IDREF (that is, if it is not lexically an xs:NCName), it is ignored. Formally, the candidate IDREF values are the strings in the sequence given by the expression:

      for $s in $arg return fn:tokenize(fn:normalize-space($s), ' ')
                       [. castable as xs:IDREF]
      
  3. If several elements have the same ID value, then E is the one that is first in document order.

Notes:

If the data model is constructed from an Infoset, an attribute will have the is-id property if the corresponding attribute in the Infoset had an attribute type of ID: typically this means the attribute was declared as an ID in a DTD.

If the data model is constructed from a PSVI, an element or attribute will have the is-id property if its typed value is a single atomic value of type xs:ID or a type derived by restriction from xs:ID.

No error is raised in respect of a candidate IDREF value that does not match the ID of any element in the document. If no candidate IDREF value matches the ID value of any element, the function returns the empty sequence.

It is not necessary that the supplied argument should have type xs:IDREF or xs:IDREFS, or that it should be derived from a node with the is-idrefs property.

An element may have more than one ID value. This can occur with synthetic data models or with data models constructed from a PSVI where the element and one of its attributes are both typed as xs:ID.

If the source document is well-formed but not valid, it is possible for two or more elements to have the same ID value. In this situation, the function will select the first such element.

It is also possible in a well-formed but invalid document to have an element or attribute that has the is-id property but whose value does not conform to the lexical rules for the xs:ID type. Such a node will never be selected by this function.

15.5.3 fn:idref

fn:idref($arg as xs:string*) as node()*
fn:idref($arg as xs:string*, $node as node()) as node()*

Summary: Returns the sequence of element or attribute nodes with an IDREF value matching the value of one or more of the ID values supplied in $arg.

The function returns a sequence, in document order with duplicates eliminated, containing every element or attribute node $N that satisfies all the following conditions:

  1. $N is in the target document. The target document is the document containing $node or the document containing the context item (.) if the second argument is omitted. The behavior of the function if $node is omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed as $node. If $node, or the context item if the second argument is omitted, is a node in a tree whose root is not a document node [err:FODC0001] is raised. If the second argument is the context item, or is omitted, the following errors may be raised: if there is no context item [err:XPDY0002]XP; if the context item is not a node [err:XPTY0004]XP.

  2. $N has an IDREF value equal to one of the candidate ID values, where:

    • A node $N has an IDREF value equal to V if both of the following conditions are true:

    • Each xs:string in $arg is parsed as if it were of lexically of type xs:ID. These xs:strings are then included in the list of candidate xs:IDs. If any of the strings in $arg is not a lexically valid xs:ID (that is, if it is not lexically an xs:NCName), it is ignored. More formally, the candidate ID values are the strings in the sequence

      $arg[. castable as xs:NCName]
      

Notes:

An element or attribute typically acquires the is-idrefs property by being validated against the schema type xs:IDREF or xs:IDREFS, or (for attributes only) by being described as of type IDREF or IDREFS in a DTD.

No error is raised in respect of a candidate ID value that does not match the IDREF value of any element or attribute in the document. If no candidate ID value matches the IDREF value of any element or attribute, the function returns the empty sequence.

It is possible for two or more nodes to have an IDREF value that matches a given candidate ID value. In this situation, the function will return all such nodes. However, each matching node will be returned at most once, regardless how many candidate ID values it matches.

It is possible in a well-formed but invalid document to have a node whose is-idrefs property is true but that does not conform to the lexical rules for the xs:IDREF type. The effect of the above rules is that ill-formed candidate ID values and ill-formed IDREF values are ignored.

If the data model is constructed from a PSVI, the typed value of a node that has the is-idrefs property will contain at least one atomic value of type xs:IDREF (or a type derived by restriction from xs:IDREF). It may also contain atomic values of other types. These atomic values are treated as candidate ID values if their lexical form is valid as an xs:NCName, and they are ignored otherwise.

15.5.4 fn:doc

fn:doc($uri as xs:string?) as document-node()?

Summary: Retrieves a document using a URI supplied as an xs:string, and returns the corresponding document node.

If $uri is the empty sequence, the result is an empty sequence.

If $uri is not a valid URI, an error may be raised [err:FODC0005].

If $uri is a relative URI reference, it is resolved relative to the value of the base URI property from the static context. The resulting absolute URI is promoted to an xs:string.

If the Available documents described in Section 2.1.2 Dynamic ContextXP provides a mapping from this string to a document node, the function returns that document node.

If the Available documents provides no mapping for the string, an error is raised [err:FODC0005].

The URI may include a fragment identifier.

By default, this function is ·stable·. Two calls on this function return the same document node if the same URI Reference (after resolution to an absolute URI Reference) is supplied to both calls. Thus, the following expression (if it does not raise an error) will always be true:

doc("foo.xml") is doc("foo.xml")

However, for performance reasons, implementations may provide a user option to evaluate the function without a guarantee of stability. The manner in which any such option is provided is implementation-defined. If the user has not selected such an option, a call of the function must either return a stable result or must raise an error: [err:FODC0003].

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.5 The fn:collection and fn:doc functionsFS.

Note:

If $uri is read from a source document, it is generally appropriate to resolve it relative to the base URI property of the relevant node in the source document. This can be achieved by calling the fn:resolve-uri function, and passing the resulting absolute URI as an argument to the fn:doc function.

If two calls to this function supply different absolute URI References as arguments, the same document node may be returned if the implementation can determine that the two arguments refer to the same resource.

By defining the semantics of this function in terms of a string-to-document-node mapping in the dynamic context, the specification is acknowledging that the results of this function are outside the purview of the language specification itself, and depend entirely on the run-time environment in which the expression is evaluated. This run-time environment includes not only an unpredictable collection of resources ("the web"), but configurable machinery for locating resources and turning their contents into document nodes within the XPath data model. Both the set of resources that are reachable, and the mechanisms by which those resources are parsed and validated, are ·implementation dependent·.

One possible processing model for this function is as follows. The resource identified by the URI Reference is retrieved. If the resource cannot be retrieved, an error is raised [err:FODC0002]. The data resulting from the retrieval action is then parsed as an XML document and a tree is constructed in accordance with the [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model]. If the top-level media type is known and is "text", the content is parsed in the same way as if the media type were text/xml; otherwise, it is parsed in the same way as if the media type were application/xml. If the contents cannot be parsed successfully, an error is raised [err:FODC0002]. Otherwise, the result of the function is the document node at the root of the resulting tree. This tree is then optionally validated against a schema.

Various aspects of this processing are ·implementation-defined·. Implementations may provide external configuration options that allow any aspect of the processing to be controlled by the user. In particular:

  • The set of URI schemes that the implementation recognizes is implementation-defined. Implementations may allow the mapping of URIs to resources to be configured by the user, using mechanisms such as catalogs or user-written URI handlers.

  • The handling of non-XML media types is implementation-defined. Implementations may allow instances of the data model to be constructed from non-XML resources, under user control.

  • It is ·implementation-defined· whether DTD validation and/or schema validation is applied to the source document.

  • Implementations may provide user-defined error handling options that allow processing to continue following an error in retrieving a resource, or in parsing and validating its content. When errors have been handled in this way, the function may return either an empty sequence, or a fallback document provided by the error handler.

  • Implementations may provide user options that relax the requirement for the function to return stable results.

15.5.5 fn:doc-available

fn:doc-available($uri as xs:string?) as xs:boolean

Summary: The function returns true if and only if the function call fn:doc($uri) would return a document node.

If $uri is an empty sequence, this function returns false.

If a call on fn:doc($uri) would return a document node, this function returns true.

If $uri is not a valid URI according to the rules applied by the implementation of fn:doc, an error is raised [err:FODC0005].

Otherwise, this function returns false.

If this function returns true, then calling fn:doc($uri) within the same ·execution scope· must return a document node. However, if non-stable processing has been selected for the fn:doc function, this guarantee is lost.

15.5.6 fn:collection

fn:collection() as node()*
fn:collection($arg as xs:string?) as node()*

Summary: This function takes an xs:string as argument and returns a sequence of nodes obtained by interpreting $arg as an xs:anyURI and resolving it according to the mapping specified in Available collections described in Section C.2 Dynamic Context ComponentsXP. If Available collections provides a mapping from this string to a sequence of nodes, the function returns that sequence. If Available collections maps the string to an empty sequence, then the function returns an empty sequence. If Available collections provides no mapping for the string, an error is raised [err:FODC0004]. If $arg is not specified, the function returns the sequence of the nodes in the default collection in the dynamic context. See Section C.2 Dynamic Context ComponentsXP. If the value of the default collection is undefined an error is raised [err:FODC0002].

If the $arg is a relative xs:anyURI, it is resolved against the value of the base-URI property from the static context. If $arg is not a valid xs:anyURI, an error is raised [err:FODC0004].

If $arg is the empty sequence, the function behaves as if it had been called without an argument. See above.

By default, this function is ·stable·. This means that repeated calls on the function with the same argument will return the same result. However, for performance reasons, implementations may provide a user option to evaluate the function without a guarantee of stability. The manner in which any such option is provided is ·implementation-defined·. If the user has not selected such an option, a call to this function must either return a stable result or must raise an error: [err:FODC0003].

For detailed type semantics, see Section 7.2.5 The fn:collection and fn:doc functionsFS.

Note:

This function provides a facility for users to work with a collection of documents which may be contained in a directory or rows of a Relational table or other implementation-specific construct. An implementation may also use external variables to identify external resources, but fn:collection() provides functionality not provided by external variables. Specifying resources using URIs is useful because URIs are dynamic, can be parameterized, and do not rely on an external environment.

15.5.7 fn:element-with-id

fn:element-with-id($arg as xs:string*) as element()*
fn:element-with-id($arg as xs:string*, $node as node()) as element()*

Summary: Returns the sequence of element nodes that have an ID value matching the value of one or more of the IDREF values supplied in $arg.

Note:

The fn:id function does not have the desired effect when searching a document in which elements of type xs:ID are used as identifiers. To preserve backwards compatibility, this function fn:element-with-id is therefore being introduced; it behaves the same way as fn:id in the case of ID-valued attributes.

Unless otherwise specified in the conformance rules for a host language, implementation of this function is optional. Introduction of the function by means of an erratum therefore does not make existing implementations non-conformant.

The function returns a sequence, in document order with duplicates eliminated, containing every element node E that satisfies all the following conditions:

  1. E is in the target document. The target document is the document containing $node, or the document containing the context item (.) if the second argument is omitted. The behavior of the function if $node is omitted is exactly the same as if the context item had been passed as $node. If $node, or the context item if the second argument is omitted, is a node in a tree whose root is not a document node [err:FODC0001] is raised. If the second argument is the context item, or is omitted, the following errors may be raised: if there is no context item, [err:XPDY0002]XP; if the context item is not a node [err:XPTY0004]XP.

  2. E has an ID value equal to one of the candidate IDREF values, where:

    • An element has an ID value equal to V if either or both of the following conditions are true:

      • The element has a child element node whose is-id property (See Section 5.5 is-id AccessorDM.) is true, and whose typed value is equal to V under the rules of the eq operator using the Unicode code point collation.

      • The element has an attribute node whose is-id property (See Section 5.5 is-id AccessorDM.) is true, and whose typed value is equal to V under the rules of the eq operator using the Unicode code point collation.

    • Each xs:string in $arg is treated as a whitespace-separated sequence of tokens, each acting as an IDREF. These tokens are then included in the list of candidate IDREF values. If any of the tokens is not a lexically valid IDREF (that is, if it is not lexically an xs:NCName), it is ignored. Formally, the candidate IDREF values are the strings in the sequence given by the expression:

      for $s in $arg return fn:tokenize(fn:normalize-space($s), ' ')[. castable as xs:IDREF]
      
  3. If several elements have the same ID value, then E is the one that is first in document order.

Notes:

See the Notes for the fn:id function, all of which apply equally to this function.

16 Context Functions

The following functions are defined to obtain information from the dynamic context.

Function Meaning
fn:position Returns the position of the context item within the sequence of items currently being processed.
fn:last Returns the number of items in the sequence of items currently being processed.
fn:current-dateTime Returns the current xs:dateTime.
fn:current-date Returns the current xs:date.
fn:current-time Returns the current xs:time.
fn:implicit-timezone Returns the value of the implicit timezone property from the dynamic context.
fn:default-collation Returns the value of the default collation property from the static context.
fn:static-base-uri Returns the value of the Base URI property from the static context.

16.1 fn:position

fn:position() as xs:integer

Summary: Returns the context position from the dynamic context. (See Section C.2 Dynamic Context ComponentsXP.) If the context item is undefined, an error is raised: [err:XPDY0002]XP.

