From an XSL processing standpoint, it doesn't matter if the root is
"mods" or "modsCollection".
I use <apply-templates select="descendant-or-self::mods:mods"/>,and it
processes as many mods records as there are, skipping modsCollection if
need be.
_______________________________________
Nate Trail
Digital Project Coordinator
Network Development & MARC Standards Office
Library of Congress
202-707-2193
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>>> [log in to unmask] 1/27/2005 1:08:37 PM >>>
From: "Bruce D'Arcus" <[log in to unmask]>
> It's just that both of these are valid:
>
> <modsCollection xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
> <mods>
> ...
> </mods>
> </modsCollection>
>
> <mods xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
> ...
> </mods>
Ok, I see.
Mods defines both the "mods record" and "mods collection" where the
latter
is a collection of records.
(So <mods> or <modsCollection> can be the root, for a mods record or
mods
collection respectively.)
A solution (to the apparent complexity and confusion that this causes)
is to
define a separate schema for modsCollection.
We did discuss this long ago and decided it wasn't necessary, but I
wouldn't
object to revisiting this. You could propose it for version 4.
Another suggestion has been to dissalow <mods> as a root, so that
<modsCollection> would wrap even a single mods record. I would oppose
this
approach but would not oppose a separate schema.
--Ray