A namespace defines a class (or set) of names of elements and attributes designed for use in the context of a specific technology. For example, the elements and attributes for XHTML, such as <HTML>
, <BODY>
, <HREF>
, and so on, share the XHTML
namespace. The elements defined in the XSLT Version 1.0 specification, such as <xsl:stylesheet>
, <xsl:template>
, <xsl:if>
, and so on, share the XSLT 1.0 namespace, xsl
.
A namespace is identified by a URI (for example, http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform
), and by one or more namespace prefixes (for example, xsl
) that serve as the short-hand of the URI. In general, an element belonging to a particular namespace is written in the format of namespace-prefix:element-name
. For example, <xsl:sort>
.
Namespaces help to avoid collisions of names of different classes. For example, <my:if>
and <xsl:if>
differentiate the <if>
element of the xsl
namespace from that of the my
namespace.
Note Technically, attribute names without a prefix are assumed to be in no namespace in particular. To ensure that an attribute comes from a specified namespace, use the namespace prefix when specifying the attribute.
For more information about how to associate a particular prefix with a particular namespace, see the next section, Declaring Namespaces for XSLT.