16.2 fn:last

fn:last() as xs:integer

Summary: Returns the context size from the dynamic context. (See Section C.2 Dynamic Context ComponentsXP.) If the context item is undefined, an error is raised: [err:XPDY0002]XP.

16.3 fn:current-dateTime

fn:current-dateTime() as xs:dateTime

Summary: Returns the current dateTime (with timezone) from the dynamic context. (See Section C.2 Dynamic Context ComponentsXP.) This is an xs:dateTime that is current at some time during the evaluation of a query or transformation in which fn:current-dateTime() is executed. This function is ·stable·. The precise instant during the query or transformation represented by the value of fn:current-dateTime() is ·implementation dependent·.

16.3.1 Examples

  • fn:current-dateTime() returns an xs:dateTime corresponding to the current date and time. For example, an invocation of fn:current-dateTime() might return 2004-05-12T18:17:15.125Z corresponding to the current time on May 12, 2004 in timezone Z.

16.4 fn:current-date

fn:current-date() as xs:date

Summary: Returns xs:date(fn:current-dateTime()). This is an xs:date (with timezone) that is current at some time during the evaluation of a query or transformation in which fn:current-date() is executed. This function is ·stable·. The precise instant during the query or transformation represented by the value of fn:current-date() is ·implementation dependent·.

16.4.1 Examples

  • fn:current-date() returns an xs:date corresponding to the current date and time. For example, an invocation of fn:current-date() might return 2004-05-12+01:00.

16.5 fn:current-time

fn:current-time() as xs:time

Summary: Returns xs:time(fn:current-dateTime()). This is an xs:time (with timezone) that is current at some time during the evaluation of a query or transformation in which fn:current-time() is executed. This function is ·stable·. The precise instant during the query or transformation represented by the value of fn:current-time() is ·implementation dependent·.

16.5.1 Examples

  • fn:current-time() returns an xs:time corresponding to the current date and time. For example, an invocation of fn:current-time() might return 23:17:00.000-05:00.

16.6 fn:implicit-timezone

fn:implicit-timezone() as xs:dayTimeDuration

Summary: Returns the value of the implicit timezone property from the dynamic context. Components of the dynamic context are discussed in Section C.2 Dynamic Context ComponentsXP.

16.7 fn:default-collation

fn:default-collation() as xs:string

Summary: Returns the value of the default collation property from the static context. Components of the static context are discussed in Section C.1 Static Context ComponentsXP.

Note:

The default collation property can never be undefined. If it is not explicitly defined, a system defined default can be invoked. If this is not provided, the Unicode code point collation (http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions/collation/codepoint) is used.

16.8 fn:static-base-uri

fn:static-base-uri() as xs:anyURI?

Summary: Returns the value of the Base URI property from the static context. If the Base URI property is undefined, the empty sequence is returned. Components of the static context are discussed in Section C.1 Static Context ComponentsXP .

17 Casting

Constructor functions and cast expressions accept an expression and return a value of a given type. They both convert a source value, SV, of a source type, ST, to a target value, TV, of the given target type, TT, with identical semantics and different syntax. The name of the constructor function is the same as the name of the built-in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] datatype or the datatype defined in Section 2.6 TypesDM of [XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model] (see 5.1 Constructor Functions for XML Schema Built-in Types) or the user-derived datatype (see 5.4 Constructor Functions for User-Defined Types) that is the target for the conversion, and the semantics are exactly the same as for a cast expression; for example," xs:date("2003-01-01") " means exactly the same as " "2003-01-01" cast as xs:date? ".

The cast expression takes a type name to indicate the target type of the conversion. See Section 3.10.2 CastXP. If the type name allows the empty sequence and the expression to be cast is the empty sequence, the empty sequence is returned. If the type name does not allow the empty sequence and the expression to be cast is the empty sequence, a type error is raised [err:XPTY0004]XP.

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.

Casting from primitive type to primitive type is discussed in 17.1 Casting from primitive types to primitive types. Casting to derived types is discussed in 17.2 Casting to derived types. Casting from derived types is discussed in 17.3 Casting from derived types to parent types, 17.4 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy and 17.5 Casting across the type hierarchy.

When casting from xs:string the semantics in 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic apply, regardless of target type.

17.1 Casting from primitive types to primitive types

This section defines casting between the 19 primitive types defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] as well as xs:untypedAtomic, xs:integer and the two derived types of xs:duration (xs:yearMonthDuration and xs:dayTimeDuration). These four types are not primitive types but they are treated as primitive types in this section. The type conversions that are supported 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 succeed for some values in the value space and fails for others.

[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] defines xs:NOTATION as an abstract type. Thus, casting to xs:NOTATION from any other type including xs:NOTATION is not permitted and raises [err:XPST0080]XP. However, casting from one subtype of xs:NOTATION to another subtype of xs:NOTATION is permitted.

Casting is not supported to or from xs:anySimpleType. Thus, there is no row or column for this type in the table below. For any node that has not been validated or has been validated as xs:anySimpleType, the typed value of the node is an atomic value of type xs:untypedAtomic. There are no atomic values with the type annotation xs:anySimpleType at runtime. Casting to a type that is not atomic raises [err:XPST0051]XP.

Similarly, casting is not supported to or from xs:anyAtomicType and will raise error [err:XPST0080]XP. There are no atomic values with the type annotation xs:anyAtomicType at runtime, although this can be a statically inferred type.

If casting is attempted from an ST to a TT for which casting is not supported, as defined in the table below, a type error is raised [err:XPTY0004]XP.

In the following table, the columns and rows are identified by short codes that identify simple types as follows:

uA = xs:untypedAtomic
aURI = xs:anyURI
b64 = xs:base64Binary
bool = xs:boolean
dat = xs:date
gDay = xs:gDay
dbl = xs:double
dec = xs:decimal
dT = xs:dateTime
dTD = xs:dayTimeDuration
dur = xs:duration
flt = xs:float
hxB = xs:hexBinary
gMD = xs:gMonthDay
gMon = xs:gMonth
int = xs:integer
NOT = xs:NOTATION
QN = xs:QName
str = xs:string
tim = xs:time
gYM = xs:gYearMonth
yMD = xs:yearMonthDuration
gYr = xs:gYear

In the following table, the notation "S\T" indicates that the source ("S") of the conversion is indicated in the column below the notation and that the target ("T") is indicated in the row to the right of the notation.

S\T uA str flt dbl dec int dur yMD dTD dT tim dat gYM gYr gMD gDay gMon bool b64 hxB aURI QN NOT
uA Y Y M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M N N
str Y Y M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M
flt Y Y Y Y M M N N N N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N
dbl Y Y Y Y M M N N N N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N
dec Y Y Y Y Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N
int Y Y Y Y Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N
dur Y Y N N N N Y Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N N
yMD Y Y N N N N Y Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N N
dTD Y Y N N N N Y Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N N
dT Y Y N N N N N N N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N N N N N N
tim Y Y N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N N N N N N N N
dat Y Y N N N N N N N Y N Y Y Y Y Y Y N N N N N N
gYM Y Y N N N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N N N N N N
gYr Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N N N N N
gMD Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N N N N
gDay Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N N N
gMon Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N N
bool Y Y Y Y Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N Y N N N N N
b64 Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N Y Y N N N
hxB Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N Y Y N N N
aURI Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N Y N N
QN Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N Y N
NOT Y Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N M

The following sub-sections define the semantics of casting from a primitive type to a primitive type. Semantics of casting to and from a derived type are defined in sections 17.2 Casting to derived types, 17.3 Casting from derived types to parent types, 17.4 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy and 17.5 Casting across the type hierarchy.

17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic

When the supplied value is an instance of xs:string or an instance of xs:untypedAtomic, it is treated as being a string value and mapped to a typed value of the target type as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]. Whitespace normalization is applied as indicated by the whiteSpace facet for the datatype. The resulting whitespace-normalized string must be a valid lexical form for the datatype. The semantics of casting are identical to XML Schema validation. For example, "13" cast as xs:unsignedInt returns the xs:unsignedInt typed value 13. This could also be written xs:unsignedInt("13").

When casting from xs:string or xs:untypedAtomic to a derived type where the derived type is restricted by a pattern facet, the lexical form is first checked against the pattern before further casting is attempted (See 17.2 Casting to derived types). If the lexical form does not conform to the pattern, error [err:FORG0001] is raised.

Consider a user-defined Schema whose target namespace is bound to the prefix mySchema which defines a restriction of xs:boolean called trueBool which allows only the lexical forms "1" and "0". "true" cast as mySchema:trueBool would fail with [err:FORG0001]. If the Schema also defines a datatype called height as a restriction of xs:integer with a maximum value of 84 then "100" cast as mySchema:height would also fail with [err:FORG0001].

Casting is permitted from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic to any primitive atomic type or any atomic type derived by restriction, except xs:QName or xs:NOTATION. Casting to xs:NOTATION is not permitted because it is an abstract type.

Casting is permitted from xs:string literals to xs:QName and types derived from xs:NOTATION. If the argument to such a cast is computed dynamically, [err:XPTY0004]XP is raised if the value is of any type other than xs:QName or xs:NOTATION respectively (including the case where it is an xs:string). The process is described in more detail in 5.3 Constructor Functions for xs:QName and xs:NOTATION.

In casting to numerics, if the value is too large or too small to be accurately represented by the implementation, it is handled as an overflow or underflow as defined in 6.2 Operators on Numeric Values.

In casting to xs:decimal or to a type derived from xs:decimal, if the value is not too large or too small but nevertheless cannot be represented accurately with the number of decimal digits available to the implementation, the implementation may round to the nearest representable value or may raise a dynamic error [err:FOCA0006]. The choice of rounding algorithm and the choice between rounding and error behavior and is implementation-defined.

In casting to xs:date, xs:dateTime, xs:gYear, or xs:gYearMonth (or types derived from these), if the value is too large or too small to be represented by the implementation, error [err:FODT0001] is raised.

In casting to a duration value, if the value is too large or too small to be represented by the implementation, error [err:FODT0002] is raised.

For xs:anyURI, the extent to which an implementation validates the lexical form of xs:anyURI is ·implementation dependent·.

If the cast fails for any other reason, error [err:FORG0001] is raised.

17.1.2 Casting to xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic

Casting is permitted from any primitive type to the primitive types xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

When a value of any simple type is cast as xs:string, the derivation of the xs:string value TV depends on the ST and on the SV, as follows.

  • If ST is xs:string or a type derived from xs:string, TV is SV.

  • If ST is xs:anyURI, the type conversion is performed without escaping any characters.

  • If ST is xs:QName or xs:NOTATION:

    • if the qualified name has a prefix, then TV is the concatenation of the prefix of SV, a single colon (:), and the local name of SV.

    • otherwise TV is the local-name.

  • If ST is a numeric type, the following rules apply:

    • If ST is xs:integer, TV is the canonical lexical representation of SV as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]. There is no decimal point.

    • If ST is xs:decimal, then:

      • If SV is in the value space of xs:integer, that is, if there are no significant digits after the decimal point, then the value is converted from an xs:decimal to an xs:integer and the resulting xs:integer is converted to an xs:string using the rule above.

      • Otherwise, the canonical lexical representation of SV is returned, as defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition].

    • If ST is xs:float or xs:double, then:

      • TV will be an xs:string in the lexical space of xs:double or xs:float that when converted to an xs:double or xs:float under the rules of 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic produces a value that is equal to SV, or is "NaN" if SV is NaN. In addition, TV must satisfy the constraints in the following sub-bullets.

        • If SV has an absolute value that is greater than or equal to 0.000001 (one millionth) and less than 1000000 (one million), then the value is converted to an xs:decimal and the resulting xs:decimal is converted to an xs:string according to the rules above, as though using an implementation of xs:decimal that imposes no limits on the totalDigits or fractionDigits facets.

        • If SV has the value positive or negative zero, TV is "0" or "-0" respectively.

        • If SV is positive or negative infinity, TV is the string "INF" or "-INF" respectively.

        • In other cases, the result consists of a mantissa, which has the lexical form of an xs:decimal, followed by the letter "E", followed by an exponent which has the lexical form of an xs:integer. Leading zeroes and "+" signs are prohibited in the exponent. For the mantissa, there must be a decimal point, and there must be exactly one digit before the decimal point, which must be non-zero. The "+" sign is prohibited. There must be at least one digit after the decimal point. Apart from this mandatory digit, trailing zero digits are prohibited.

      Note:

      The above rules allow more than one representation of the same value. For example, the xs:float value whose exact decimal representation is 1.26743223E15 might be represented by any of the strings "1.26743223E15", "1.26743222E15" or "1.26743224E15" (inter alia). It is implementation-dependent which of these representations is chosen.

  • If ST is xs:dateTime, xs:date or xs:time, TV is the local value. The components of TV are individually cast to xs:string using the functions described in [casting-to-datetimes] and the results are concatenated together. The year component is cast to xs:string using eg:convertYearToString. The month, day, hour and minute components are cast to xs:string using eg:convertTo2CharString. The second component is cast to xs:string using eg:convertSecondsToString. The timezone component, if present, is cast to xs:string using eg:convertTZtoString.

    Note that the hours component of the resulting string will never be "24". Midnight is always represented as "00:00:00".

  • If ST is xs:yearMonthDuration or xs:dayTimeDuration, TV is the canonical representation of SV as defined in 10.3.1 xs:yearMonthDuration or 10.3.2 xs:dayTimeDuration, respectively.

  • If ST is xs:duration then let SYM be SV cast as xs:yearMonthDuration, and let SDT be SV cast as xs:dayTimeDuration; Now, let the next intermediate value, TYM, be SYM cast as TT, and let TDT be SDT cast as TT. If TYM is "P0M", then TV is TDT. Otherwise, TYM and TDT are merged according to the following rules:

    1. If TDT is "PT0S", then TV is TYM.

    2. Otherwise, TV is the concatenation of all the characters in TYM and all the characters except the first "P" and the optional negative sign in TDT.

  • In all other cases, TV is the [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] canonical representation of SV. For datatypes that do not have a canonical lexical representation defined an ·implementation dependent· canonical representation may be used.

To cast as xs:untypedAtomic the value is cast as xs:string, as described above, and the type annotation changed to xs:untypedAtomic.

Note:

The string representations of numeric values are backwards compatible with XPath 1.0 except for the special values positive and negative infinity, negative zero and values outside the range 1.0e-6 to 1.0e+6.

17.1.3 Casting to numeric types

17.1.3.1 Casting to xs:float

When a value of any simple type is cast as xs:float, the xs:float TV is derived from the ST and the SV as follows:

  • If ST is xs:float, then TV is SV and the conversion is complete.

  • If ST is xs:double, then TV is obtained as follows:

    • if SV is the xs:double value INF, -INF, NaN, positive zero, or negative zero, then TV is the xs:float value INF, -INF, NaN, positive zero, or negative zero respectively.

    • otherwise, SV can be expressed in the form m × 2^e where the mantissa m and exponent e are signed xs:integers whose value range is defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition], and the following rules apply:

      • if m (the mantissa of SV) is outside the permitted range for the mantissa of an xs:float value (-2^24-1 to +2^24-1), then it is divided by 2^N where N is the lowest positive xs:integer that brings the result of the division within the permitted range, and the exponent e is increased by N. This is integer division (in effect, the binary value of the mantissa is truncated on the right). Let M be the mantissa and E the exponent after this adjustment.

      • if E exceeds 104 (the maximum exponent value in the value space of xs:float) then TV is the xs:float value INF or -INF depending on the sign of M.

      • if E is less than -149 (the minimum exponent value in the value space of xs:float) then TV is the xs:float value positive or negative zero depending on the sign of M

      • otherwise, TV is the xs:float value M × 2^E.

  • If ST is xs:decimal, or xs:integer, then TV is xs:float( SV cast as xs:string) and the conversion is complete.

  • If ST is xs:boolean, SV is converted to 1.0E0 if SV is true and to 0.0E0 if SV is false and the conversion is complete.

  • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

Note:

Implementations ·may· return negative zero for "-0.0E0" cast as xs:float. [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] does not distinguish between the values positive zero and negative zero.

17.1.3.2 Casting to xs:double

When a value of any simple type is cast as xs:double, the xs:double value TV is derived from the ST and the SV as follows:

  • If ST is xs:double, then TV is SV and the conversion is complete.

  • If ST is xs:float or a type derived from xs:float, then TV is obtained as follows:

    • if SV is the xs:float value INF, -INF, NaN, positive zero, or negative zero, then TV is the xs:double value INF, -INF, NaN, positive zero, or negative zero respectively.

    • otherwise, SV can be expressed in the form m × 2^e where the mantissa m and exponent e are signed xs:integer values whose value range is defined in [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition], and TV is the xs:double value m × 2^e.

  • If ST is xs:decimal or xs:integer, then TV is xs:double( SV cast as xs:string) and the conversion is complete.

  • If ST is xs:boolean, SV is converted to 1.0E0 if SV is true and to 0.0E0 if SV is false and the conversion is complete.

  • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

Note:

Implementations ·may· return negative zero for "-0.0E0" cast as xs:double. [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] does not distinguish between the values positive zero and negative zero.

17.1.3.3 Casting to xs:decimal

When a value of any simple type is cast as xs:decimal, the xs:decimal value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

  • If ST is xs:decimal, xs:integer or a type derived from them, then TV is SV, converted to an xs:decimal value if need be, and the conversion is complete.

  • If ST is xs:float or xs:double, then TV is the xs:decimal value, within the set of xs:decimal values that the implementation is capable of representing, that is numerically closest to SV. If two values are equally close, then the one that is closest to zero is chosen. If SV is too large to be accommodated as an xs:decimal, (see [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] for ·implementation-defined· limits on numeric values) an error is raised [err:FOCA0001]. If SV is one of the special xs:float or xs:double values NaN, INF, or -INF, an error is raised [err:FOCA0002].

  • If ST is xs:boolean, SV is converted to 1.0 if SV is 1 or true and to 0.0 if SV is 0 or false and the conversion is complete.

  • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

17.1.3.4 Casting to xs:integer

When a value of any simple type is cast as xs:integer, the xs:integer value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

  • If ST is xs:integer, or a type derived from xs:integer, then TV is SV, converted to an xs:integer value if need be, and the conversion is complete.

  • If ST is xs:decimal, xs:float or xs:double, then TV is SV with the fractional part discarded and the value converted to xs:integer. Thus, casting 3.1456 returns 3 and -17.89 returns -17. Casting 3.124E1 returns 31. If SV is too large to be accommodated as an integer, (see [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] for ·implementation-defined· limits on numeric values) an error is raised [err:FOCA0003]. If SV is one of the special xs:float or xs:double values NaN, INF, or -INF, an error is raised [err:FOCA0002].

  • If ST is xs:boolean, SV is converted to 1 if SV is 1 or true and to 0 if SV is 0 or false and the conversion is complete.

  • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

17.1.4 Casting to duration types

When a value of type xs:untypedAtomic, xs:string, a type derived from xs:string, xs:yearMonthDuration or xs:dayTimeDuration is cast as xs:duration, xs:yearMonthDuration or xs:dayTimeDuration, TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

  • If ST is the same as TT, then TV is SV.

  • If ST is xs:duration, or a type derived from xs:duration, but not xs:dayTimeDuration or a type derived from xs:dayTimeDuration, and TT is xs:yearMonthDuration, then TV is derived from SV by removing the day, hour, minute and second components from SV.

  • If ST is xs:duration, or a type derived from duration, but not xs:yearMonthDuration or a type derived from xs:yearMonthDuration, and TT is xs:dayTimeDuration, then TV is derived from SV by removing the year and month components from SV.

  • If ST is xs:yearMonthDuration or xs:dayTimeDuration, and TT is xs:duration, then TV is derived from SV as discussed in 17.3 Casting from derived types to parent types.

  • If ST is xs:yearMonthDuration and TT is xs:dayTimeDuration, the cast is permitted and returns a xs:dayTimeDuration with value 0.0 seconds.

  • If ST is xs:dayTimeDuration and TT is xs:yearMonthDuration, the cast is permitted and returns a xs:yearMonthDuration with value 0 months.

  • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

Note that casting from xs:duration to xs:yearMonthDuration or xs:dayTimeDuration loses information. To avoid this, users can cast the xs:duration value to both an xs:yearMonthDuration and an xs:dayTimeDuration and work with both values.

17.1.5 Casting to date and time types

In several situations, casting to date and time types requires the extraction of a component from SV or from the result of fn:current-dateTime and converting it to an xs:string. These conversions must follow certain rules. For example, converting an xs:integer year value requires converting to an xs:string with four or more characters, preceded by a minus sign if the value is negative.

This document defines four functions to perform these conversions. These functions are for illustrative purposes only and make no recommendations as to style or efficiency. References to these functions from the following text are not normative.

The arguments to these functions come from functions defined in this document. Thus, the functions below assume that they are correct and do no range checking on them.

declare function eg:convertYearToString($year as xs:integer) as xs:string
{
   let $plusMinus := if ($year >= 0) then "" else "-"
   let $yearString := fn:abs($year) cast as xs:string
   let $length := fn:string-length($yearString)
   return
     if ($length = 1)  then fn:concat($plusMinus, "000", $yearString)
     else
     if ($length = 2)  then fn:concat($plusMinus, "00", $yearString)
       else
       if ($length = 3)  then fn:concat($plusMinus, "0", $yearString)
       else fn:concat($plusMinus, $yearString)
}
                    
declare function eg:convertTo2CharString($value as xs:integer) as xs:string
{
   let $string := $value cast as xs:string
   return 
     if (fn:string-length($string) = 1) then fn:concat("0", $string)
     else $string
}
                    
declare function eg:convertSecondsToString($seconds as xs:decimal) as xs:string
{
   let $string := $seconds cast as xs:string
   let $intLength := fn:string-length(($seconds cast as xs:integer) cast as xs:string)
   return 
     if ($intLength = 1) then fn:concat("0", $string)
     else $string
}
                    
declare function eg:convertTZtoString($tz as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:string
{
   if (empty($tz)) 
     then ""
   else if ($tz eq xs:dayTimeDuration('PT0S'))
     then "Z"
   else 
     let $tzh := fn:hours-from-duration($tz)
     let $tzm := fn:minutes-from-duration($tz)
     let $plusMinus := if ($tzh >= 0) then "+" else "-"
     let $tzhString := eg:convertTo2CharString(fn:abs($tzh))
     let $tzmString := eg:convertTo2CharString(fn:abs($tzm))
     return fn:concat($plusMinus, $tzhString, ":", $tzmString)
}

                    

Conversion from primitive types to date and time types follows the rules below.

  1. When a value of any primitive type is cast as xs:dateTime, the xs:dateTime value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

    • If ST is xs:dateTime, then TV is SV.

    • If ST is xs:date, then let SYR be eg:convertYearToString( fn:year-from-date( SV )), let SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:month-from-date( SV )), let SDA be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:day-from-date( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-date( SV )); TV is xs:dateTime( fn:concat( SYR , '-', SMO , '-', SDA , 'T00:00:00 ', STZ ) ).

    • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

  2. When a value of any primitive type is cast as xs:time, the xs:time value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

    • If ST is xs:time, then TV is SV.

    • If ST is xs:dateTime, then TV is xs:time( fn:concat( eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:hours-from-dateTime( SV )), ':', eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:minutes-from-dateTime( SV )), ':', eg:convertSecondsToString( fn:seconds-from-dateTime( SV )), eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-dateTime( SV )) )).

    • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

  3. When a value of any primitive type is cast as xs:date, the xs:date value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

    • If ST is xs:date, then TV is SV.

    • If ST is xs:dateTime, then let SYR be eg:convertYearToString( fn:year-from-dateTime( SV )), let SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:month-from-dateTime( SV )), let SDA be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:day-from-dateTime( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString(fn:timezone-from-dateTime( SV )); TV is xs:date( fn:concat( SYR , '-', SMO , '-', SDA, STZ ) ).

    • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

  4. When a value of any primitive type is cast as xs:gYearMonth, the xs:gYearMonth value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

    • If ST is xs:gYearMonth, then TV is SV.

    • If ST is xs:dateTime, then let SYR be eg:convertYearToString( fn:year-from-dateTime( SV )), let SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:month-from-dateTime( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-dateTime( SV )); TV is xs:gYearMonth( fn:concat( SYR , '-', SMO, STZ ) ).

    • If ST is xs:date, then let SYR be eg:convertYearToString( fn:year-from-date( SV )), let SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:month-from-date( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-date( SV )); TV is xs:gYearMonth( fn:concat( SYR , '-', SMO, STZ ) ).

    • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

  5. When a value of any primitive type is cast as xs:gYear, the xs:gYear value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

    • If ST is xs:gYear, then TV is SV.

    • If ST is xs:dateTime, let SYR be eg:convertYearToString( fn:year-from-dateTime( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-dateTime( SV )); TV is xs:gYear(fn:concat( SYR, STZ )).

    • If ST is xs:date, let SYR be eg:convertYearToString( fn:year-from-date( SV )); and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-date( SV )); TV is xs:gYear(fn:concat( SYR, STZ )).

    • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

  6. When a value of any primitive type is cast as xs:gMonthDay, the xs:gMonthDay value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

    • If ST is xs:gMonthDay, then TV is SV.

    • If ST is xs:dateTime, then let SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:month-from-dateTime( SV )), let SDA be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:day-from-dateTime( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-dateTime( SV )); TV is xs:gYearMonth( fn:concat( '--', SMO '-', SDA, STZ ) ).

    • If ST is xs:date, then let SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:month-from-date( SV )), let SDA be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:day-from-date( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-date( SV )); TV is xs:gYearMonth( fn:concat( '--', SMO , '-', SDA, STZ ) ).

    • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

  7. When a value of any primitive type is cast as xs:gDay, the xs:gDay value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

    • If ST is xs:gDay, then TV is SV.

    • If ST is xs:dateTime, then let SDA be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:day-from-dateTime( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-dateTime( SV )); TV is xs:gDay( fn:concat( '---', SDA, STZ )).

    • If ST is xs:date, then let SDA be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:day-from-date( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-date( SV )); TV is xs:gDay( fn:concat( '---', SDA, STZ )).

    • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

  8. When a value of any primitive type is cast as xs:gMonth, the xs:gMonth value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

    • If ST is xs:gMonth, then TV is SV.

    • If ST is xs:dateTime, then let SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:month-from-dateTime( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-dateTime( SV )); TV is xs:gMonth( fn:concat( '--' , SMO, STZ )).

    • If ST is xs:date, then let SMO be eg:convertTo2CharString( fn:month-from-date( SV )) and let STZ be eg:convertTZtoString( fn:timezone-from-date( SV )); TV is xs:gMonth( fn:concat( '--', SMO, STZ )).

    • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

17.1.6 Casting to xs:boolean

When a value of any primitive type is cast as xs:boolean, the xs:boolean value TV is derived from ST and SV as follows:

  • If ST is xs:boolean, then TV is SV.

  • If ST is xs:float, xs:double, xs:decimal or xs:integer and SV is 0, +0, -0, 0.0, 0.0E0 or NaN, then TV is false.

  • If ST is xs:float, xs:double, xs:decimal or xs:integer and SV is not one of the above values, then TV is true.

  • If ST is xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string, see 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

17.1.7 Casting to xs:base64Binary and xs:hexBinary

Values of type xs:base64Binary can be cast as xs:hexBinary and vice versa, since the two types have the same value space. Casting to xs:base64Binary and xs:hexBinary is also supported from the same type and from xs:untypedAtomic, xs:string and subtypes of xs:string using [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] semantics.

17.1.8 Casting to xs:anyURI

Casting to xs:anyURI is supported only from the same type, xs:untypedAtomic or xs:string.

When a value of any primitive type is cast as xs:anyURI, the xs:anyURI value TV is derived from the ST and SV as follows:

17.2 Casting to derived types

Casting a value to a derived type can be separated into four cases. Note that xs:untypedAtomic, xs:integer and the two derived types of xs:duration:xs:yearMonthDuration and xs:dayTimeDuration are treated as primitive types.

  1. When SV is an instance of a type that is derived by restriction from TT. This is described in section 17.3 Casting from derived types to parent types.

  2. When SV is an instance of a type derived by restriction from the same primitive type as TT. This is described in 17.4 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy.

  3. When the derived type is derived, directly or indirectly, from a different primitive type than the primitive type of ST. This is described in 17.5 Casting across the type hierarchy.

  4. When SV is an instance of the TT, the cast always succeeds (Identity cast).

17.3 Casting from derived types to parent types

Except in the case of xs:NOTATION, it is always possible to cast a value of any atomic type to an atomic type from which it is derived, directly or indirectly, by restriction. For example, it is possible to cast an xs:unsignedShort to an xs:unsignedInt, an xs:integer, or an xs: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 the same value as the original, but will have a new type annotation.

17.4 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy

It is possible to cast an SV to a TT if the type of the SV and the TT type are both derived by restriction (directly or indirectly) from the same primitive type, provided that the supplied value conforms to the constraints implied by the facets of the target type. This includes the case where the target type is derived from the type of the supplied value, as well as the case where the type of the supplied value is derived from the target type. For example, an instance of xs:byte can be cast as xs:unsignedShort, provided the value is not negative.

If the value does not conform to the facets defined for the target type, then an error is raised [err:FORG0001]. See [XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition]. In the case of the pattern facet (which applies to the lexical space rather than the value space), the pattern is tested against the canonical lexical representation of the value, as defined for the source type (or the result of casting the value to an xs:string, in the case of types that have no canonical lexical representation defined for them).

Note that this will cause casts to fail if the pattern excludes the canonical lexical representation of the source type. For example, if the type my:distance is defined as a restriction of xs:decimal with a pattern that requires two digits after the decimal point, casting of an xs:integer to my:distance will always fail, because the canonical representation of an xs:integer does not conform to this pattern.

In some cases, casting from a parent type to a derived type requires special rules. See 17.1.4 Casting to duration types for rules regarding casting to xs:yearMonthDuration and xs:dayTimeDuration. See 17.4.1 Casting to xs:ENTITY, below, for casting to xs:ENTITY and types derived from it.

17.4.1 Casting to xs:ENTITY

[XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition] says that "The value space of ENTITY is the set of all strings that match the NCName production ... and have been declared as an unparsed entity in a document type definition." However, [XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0] and [XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language] do not check that constructed values of type xs:ENTITY match declared unparsed entities. Thus, this rule is relaxed in this specification and, in casting to xs:ENTITY and types derived from it, no check is made that the values correspond to declared unparsed entities.

17.5 Casting across the type hierarchy

When the ST and the TT are derived, directly or indirectly, from different primitive types, this is called casting across the type hierarchy. Casting across the type hierarchy is logically equivalent to three separate steps performed in order. Errors can occur in either of the latter two steps.

  1. Cast the SV, up the hierarchy, to the primitive type of the source, as described in 17.3 Casting from derived types to parent types.

    1. If SV is an instance of xs:string or xs:untypedAtomic, check its value against the pattern facet of TT, and raise an error [err:FORG0001] if the check fails.

  2. Cast the value to the primitive type of TT, as described in 17.1 Casting from primitive types to primitive types.

    • If TT is derived from xs:NOTATION, assume for the purposes of this rule that casting to xs:NOTATION succeeds.

  3. Cast the value down to the TT, as described in 17.4 Casting within a branch of the type hierarchy

A References

A.1 Normative References

IEEE 754-1985
IEEE. IEEE Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic.
Locale Data Markup Language
Unicode Technical Standard #35, Locale Data Markup Language. Available at: http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr35/
RFC 2396
IETF. RFC 2396: Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax. Available at: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt
RFC 3986
IETF. RFC 3986: Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax. Available at: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3986.txt
RFC 3987
IETF. RFC 3987: Internationalized Resource Identifiers (IRIs). Available at: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt
Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Fundamentals
Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Fundamentals. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/2005/REC-charmod-20050215/
Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Normalization
Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Normalization, Last Call Working Draft. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/2005/WD-charmod-norm-20051027/
ISO 10967
ISO (International Organization for Standardization). ISO/IEC 10967-1:1994, Information technology—Language Independent Arithmetic—Part 1: Integer and floating point arithmetic [Geneva]: International Organization for Standardization, 1994. Available from: http://www.iso.org/
The Unicode Standard
The Unicode Consortium, Reading, MA, Addison-Wesley, 2003. The Unicode Standard as updated from time to time by the publication of new versions. See http://www.unicode.org/standard/versions/ for the latest version and additional information on versions of the standard and of the Unicode Character Database. The version of Unicode to be used is ·implementation-defined·, but implementations are recommended to use the latest Unicode version; currently, Version 4.0.00, Addison-Wesley, 2003 ISBN 0-321-18578-1
Unicode Collation Algorithm
Unicode Technical Standard #10, Unicode Collation Algorithm. Available at: http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr10/
Unicode Regular Expressions
Unicode Technical Standard #18, Unicode Regular Expressions. Available at: http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr18/
Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 Recommendation (Third Edition)
World Wide Web Consortium. Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 Third Edition. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml/
Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1 Recommendation
World Wide Web Consortium. Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xml11-20040204/
XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0
World Wide Web Consortium. XML Path Language (XPath) Version 2.0. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath20/
XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0
World Wide Web Consortium. XSL Transformations Version 2.0. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt20/
XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model
World Wide Web Consortium. XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model (XDM). Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath-datamodel/
XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Formal Semantics
World Wide Web Consortium. XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Formal Semantics. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery-semantics/
XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language
World Wide Web Consortium. XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery/
XML Schema Part 1: Structures Second Edition
XML Schema Part 1: Structures Second Edition, Oct 28 2004. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-1/
XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition
XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition, Oct. 28 2004. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/
Namespaces in XML
Namespaces in XML. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xml-names-19990114/

A.2 Non-normative References

HTML 4.0
HTML 4.01 Recommendation, 24 December 1999. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/
ISO 8601
ISO (International Organization for Standardization). Representations of dates and times, 2000-08-03. Available from: http://www.iso.org/"
Working With Timezones
World Wide Web Consortium Working Group Note. Working With Timezones, October 13, 2005. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/2005/NOTE-timezone-20051013/
XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0
World Wide Web Consortium. XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0 Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath/

B Error Summary

The error text provided with these errors is non-normative.

err:FOER0000, Unidentified error.

Unidentified error.

err:FOAR0001, Division by zero.

This error is raised whenever an attempt is made to divide by zero.

err:FOAR0002, Numeric operation overflow/underflow.

This error is raised whenever numeric operations result in an overflow or underflow.

err:FOCA0001, Input value too large for decimal.
err:FOCA0002, Invalid lexical value.
err:FOCA0003, Input value too large for integer.
err:FOCA0005, NaN supplied as float/double value.
err:FOCA0006, String to be cast to decimal has too many digits of precision.
err:FOCH0001, Code point not valid.
err:FOCH0002, Unsupported collation.
err:FOCH0003, Unsupported normalization form.
err:FOCH0004, Collation does not support collation units.
err:FODC0001, No context document.
err:FODC0002, Error retrieving resource.
err:FODC0003, Function stability not defined.
err:FODC0004, Invalid argument to fn:collection.
err:FODC0005, Invalid argument to fn:doc or fn:doc-available.
err:FODT0001, Overflow/underflow in date/time operation.
err:FODT0002, Overflow/underflow in duration operation.
err:FODT0003, Invalid timezone value.
err:FONS0004, No namespace found for prefix.
err:FONS0005, Base-uri not defined in the static context.
err:FORG0001, Invalid value for cast/constructor.
err:FORG0002, Invalid argument to fn:resolve-uri().
err:FORG0003, fn:zero-or-one called with a sequence containing more than one item.
err:FORG0004, fn:one-or-more called with a sequence containing no items.
err:FORG0005, fn:exactly-one called with a sequence containing zero or more than one item.
err:FORG0006, Invalid argument type.
err:FORG0008, The two arguments to fn:dateTime have inconsistent timezones.
err:FORG0009, Error in resolving a relative URI against a base URI in fn:resolve-uri.
err:FORX0001, Invalid regular expression flags.
err:FORX0002, Invalid regular expression.
err:FORX0003, Regular expression matches zero-length string.
err:FORX0004, Invalid replacement string.
err:FOTY0012, Argument node does not have a typed value.

C Compatibility with XPath 1.0 (Non-Normative)

This appendix summarizes the relationship between certain functions defined in [XML Path Language (XPath) Version 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. The second column provides the signature of the corresponding function in [XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0]. The third column discusses the differences in the semantics of the corresponding functions. The functions appear in the order they appear in [XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0].

The evaluation of the arguments to the functions defined in this document depends on whether the XPath 1.0 compatibility mode is on or off. See [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0]. If the mode is on, the following conversions are applied, in order, before the argument value is passed to the function:

XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 XPath 1.0 Notes
fn:last() as xs:integer
last() => number Precision of numeric results may be different.
fn:position() as xs:integer
position() => number Precision of numeric results may be different.
fn:count($arg as item*) as xs:integer
count(node-set) => number Precision of numeric results may be different.
fn:id($arg as xs:string*) as element()*
id(object) => node-set XPath 2.0 behavior is different for boolean and numeric arguments. The recognition of a node as an id value is sensitive to the manner in which the datamodel is constructed. In XPath 1.0 the whole string is treated as a unit. In XPath 2.0 each string is treated as a list.
fn:local-name() as xs:string
local-name(node-set?) => string If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if argument has more than one node.
fn:local-name($arg as node()?) as xs:string
fn:namespace-uri() as xs:string
namespace-uri(node-set?) => string If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if argument has more than one node.
fn:namespace-uri($arg as node?) as xs:string
fn:name($arg as node()?) as xs:string
name(node-set?) => string If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if argument has more than one node. The rules for determining the prefix are more precisely defined in [XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0]. Function is not "well-defined" for parentless attribute nodes.
fn:string() as xs:string
string(object) => string If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if argument has more than one node. Representations of numeric values are XPath 1.0 compatible except for the special values positive and negative infinity, and for values outside the range 1.0e-6 to 1.0e+6.
fn:string($arg as item()?) as xs:string
fn:concat( $arg1  as xs:anyAtomicType?,
$arg2  as xs:anyAtomicType?,
... ) as xs:string
concat(string, string, string*) => string If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if an argument has more than one node. If compatibility mode on, the first node in the sequence is used.
fn:starts-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
starts-with(string, string) => boolean If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if either argument has more than one node or is a number or a boolean. If compatibility mode is on, implicit conversion is performed.
fn:starts-with( $arg1  as xs:string?,
$arg2  as xs:string?,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:boolean
fn:contains($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
contains(string, string) => boolean If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if either argument has more than one node or is a number or a boolean. If compatibility mode is on, implicit conversion is performed.
fn:contains( $arg1  as xs:string?,
$arg2  as xs:string?,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:boolean
fn:substring-before($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:string
substring-before(string, string) => string If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if either argument has more than one node or is a number or a boolean. If compatibility mode is on, implicit conversion is performed.
fn:substring-before( $arg1  as xs:string?,
$arg2  as xs:string?,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:string
fn:substring-after($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:string
substring-after(string, string) => string If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if either argument has more than one node or is a number or a boolean. If compatibility mode is on, implicit conversion is performed.
fn:substring-after( $arg1  as xs:string?,
$arg2  as xs:string?,
$collation  as xs:string) as xs:string
fn:substring( $sourceString  as xs:string?,
$startingLoc  as xs:double) as xs:string
substring(string, number, number?) => string If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if $sourceString has more than one node or is a number or a boolean. If compatibility mode is on, implicit conversion is performed.
fn:substring( $sourceString  as xs:string?,
$startingLoc  as xs:double,
$length  as xs:double) as xs:string
fn:string-length($arg as xs:string?) as xs:integer?
string-length(string?) => number If compatibility mode is off, numbers and booleans will give errors for first arg. Also, multiple nodes will give error.
fn:string-length() as xs:integer?
fn:normalize-space($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string
normalize-space(string?) => string If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur if $arg has more than one node or is a number or a boolean. If compatibility mode is on, implicit conversion is performed.
fn:normalize-space() as xs:string
fn:translate( $arg  as xs:string?,
$mapString  as xs:string,
$transString  as xs:string) as xs:string
translate(string, string, string)=> string .
fn:boolean($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean
boolean(object) => boolean
fn:not($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean
not(boolean) => boolean
fn:true() as xs:boolean
true() => boolean
fn:false() as xs:boolean
false() => boolean
fn:lang($testlang as xs:string) as xs:boolean
lang(string) => boolean If compatibility mode is off, numbers and booleans will give errors. Also, multiple nodes will give error. If compatibility mode is on, implicit conversion is performed.
fn:number() as xs:double
number(object?) => number Error if argument has more than one node when not in compatibility node.
fn:number($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:double
fn:sum($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType
sum(node-set) => number 2.0 raises an error if sequence contains values that cannot be added together such as NMTOKENS and other subtypes of string. 1.0 returns NaN.
fn:floor($arg as numeric?) as numeric?
floor(number)=> number In 2.0, if argument is (), the result is (). In 1.0, the result is NaN. If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur with more than one node. If compatibility mode is on, implicit conversion is performed.
fn:ceiling($arg as numeric?) as numeric?
ceiling(number)=> number In 2.0, if argument is (), the result is (). In 1.0, the result is NaN. If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur with more than one node. If compatibility mode is on, implicit conversion is performed.
fn:round($arg as numeric?) as numeric?
round(number)=> number In 2.0, if argument is (), the result is (). In 1.0, the result is NaN. If compatibility mode is off, an error will occur with more than one node. If compatibility mode is on, implicit conversion is performed.

D Illustrative User-written Functions (Non-Normative)

Certain functions that were proposed for inclusion in this function library have been excluded on the basis that it is straightforward for users to implement these functions themselves using XSLT 2.0 or XQuery 1.0.

This Appendix provides sample implementations of some of these functions.

To emphasize that these functions are examples of functions that vendors may write, their names carry the prefix 'eg'. Vendors are free to define such functions in any namespace. A group of vendors may also choose to create a collection of such useful functions and put them in a common namespace.

D.1 eg:if-empty and eg:if-absent

In some situations, users may want to provide default values for missing information that may be signaled by elements that are omitted, have no value or have the empty sequence as their value. For example, a missing middle initial may be indicated by omitting the element or a non-existent bonus signaled with an empty sequence. This section includes examples of functions that provide such defaults. These functions return xs:anyAtomicType*. Users may want to write functions that return more specific types.

D.1.1 eg:if-empty

eg:if-empty( $node  as node()?,
$value  as xs:anyAtomicType) as xs:anyAtomicType*

If the first argument is the empty sequence or an element without simple or complex content, if-empty() returns the second argument; otherwise, it returns the content of the first argument.

XSLT implementation

<xsl:function name="eg:if-empty" as="xs:anyAtomicType*">
  <xsl:param name="node" as="node()?"/>
  <xsl:param name="value" as="xs:anyAtomicType"/>
  <xsl:choose>
    <xsl:when test="$node and $node/child::node()">
      <xsl:sequence select="fn:data($node)"/>
    </xsl:when>
    <xsl:otherwise>
      <xsl:sequence select="$value"/>
    </xsl:otherwise>
  </xsl:choose>
</xsl:function>

XQuery implementation

declare function eg:if-empty (
  $node as node()?,
  $value as xs:anyAtomicType) as xs:anyAtomicType* 
{
  if ($node and $node/child::node())
            then fn:data($node)
            else $value
}
                    

D.1.2 eg:if-absent

eg:if-absent( $node  as node()?,
$value  as xs:anyAtomicType) as xs:anyAtomicType*

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" as="node()?"/>
  <xsl:param name="value" as="xs:anyAtomicType"/>
  <xsl:choose>
    <xsl:when test="$node">
      <xsl:sequence select="fn:data($node)"/>
    </xsl:when>
    <xsl:otherwise>
      <xsl:sequence select="$value"/>
    </xsl:otherwise>
  </xsl:choose>
</xsl:function>

XQuery implementation

declare function eg:if-absent (
  $node as node()?,
  $value as xs:anyAtomicType) as xs:anyAtomicType* 
{
  if ($node)
    then fn:data($node)
    else $value
}
                    

D.2 union, intersect and except on sequences of values

D.2.1 eg:value-union

eg:value-union( $arg1  as xs:anyAtomicType*,
$arg2  as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType*

This function returns a sequence containing all the distinct items in $arg1 and $arg2, in an undefined order.

XSLT implementation

xsl:function name="eg:value-union" as="xs:anyAtomicType*">
  <xsl:param name="arg1" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/>
  <xsl:param name="arg2" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/>
  <xsl:sequence
     select="fn:distinct-values(($arg1, $arg2))"/> 
</xsl:function>

XQuery implementation

declare function eg:value-union (
  $arg1 as xs:anyAtomicType*,
  $arg2 as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType* 
{
  fn:distinct-values(($arg1, $arg2))
}
                    

D.2.2 eg:value-intersect

eg:value-intersect( $arg1  as xs:anyAtomicType*,
$arg2  as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType*

This function returns a sequence containing all the distinct items that appear in both $arg1 and $arg2, in an undefined order.

XSLT implementation>

<xsl:function name="eg:value-intersect" as="xs:anyAtomicType*">
  <xsl:param name="arg1" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/>
  <xsl:param name="arg2" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/>
  <xsl:sequence 
     select="fn:distinct-values($arg1[.=$arg2])"/>
</xsl:function>

XQuery implementation

declare function eg:value-intersect (
  $arg1 as xs:anyAtomicType*,
  $arg2 as xs:anyAtomicType* ) as xs:anyAtomicType* 
{
  fn:distinct-values($arg1[.=$arg2])
}
                    

D.2.3 eg:value-except

eg:value-except( $arg1  as xs:anyAtomicType*,
$arg2  as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType*

This function returns a sequence containing all the distinct items that appear in $arg1 but not in $arg2, in an undefined order.

XSLT implementation

<xsl:function name="eg:value-except" as="xs:anyAtomicType*">
  <xsl:param name="arg1" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/>
  <xsl:param name="arg2" as="xs:anyAtomicType*"/>
  <xsl:sequence
     select="fn:distinct-values($arg1[not(.=$arg2)])"/>
</xsl:function>

XQuery implementation

declare function eg:value-except (
  $arg1 as xs:anyAtomicType*,
  $arg2 as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType* 
{
  fn:distinct-values($arg1[not(.=$arg2)])
}

D.3 eg:index-of-node

eg:index-of-node($seqParam as node()*, $srchParam as node()) as xs:integer*

This function returns a sequence of positive integers giving the positions within the sequence $seqParam of nodes that are identical to $srchParam.

The nodes in the sequence $seqParam are compared with $srchParam under the rules for the is operator. If a node compares identical, then the position of that node in the sequence $srchParam is included in the result.

If the value of $seqParam is the empty sequence, or if no node in $seqParam matches $srchParam, then the empty sequence is returned.

The index is 1-based, not 0-based.

The result sequence is in ascending numeric order.

XSLT implementation

<xsl:function name="eg:index-of-node" as="xs:integer*">
  <xsl:param name="sequence" as="node()*"/>
  <xsl:param name="srch" as="node()"/>
  <xsl:for-each select="$sequence">
    <xsl:if test=". is $srch">
       <xsl:sequence select="position()"/>
    </xsl:if>
  </xsl:for-each>
</xsl:function>

XQuery implementation

declare function eg:index-of-node($sequence as node()*, $srch as node()) as xs:integer* 
{
  for $n at $i in $sequence where ($n is $srch) return $i
}

D.4 eg:string-pad

eg:string-pad($padString as xs:string?, $padCount as xs:integer) as xs:string

Returns a xs:string consisting of a given number of copies of an xs:string argument concatenated together.

XSLT implementation

<xsl:function name="eg:string-pad" as="xs:string">
  <xsl:param name="padString" as="xs:string?"/>
  <xsl:param name="padCount" as="xs:integer"/>
  <xsl:sequence select="fn:string-join((for $i in 1 to $padCount 
                                    return $padString), '')"/>
 </xsl:function>
                

XQuery implementation

declare function eg:string-pad (
  $padString as xs:string?,
  $padCount as xs:integer) as xs:string 
{
   fn:string-join((for $i in 1 to $padCount return $padString), "")
}

                

This returns the zero-length string if $padString is the empty sequence, which is consistent with the general principle that if an xs:string argument is the empty sequence it is treated as if it were the zero-length string.

D.5 eg:distinct-nodes-stable

fn:eg:distinct-nodes-stable($arg as node()*) as node()*

This function illustrates one possible implementation of a distinct-nodes function. It removes duplicate nodes by identity, preserving the first occurrence of each node.

XPath

$arg[empty(subsequence($arg, 1, position()-1) intersect .)]
                

XSLT implementation

<xsl:function name="eg:distinct-nodes-stable" as="node()*">
  <xsl:param name="arg" as="node()*"/>
  <xsl:sequence 
    select="$arg[empty(subsequence($arg, 1, position()-1) intersect .)]"/> </xsl:function>
                

XQuery implementation

declare function distinct-nodes-stable ($arg as node()*) as node()* 
{ 
   for $a at $apos in $arg 
   let $before_a := fn:subsequence($arg, 1, $apos - 1) 
   where every $ba in $before_a satisfies not($ba is $a) 
   return $a 
}

E Checklist of Implementation-Defined Features (Non-Normative)

This appendix provides a summary of features defined in this specification whose effect is explicitly ·implementation-defined·. The conformance rules require vendors to provide documentation that explains how these choices have been exercised.

  1. The destination of the trace output is ·implementation-defined·. See 4 The Trace Function.

  2. For xs:integer operations, implementations that support limited-precision integer operations ·must· either raise an error [err:FOAR0002] or provide an ·implementation-defined· mechanism that allows users to choose between raising an error and returning a result that is modulo the largest representable integer value. See 6.2 Operators on Numeric Values.

  3. For xs:decimal values the number of digits of precision returned by the numeric operators is ·implementation-defined·. See 6.2 Operators on Numeric Values. See also 17.1.3.3 Casting to xs:decimal and 17.1.3.4 Casting to xs:integer

  4. If the number of digits in the result of a numeric operation exceeds the number of digits that the implementation supports, the result is truncated or rounded in an ·implementation-defined· manner. See 6.2 Operators on Numeric Values. See also 17.1.3.3 Casting to xs:decimal and 17.1.3.4 Casting to xs:integer

  5. It is ·implementation-defined· which version of Unicode is supported by the features defined in this specification, but it is recommended that the most recent version of Unicode be used. See 7.1 String Types.

  6. For 7.4.6 fn:normalize-unicode, conforming implementations ·must· support normalization form "NFC" and ·may· support normalization forms "NFD", "NFKC", "NFKD", "FULLY-NORMALIZED". They ·may· also support other normalization forms with ·implementation-defined· semantics.

  7. The ability to decompose strings into collation units suitable for substring matching is an ·implementation-defined· property of a collation. See 7.5 Functions Based on Substring Matching.

  8. All minimally conforming processors ·must· support year values with a minimum of 4 digits (i.e., YYYY) and a minimum fractional second precision of 1 millisecond or three digits (i.e., s.sss). However, conforming processors ·may· set larger ·implementation-defined· limits on the maximum number of digits they support in these two situations. See 10.1.1 Limits and Precision.

  9. The result of casting a string to xs:decimal, when the resulting value is not too large or too small but nevertheless has too many decimal digits to be accurately represented, is implementation-defined. See 17.1.1 Casting from xs:string and xs:untypedAtomic.

  10. Various aspects of the processing provided by 15.5.4 fn:doc are ·implementation-defined·. Implementations may provide external configuration options that allow any aspect of the processing to be controlled by the user.

  11. The manner in which implementations provide options to weaken the ·stable· characteristic of 15.5.6 fn:collection and 15.5.4 fn:doc are ·implementation-defined·.

F Changes since the First Edition (Non-Normative)

The changes made to this document are described in detail in the Errata to the first edition. The rationale for each erratum is explained in the corresponding Bugzilla database entry. The following table summarizes the errata that have been applied.

Erratum Bugzilla Category Description
E1 4373 substantive In fn:resolve-uri it is unclear what happens when the supplied base URI is a relative reference
E2 4384 editorial The description of fn:subsequence contains a spurious variable $p
E3 4385 markup An example under fn:idref is incorrectly formatted
E4 4106 4634 substantive The regex specification allows a back-reference within square brackets, which is meaningless. Furthermore, the specification doesn't say what happens when a regular expression contains a back-reference to a non-existent subexpression.
E5 4448 editorial The function signatures for the internal functions op:subtract-dates and op:subtract-dateTimes incorrectly allow an empty sequence as the return value.
E6 4471 substantive Casting from date and time type to string represents the UTC timezone as "+00:00" rather than as "Z". This erratum changes the representation to "Z".
E7 4543 substantive The meaning of the regex flag "m" is unclear when the last character in the string is a newline
E8 4545 editorial A character code confuses decimal and hexadecimal notation
E9 4549 editorial In Appendix D, the function signature of the fn:translate function is quoted incorrectly.
E10 4874 editorial In 17.1.2, the procedure for casting xs:NOTATION to xs:string does not work because it uses functions that are defined only on xs:QName.
E11 4874 editorial Although the specification states that a string literal can be cast to an xs:QName or xs:NOTATION, the semantics of the operation are not described in the obvious place. This erratum adds a cross-reference.
E12 4621 substantive When multiplying or dividing a yearMonthDuration by a number, rounding behavior is underspecified.
E13 4519 editorial The conditions under which a node has the is-id or is-idref property need to be clarified. (See also corresponding erratum DM.E005 to XDM)
E14 4974 editorial In fn:normalize-space, a sentence with multiple conditions is ambiguously worded. To solve the problem, the relevant sentence can be simplified, because it doesn't need to say what happens when the argument is "." and there is no context item; that's covered in the rules for evaluating ".".
E15 5235 editorial In fn:namespace-uri, the terminology "the namespace URI of the xs:QName of $arg" is incorrect. It's not clear that it's referring to the name of the node, rather than (say) its type annotation.
E16 5246 markup In fn:lang, the list item numbers (1) and (2) are duplicated.
E17 5251 substantive In fn:starts-with and fn:ends-with, the requirement that there should be a minimal match at the start of the string gives unacceptable results. Any match suffices.
E18 5271 editorial In the (non-normative) appendix summarizing error conditions, the description of code FORG0008 is misleading.
E19 5284 editorial Typo in the description of the fn:concat function.
E20 5287 editorial Errors in examples for the function op:duration-equal.
E21 5597 markup Errors in examples for the function fn:string-join.
E22 5618 editorial Narrative for fn:namespace-uri-from-QName refers to xs:string rather than xs:anyURI.
E23 5617 editorial Summary of op:unary-plus and op:unary-minus ignores the possibility of type promotion.
E24 4106 4634 5348 substantive The regex specification allows a back-reference within square brackets, which is meaningless. Furthermore, the specification doesn't say what happens when a regular expression contains a back-reference to a non-existent subexpression.
E25 5719 editorial Misplaced full stop in (non-normative) error text for error FORX0001
E26 5688 substantive The doc() and doc-available() functions are unclear on the rules for validating the first argument. They also mandate that invalid URIs should always be rejected: this runs against the practice of many implementations, which often allow strings that are not valid URIs to be dereferenced, for example by the use of a catalog. Note: this change indirectly affects the rules for the document() function in XSLT, which refers normatively to the doc() function
E27 5671 editorial The rules for fn:min() and fn:max() are not entirely clear about the type of the returned result.
E28 5706 editorial It is unclear what happens when implementation limits are exceeded in casting to xs:gYear or xs:gYearMonth.
E29 6306 substantive In the description of fn:idref, fn:normalize-space needs to be applied to the string value of the node, not to its typed value.
E30 6212 substantive The behavior of the idiv operator is unclear in situations involving rounding or overflow.
E31 6028 6591 substantive The fn:id() function does not have the correct semantics when dealing with ID-valued elements. The resolution of this problem is to retain the behavior of fn:id() as specified, while introducing a new function fn:element-with-id() whose behavior reflects the intended meaning of ID-valued elements. To avoid making existing implementations non-conformant, the new function is optional.
E32 6124 editorial Code in illustrative functions for casting to dates and times uses fn:length in place of fn:string-length.
E33 6316 6212 editorial The behaviour of the idiv operator is unclear in situations involving rounding or overflow, and it is not stated clearly what the result of idiv is when the second operand is infinity.
E34 6338 editorial In fn:string-length, a sentence with multiple conditions is ambiguously worded. To solve the problem, the relevant sentence can be simplified, because it doesn't need to say what happens when the argument is "." and there is no context item; that's covered in the rules for evaluating ".". (See also erratum E14)
E35 6342 editorial Missing closing quote in example of op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration
E36 6346 editorial Misleading example of fn:number
E37 6347 editorial Missing closing parenthesis in description of fn:local-name
E38 6348 editorial Incorrect duration syntax in example code
E39 6355 editorial Incorrect example for op:divide-dayTimeDuration (uses wrong type name)
E40 6359 editorial Incorrect example for op:gMonth-equal (missing closing parenthesis)
E41 6371 editorial Unclear scenario for example of fn:index-of
E42 6372 substantive The rules for comparing namespace nodes in fn:deep-equal() are inappropriate, for example they can lead to a node not being equal to itself.
E43 6375 editorial It is not explicitly stated that notes and examples are non-normative
E44 5183 substantive The distinct-values() function has problems caused by non-transitivity of the eq operator
E45 6344 editorial Typographical error in the explanation of an example of op:gYearEqual()
E46 6345 editorial The word "Summary" is repeated in the specification of op:gMonthDayEqual()
E47 5671 editorial The rules for fn:min() and fn:max() appear contradictory about whether the input sequence is allowed to contain a mixture of xs:string and xs:anyURI values. (This erratum relates to the problem identified in comment #9 of the Bugzilla entry.)
E48 6591 editorial The reference to xs:IDREFS in the description of fn:id() is misleading, since xs:IDREFS has a minLength of 1.

G Function and Operator Quick Reference (Non-Normative)

G.1 Functions and Operators by Section

2 Accessors
2.1 fn:node-name
fn:node-name($arg as node()?) as xs:QName?
2.2 fn:nilled
fn:nilled($arg as node()?) as xs:boolean?
2.3 fn:string
fn:string() as xs:string
fn:string($arg as item()?) as xs:string
2.4 fn:data
fn:data($arg as item()*) as xs:anyAtomicType*
2.5 fn:base-uri
fn:base-uri() as xs:anyURI?
fn:base-uri($arg as node()?) as xs:anyURI?
2.6 fn:document-uri
fn:document-uri($arg as node()?) as xs:anyURI?
3 The Error Function
fn:error() as none
fn:error($error as xs:QName) as none
fn:error($error as xs:QName?, $description as xs:string) as none
fn:error($error as xs:QName?, $description as xs:string, $error-object as item()*) as none
4 The Trace Function
fn:trace($value as item()*, $label as xs:string) as item()*
5 Constructor Functions
5.2 A Special Constructor Function for xs:dateTime
fn:dateTime($arg1 as xs:date?, $arg2 as xs:time?) as xs:dateTime?
6 Functions and Operators on Numerics
6.2 Operators on Numeric Values
op:numeric-add($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric
op:numeric-subtract($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric
op:numeric-multiply($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric
op:numeric-divide($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric
op:numeric-integer-divide($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:integer
op:numeric-mod($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric
op:numeric-unary-plus($arg as numeric) as numeric
op:numeric-unary-minus($arg as numeric) as numeric
6.3 Comparison Operators on Numeric Values
op:numeric-equal($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:boolean
op:numeric-less-than($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:boolean
op:numeric-greater-than($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:boolean
6.4 Functions on Numeric Values
fn:abs($arg as numeric?) as numeric?
fn:ceiling($arg as numeric?) as numeric?
fn:floor($arg as numeric?) as numeric?
fn:round($arg as numeric?) as numeric?
fn:round-half-to-even($arg as numeric?) as numeric?
fn:round-half-to-even($arg as numeric?, $precision as xs:integer) as numeric?
7 Functions on Strings
7.2 Functions to Assemble and Disassemble Strings
fn:codepoints-to-string($arg as xs:integer*) as xs:string
fn:string-to-codepoints($arg as xs:string?) as xs:integer*
7.3 Equality and Comparison of Strings
fn:compare($comparand1 as xs:string?, $comparand2 as xs:string?) as xs:integer?
fn:compare($comparand1 as xs:string?, $comparand2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:integer?
fn:codepoint-equal($comparand1 as xs:string?, $comparand2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean?
7.4 Functions on String Values
fn:concat($arg1 as xs:anyAtomicType?, $arg2 as xs:anyAtomicType?, ...) as xs:string
fn:string-join($arg1 as xs:string*, $arg2 as xs:string) as xs:string
fn:substring($sourceString as xs:string?, $startingLoc as xs:double) as xs:string
fn:substring($sourceString as xs:string?, $startingLoc as xs:double, $length as xs:double) as xs:string
fn:string-length() as xs:integer
fn:string-length($arg as xs:string?) as xs:integer
fn:normalize-space() as xs:string
fn:normalize-space($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:normalize-unicode($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:normalize-unicode($arg as xs:string?, $normalizationForm as xs:string) as xs:string
fn:upper-case($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:lower-case($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:translate($arg as xs:string?, $mapString as xs:string, $transString as xs:string) as xs:string
fn:encode-for-uri($uri-part as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:iri-to-uri($iri as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:escape-html-uri($uri as xs:string?) as xs:string
7.5 Functions Based on Substring Matching
fn:contains($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
fn:contains($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:boolean
fn:starts-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
fn:starts-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:boolean
fn:ends-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
fn:ends-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:boolean
fn:substring-before($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:substring-before($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:string
fn:substring-after($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:string
fn:substring-after($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:string
7.6 String Functions that Use Pattern Matching
fn:matches($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string) as xs:boolean
fn:matches($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string, $flags as xs:string) as xs:boolean
fn:replace($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string, $replacement as xs:string) as xs:string
fn:replace($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string, $replacement as xs:string, $flags as xs:string) as xs:string
fn:tokenize($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string) as xs:string*
fn:tokenize($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string, $flags as xs:string) as xs:string*
8 Functions on anyURI
8.1 fn:resolve-uri
fn:resolve-uri($relative as xs:string?) as xs:anyURI?
fn:resolve-uri($relative as xs:string?, $base as xs:string) as xs:anyURI?
9 Functions and Operators on Boolean Values
9.1 Additional Boolean Constructor Functions
fn:true() as xs:boolean
fn:false() as xs:boolean
9.2 Operators on Boolean Values
op:boolean-equal($value1 as xs:boolean, $value2 as xs:boolean) as xs:boolean
op:boolean-less-than($arg1 as xs:boolean, $arg2 as xs:boolean) as xs:boolean
op:boolean-greater-than($arg1 as xs:boolean, $arg2 as xs:boolean) as xs:boolean
9.3 Functions on Boolean Values
fn:not($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean
10 Functions and Operators on Durations, Dates and Times
10.4 Comparison Operators on Duration, Date and Time Values
op:yearMonthDuration-less-than($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:boolean
op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:boolean
op:dayTimeDuration-less-than($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:boolean
op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:boolean
op:duration-equal($arg1 as xs:duration, $arg2 as xs:duration) as xs:boolean
op:dateTime-equal($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dateTime) as xs:boolean
op:dateTime-less-than($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dateTime) as xs:boolean
op:dateTime-greater-than($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dateTime) as xs:boolean
op:date-equal($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:boolean
op:date-less-than($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:boolean
op:date-greater-than($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:boolean
op:time-equal($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:boolean
op:time-less-than($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:boolean
op:time-greater-than($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:boolean
op:gYearMonth-equal($arg1 as xs:gYearMonth, $arg2 as xs:gYearMonth) as xs:boolean
op:gYear-equal($arg1 as xs:gYear, $arg2 as xs:gYear) as xs:boolean
op:gMonthDay-equal($arg1 as xs:gMonthDay, $arg2 as xs:gMonthDay) as xs:boolean
op:gMonth-equal($arg1 as xs:gMonth, $arg2 as xs:gMonth) as xs:boolean
op:gDay-equal($arg1 as xs:gDay, $arg2 as xs:gDay) as xs:boolean
10.5 Component Extraction Functions on Durations, Dates and Times
fn:years-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?
fn:months-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?
fn:days-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?
fn:hours-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?
fn:minutes-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?
fn:seconds-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:decimal?
fn:year-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?
fn:month-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?
fn:day-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?
fn:hours-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?
fn:minutes-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?
fn:seconds-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:decimal?
fn:timezone-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:dayTimeDuration?
fn:year-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:integer?
fn:month-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:integer?
fn:day-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:integer?
fn:timezone-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:dayTimeDuration?
fn:hours-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:integer?
fn:minutes-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:integer?
fn:seconds-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:decimal?
fn:timezone-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:dayTimeDuration?
10.6 Arithmetic Operators on Durations
op:add-yearMonthDurations($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:yearMonthDuration
op:subtract-yearMonthDurations($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:yearMonthDuration
op:multiply-yearMonthDuration($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:double) as xs:yearMonthDuration
op:divide-yearMonthDuration($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:double) as xs:yearMonthDuration
op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:decimal
op:add-dayTimeDurations($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dayTimeDuration
op:subtract-dayTimeDurations($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dayTimeDuration
op:multiply-dayTimeDuration($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:double) as xs:dayTimeDuration
op:divide-dayTimeDuration($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:double) as xs:dayTimeDuration
op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:decimal
10.7 Timezone Adjustment Functions on Dates and Time Values
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:dateTime?
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone($arg as xs:dateTime?, $timezone as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:dateTime?
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone($arg as xs:date?) as xs:date?
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone($arg as xs:date?, $timezone as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:date?
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone($arg as xs:time?) as xs:time?
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone($arg as xs:time?, $timezone as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:time?
10.8 Arithmetic Operators on Durations, Dates and Times
op:subtract-dateTimes($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dateTime) as xs:dayTimeDuration
op:subtract-dates($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:dayTimeDuration
op:subtract-times($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:dayTimeDuration
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:dateTime
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dateTime
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:dateTime
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dateTime
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:date
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:date
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:date
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:date
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:time
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:time
11 Functions Related to QNames
11.1 Additional Constructor Functions for QNames
fn:resolve-QName($qname as xs:string?, $element as element()) as xs:QName?
fn:QName($paramURI as xs:string?, $paramQName as xs:string) as xs:QName
11.2 Functions and Operators Related to QNames
op:QName-equal($arg1 as xs:QName, $arg2 as xs:QName) as xs:boolean
fn:prefix-from-QName($arg as xs:QName?) as xs:NCName?
fn:local-name-from-QName($arg as xs:QName?) as xs:NCName?
fn:namespace-uri-from-QName($arg as xs:QName?) as xs:anyURI?
fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix($prefix as xs:string?, $element as element()) as xs:anyURI?
fn:in-scope-prefixes($element as element()) as xs:string*
12 Operators on base64Binary and hexBinary
12.1 Comparisons of base64Binary and hexBinary Values
op:hexBinary-equal($value1 as xs:hexBinary, $value2 as xs:hexBinary) as xs:boolean
op:base64Binary-equal($value1 as xs:base64Binary, $value2 as xs:base64Binary) as xs:boolean
13 Operators on NOTATION
13.1 Operators on NOTATION
op:NOTATION-equal($arg1 as xs:NOTATION, $arg2 as xs:NOTATION) as xs:boolean
14 Functions and Operators on Nodes
14.1 fn:name
fn:name() as xs:string
fn:name($arg as node()?) as xs:string
14.2 fn:local-name
fn:local-name() as xs:string
fn:local-name($arg as node()?) as xs:string
14.3 fn:namespace-uri
fn:namespace-uri() as xs:anyURI
fn:namespace-uri($arg as node()?) as xs:anyURI
14.4 fn:number
fn:number() as xs:double
fn:number($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:double
14.5 fn:lang
fn:lang($testlang as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
fn:lang($testlang as xs:string?, $node as node()) as xs:boolean
14.6 op:is-same-node
op:is-same-node($parameter1 as node(), $parameter2 as node()) as xs:boolean
14.7 op:node-before
op:node-before($parameter1 as node(), $parameter2 as node()) as xs:boolean
14.8 op:node-after
op:node-after($parameter1 as node(), $parameter2 as node()) as xs:boolean
14.9 fn:root
fn:root() as node()
fn:root($arg as node()?) as node()?
15 Functions and Operators on Sequences
15.1 General Functions and Operators on Sequences
fn:boolean($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean
op:concatenate($seq1 as item()*, $seq2 as item()*) as item()*
fn:index-of($seqParam as xs:anyAtomicType*, $srchParam as xs:anyAtomicType) as xs:integer*
fn:index-of($seqParam as xs:anyAtomicType*, $srchParam as xs:anyAtomicType, $collation as xs:string) as xs:integer*
fn:empty($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean
fn:exists($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean
fn:distinct-values($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType*
fn:distinct-values($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*, $collation as xs:string) as xs:anyAtomicType*
fn:insert-before($target as item()*, $position as xs:integer, $inserts as item()*) as item()*
fn:remove($target as item()*, $position as xs:integer) as item()*
fn:reverse($arg as item()*) as item()*
fn:subsequence($sourceSeq as item()*, $startingLoc as xs:double) as item()*
fn:subsequence($sourceSeq as item()*, $startingLoc as xs:double, $length as xs:double) as item()*
fn:unordered($sourceSeq as item()*) as item()*
15.2 Functions That Test the Cardinality of Sequences
fn:zero-or-one($arg as item()*) as item()?
fn:one-or-more($arg as item()*) as item()+
fn:exactly-one($arg as item()*) as item()
15.3 Equals, Union, Intersection and Except
fn:deep-equal($parameter1 as item()*, $parameter2 as item()*) as xs:boolean
fn:deep-equal($parameter1 as item()*, $parameter2 as item()*, $collation as string) as xs:boolean
op:union($parameter1 as node()*, $parameter2 as node()*) as node()*
op:intersect($parameter1 as node()*, $parameter2 as node()*) as node()*
op:except($parameter1 as node()*, $parameter2 as node()*) as node()*
15.4 Aggregate Functions
fn:count($arg as item()*) as xs:integer
fn:avg($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType?
fn:max($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType?
fn:max($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*, $collation as string) as xs:anyAtomicType?
fn:min($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType?
fn:min($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*, $collation as string) as xs:anyAtomicType?
fn:sum($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType
fn:sum($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*, $zero as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:anyAtomicType?
15.5 Functions and Operators that Generate Sequences
op:to($firstval as xs:integer, $lastval as xs:integer) as xs:integer*
fn:id($arg as xs:string*) as element()*
fn:id($arg as xs:string*, $node as node()) as element()*
fn:idref($arg as xs:string*) as node()*
fn:idref($arg as xs:string*, $node as node()) as node()*
fn:doc($uri as xs:string?) as document-node()?
fn:doc-available($uri as xs:string?) as xs:boolean
fn:collection() as node()*
fn:collection($arg as xs:string?) as node()*
fn:element-with-id($arg as xs:string*) as element()*
fn:element-with-id($arg as xs:string*, $node as node()) as element()*
16 Context Functions
16.1 fn:position
fn:position() as xs:integer
16.2 fn:last
fn:last() as xs:integer
16.3 fn:current-dateTime
fn:current-dateTime() as xs:dateTime
16.4 fn:current-date
fn:current-date() as xs:date
16.5 fn:current-time
fn:current-time() as xs:time
16.6 fn:implicit-timezone
fn:implicit-timezone() as xs:dayTimeDuration
16.7 fn:default-collation
fn:default-collation() as xs:string
16.8 fn:static-base-uri
fn:static-base-uri() as xs:anyURI?

G.2 Functions and Operators Alphabetically

op:NOTATION-equal($arg1 as xs:NOTATION, $arg2 as xs:NOTATION) as xs:boolean13.1.1)
fn:QName($paramURI as xs:string?, $paramQName as xs:string) as xs:QName11.1.2)
op:QName-equal($arg1 as xs:QName, $arg2 as xs:QName) as xs:boolean11.2.1)
fn:abs($arg as numeric?) as numeric?6.4.1)
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-date($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:date10.8.9)
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-dateTime($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dateTime10.8.5)
op:add-dayTimeDuration-to-time($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:time10.8.12)
op:add-dayTimeDurations($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dayTimeDuration10.6.6)
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-date($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:date10.8.8)
op:add-yearMonthDuration-to-dateTime($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:dateTime10.8.4)
op:add-yearMonthDurations($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:yearMonthDuration10.6.1)
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone($arg as xs:date?) as xs:date?10.7.2)
fn:adjust-date-to-timezone($arg as xs:date?, $timezone as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:date?10.7.2)
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:dateTime?10.7.1)
fn:adjust-dateTime-to-timezone($arg as xs:dateTime?, $timezone as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:dateTime?10.7.1)
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone($arg as xs:time?) as xs:time?10.7.3)
fn:adjust-time-to-timezone($arg as xs:time?, $timezone as xs:dayTimeDuration?) as xs:time?10.7.3)
fn:avg($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType?15.4.2)
fn:base-uri() as xs:anyURI?2.5)
fn:base-uri($arg as node()?) as xs:anyURI?2.5)
op:base64Binary-equal($value1 as xs:base64Binary, $value2 as xs:base64Binary) as xs:boolean12.1.2)
fn:boolean($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean15.1.1)
op:boolean-equal($value1 as xs:boolean, $value2 as xs:boolean) as xs:boolean9.2.1)
op:boolean-greater-than($arg1 as xs:boolean, $arg2 as xs:boolean) as xs:boolean9.2.3)
op:boolean-less-than($arg1 as xs:boolean, $arg2 as xs:boolean) as xs:boolean9.2.2)
fn:ceiling($arg as numeric?) as numeric?6.4.2)
fn:codepoint-equal($comparand1 as xs:string?, $comparand2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean?7.3.3)
fn:codepoints-to-string($arg as xs:integer*) as xs:string7.2.1)
fn:collection() as node()*15.5.6)
fn:collection($arg as xs:string?) as node()*15.5.6)
fn:compare($comparand1 as xs:string?, $comparand2 as xs:string?) as xs:integer?7.3.2)
fn:compare($comparand1 as xs:string?, $comparand2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:integer?7.3.2)
fn:concat($arg1 as xs:anyAtomicType?, $arg2 as xs:anyAtomicType?, ...) as xs:string7.4.1)
op:concatenate($seq1 as item()*, $seq2 as item()*) as item()*15.1.2)
fn:contains($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean7.5.1)
fn:contains($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:boolean7.5.1)
fn:count($arg as item()*) as xs:integer15.4.1)
fn:current-date() as xs:date16.4)
fn:current-dateTime() as xs:dateTime16.3)
fn:current-time() as xs:time16.5)
fn:data($arg as item()*) as xs:anyAtomicType*2.4)
op:date-equal($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:boolean10.4.9)
op:date-greater-than($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:boolean10.4.11)
op:date-less-than($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:boolean10.4.10)
fn:dateTime($arg1 as xs:date?, $arg2 as xs:time?) as xs:dateTime?5.2)
op:dateTime-equal($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dateTime) as xs:boolean10.4.6)
op:dateTime-greater-than($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dateTime) as xs:boolean10.4.8)
op:dateTime-less-than($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dateTime) as xs:boolean10.4.7)
fn:day-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:integer?10.5.16)
fn:day-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?10.5.9)
op:dayTimeDuration-greater-than($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:boolean10.4.4)
op:dayTimeDuration-less-than($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:boolean10.4.3)
fn:days-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?10.5.3)
fn:deep-equal($parameter1 as item()*, $parameter2 as item()*) as xs:boolean15.3.1)
fn:deep-equal($parameter1 as item()*, $parameter2 as item()*, $collation as string) as xs:boolean15.3.1)
fn:default-collation() as xs:string16.7)
fn:distinct-values($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType*15.1.6)
fn:distinct-values($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*, $collation as xs:string) as xs:anyAtomicType*15.1.6)
op:divide-dayTimeDuration($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:double) as xs:dayTimeDuration10.6.9)
op:divide-dayTimeDuration-by-dayTimeDuration($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:decimal10.6.10)
op:divide-yearMonthDuration($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:double) as xs:yearMonthDuration10.6.4)
op:divide-yearMonthDuration-by-yearMonthDuration($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:decimal10.6.5)
fn:doc($uri as xs:string?) as document-node()?15.5.4)
fn:doc-available($uri as xs:string?) as xs:boolean15.5.5)
fn:document-uri($arg as node()?) as xs:anyURI?2.6)
op:duration-equal($arg1 as xs:duration, $arg2 as xs:duration) as xs:boolean10.4.5)
fn:element-with-id($arg as xs:string*) as element()*15.5.7)
fn:element-with-id($arg as xs:string*, $node as node()) as element()*15.5.7)
fn:empty($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean15.1.4)
fn:encode-for-uri($uri-part as xs:string?) as xs:string7.4.10)
fn:ends-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean7.5.3)
fn:ends-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:boolean7.5.3)
fn:error() as none3)
fn:error($error as xs:QName) as none3)
fn:error($error as xs:QName?, $description as xs:string) as none3)
fn:error($error as xs:QName?, $description as xs:string, $error-object as item()*) as none3)
fn:escape-html-uri($uri as xs:string?) as xs:string7.4.12)
fn:exactly-one($arg as item()*) as item()15.2.3)
op:except($parameter1 as node()*, $parameter2 as node()*) as node()*15.3.4)
fn:exists($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean15.1.5)
fn:false() as xs:boolean9.1.2)
fn:floor($arg as numeric?) as numeric?6.4.3)
op:gDay-equal($arg1 as xs:gDay, $arg2 as xs:gDay) as xs:boolean10.4.19)
op:gMonth-equal($arg1 as xs:gMonth, $arg2 as xs:gMonth) as xs:boolean10.4.18)
op:gMonthDay-equal($arg1 as xs:gMonthDay, $arg2 as xs:gMonthDay) as xs:boolean10.4.17)
op:gYear-equal($arg1 as xs:gYear, $arg2 as xs:gYear) as xs:boolean10.4.16)
op:gYearMonth-equal($arg1 as xs:gYearMonth, $arg2 as xs:gYearMonth) as xs:boolean10.4.15)
op:hexBinary-equal($value1 as xs:hexBinary, $value2 as xs:hexBinary) as xs:boolean12.1.1)
fn:hours-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?10.5.10)
fn:hours-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?10.5.4)
fn:hours-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:integer?10.5.18)
fn:id($arg as xs:string*) as element()*15.5.2)
fn:id($arg as xs:string*, $node as node()) as element()*15.5.2)
fn:idref($arg as xs:string*) as node()*15.5.3)
fn:idref($arg as xs:string*, $node as node()) as node()*15.5.3)
fn:implicit-timezone() as xs:dayTimeDuration16.6)
fn:in-scope-prefixes($element as element()) as xs:string*11.2.6)
fn:index-of($seqParam as xs:anyAtomicType*, $srchParam as xs:anyAtomicType) as xs:integer*15.1.3)
fn:index-of($seqParam as xs:anyAtomicType*, $srchParam as xs:anyAtomicType, $collation as xs:string) as xs:integer*15.1.3)
fn:insert-before($target as item()*, $position as xs:integer, $inserts as item()*) as item()*15.1.7)
op:intersect($parameter1 as node()*, $parameter2 as node()*) as node()*15.3.3)
fn:iri-to-uri($iri as xs:string?) as xs:string7.4.11)
op:is-same-node($parameter1 as node(), $parameter2 as node()) as xs:boolean14.6)
fn:lang($testlang as xs:string?) as xs:boolean14.5)
fn:lang($testlang as xs:string?, $node as node()) as xs:boolean14.5)
fn:last() as xs:integer16.2)
fn:local-name() as xs:string14.2)
fn:local-name($arg as node()?) as xs:string14.2)
fn:local-name-from-QName($arg as xs:QName?) as xs:NCName?11.2.3)
fn:lower-case($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string7.4.8)
fn:matches($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string) as xs:boolean7.6.2)
fn:matches($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string, $flags as xs:string) as xs:boolean7.6.2)
fn:max($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType?15.4.3)
fn:max($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*, $collation as string) as xs:anyAtomicType?15.4.3)
fn:min($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType?15.4.4)
fn:min($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*, $collation as string) as xs:anyAtomicType?15.4.4)
fn:minutes-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?10.5.11)
fn:minutes-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?10.5.5)
fn:minutes-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:integer?10.5.19)
fn:month-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:integer?10.5.15)
fn:month-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?10.5.8)
fn:months-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?10.5.2)
op:multiply-dayTimeDuration($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:double) as xs:dayTimeDuration10.6.8)
op:multiply-yearMonthDuration($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:double) as xs:yearMonthDuration10.6.3)
fn:name() as xs:string14.1)
fn:name($arg as node()?) as xs:string14.1)
fn:namespace-uri() as xs:anyURI14.3)
fn:namespace-uri($arg as node()?) as xs:anyURI14.3)
fn:namespace-uri-for-prefix($prefix as xs:string?, $element as element()) as xs:anyURI?11.2.5)
fn:namespace-uri-from-QName($arg as xs:QName?) as xs:anyURI?11.2.4)
fn:nilled($arg as node()?) as xs:boolean?2.2)
op:node-after($parameter1 as node(), $parameter2 as node()) as xs:boolean14.8)
op:node-before($parameter1 as node(), $parameter2 as node()) as xs:boolean14.7)
fn:node-name($arg as node()?) as xs:QName?2.1)
fn:normalize-space() as xs:string7.4.5)
fn:normalize-space($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string7.4.5)
fn:normalize-unicode($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string7.4.6)
fn:normalize-unicode($arg as xs:string?, $normalizationForm as xs:string) as xs:string7.4.6)
fn:not($arg as item()*) as xs:boolean9.3.1)
fn:number() as xs:double14.4)
fn:number($arg as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:double14.4)
op:numeric-add($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric6.2.1)
op:numeric-divide($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric6.2.4)
op:numeric-equal($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:boolean6.3.1)
op:numeric-greater-than($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:boolean6.3.3)
op:numeric-integer-divide($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:integer6.2.5)
op:numeric-less-than($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as xs:boolean6.3.2)
op:numeric-mod($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric6.2.6)
op:numeric-multiply($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric6.2.3)
op:numeric-subtract($arg1 as numeric, $arg2 as numeric) as numeric6.2.2)
op:numeric-unary-minus($arg as numeric) as numeric6.2.8)
op:numeric-unary-plus($arg as numeric) as numeric6.2.7)
fn:one-or-more($arg as item()*) as item()+15.2.2)
fn:position() as xs:integer16.1)
fn:prefix-from-QName($arg as xs:QName?) as xs:NCName?11.2.2)
fn:remove($target as item()*, $position as xs:integer) as item()*15.1.8)
fn:replace($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string, $replacement as xs:string) as xs:string7.6.3)
fn:replace($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string, $replacement as xs:string, $flags as xs:string) as xs:string7.6.3)
fn:resolve-QName($qname as xs:string?, $element as element()) as xs:QName?11.1.1)
fn:resolve-uri($relative as xs:string?) as xs:anyURI?8.1)
fn:resolve-uri($relative as xs:string?, $base as xs:string) as xs:anyURI?8.1)
fn:reverse($arg as item()*) as item()*15.1.9)
fn:root() as node()14.9)
fn:root($arg as node()?) as node()?14.9)
fn:round($arg as numeric?) as numeric?6.4.4)
fn:round-half-to-even($arg as numeric?) as numeric?6.4.5)
fn:round-half-to-even($arg as numeric?, $precision as xs:integer) as numeric?6.4.5)
fn:seconds-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:decimal?10.5.12)
fn:seconds-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:decimal?10.5.6)
fn:seconds-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:decimal?10.5.20)
fn:starts-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:boolean7.5.2)
fn:starts-with($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:boolean7.5.2)
fn:static-base-uri() as xs:anyURI?16.8)
fn:string() as xs:string2.3)
fn:string($arg as item()?) as xs:string2.3)
fn:string-join($arg1 as xs:string*, $arg2 as xs:string) as xs:string7.4.2)
fn:string-length() as xs:integer7.4.4)
fn:string-length($arg as xs:string?) as xs:integer7.4.4)
fn:string-to-codepoints($arg as xs:string?) as xs:integer*7.2.2)
fn:subsequence($sourceSeq as item()*, $startingLoc as xs:double) as item()*15.1.10)
fn:subsequence($sourceSeq as item()*, $startingLoc as xs:double, $length as xs:double) as item()*15.1.10)
fn:substring($sourceString as xs:string?, $startingLoc as xs:double) as xs:string7.4.3)
fn:substring($sourceString as xs:string?, $startingLoc as xs:double, $length as xs:double) as xs:string7.4.3)
fn:substring-after($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:string7.5.5)
fn:substring-after($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:string7.5.5)
fn:substring-before($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?) as xs:string7.5.4)
fn:substring-before($arg1 as xs:string?, $arg2 as xs:string?, $collation as xs:string) as xs:string7.5.4)
op:subtract-dateTimes($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dateTime) as xs:dayTimeDuration10.8.1)
op:subtract-dates($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:date) as xs:dayTimeDuration10.8.2)
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-date($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:date10.8.11)
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-dateTime($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dateTime10.8.7)
op:subtract-dayTimeDuration-from-time($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:time10.8.13)
op:subtract-dayTimeDurations($arg1 as xs:dayTimeDuration, $arg2 as xs:dayTimeDuration) as xs:dayTimeDuration10.6.7)
op:subtract-times($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:dayTimeDuration10.8.3)
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-date($arg1 as xs:date, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:date10.8.10)
op:subtract-yearMonthDuration-from-dateTime($arg1 as xs:dateTime, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:dateTime10.8.6)
op:subtract-yearMonthDurations($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:yearMonthDuration10.6.2)
fn:sum($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*) as xs:anyAtomicType15.4.5)
fn:sum($arg as xs:anyAtomicType*, $zero as xs:anyAtomicType?) as xs:anyAtomicType?15.4.5)
op:time-equal($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:boolean10.4.12)
op:time-greater-than($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:boolean10.4.14)
op:time-less-than($arg1 as xs:time, $arg2 as xs:time) as xs:boolean10.4.13)
fn:timezone-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:dayTimeDuration?10.5.17)
fn:timezone-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:dayTimeDuration?10.5.13)
fn:timezone-from-time($arg as xs:time?) as xs:dayTimeDuration?10.5.21)
op:to($firstval as xs:integer, $lastval as xs:integer) as xs:integer*15.5.1)
fn:tokenize($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string) as xs:string*7.6.4)
fn:tokenize($input as xs:string?, $pattern as xs:string, $flags as xs:string) as xs:string*7.6.4)
fn:trace($value as item()*, $label as xs:string) as item()*4)
fn:translate($arg as xs:string?, $mapString as xs:string, $transString as xs:string) as xs:string7.4.9)
fn:true() as xs:boolean9.1.1)
op:union($parameter1 as node()*, $parameter2 as node()*) as node()*15.3.2)
fn:unordered($sourceSeq as item()*) as item()*15.1.11)
fn:upper-case($arg as xs:string?) as xs:string7.4.7)
fn:year-from-date($arg as xs:date?) as xs:integer?10.5.14)
fn:year-from-dateTime($arg as xs:dateTime?) as xs:integer?10.5.7)
op:yearMonthDuration-greater-than($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:boolean10.4.2)
op:yearMonthDuration-less-than($arg1 as xs:yearMonthDuration, $arg2 as xs:yearMonthDuration) as xs:boolean10.4.1)
fn:years-from-duration($arg as xs:duration?) as xs:integer?10.5.1)
fn:zero-or-one($arg as item()*) as item()?15.2.1)