<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?> <?xml-stylesheet href="../../make-menu.xsl" type="text/xsl"?><html> <head> <this-is section="extensibility" page="functions" subpage="instance-methods"/> <!-- Generated at 2011-12-09T20:47:22.916Z--><title>Saxonica: XSLT and XQuery Processing: Calling Java Instance-Level Methods</title> <meta name="coverage" content="Worldwide"/> <meta name="copyright" content="Copyright Saxonica Ltd"/> <meta name="title" content="Saxonica: XSLT and XQuery Processing: Calling Java Instance-Level Methods"/> <meta name="robots" content="noindex,nofollow"/> <link rel="stylesheet" href="../../saxondocs.css" type="text/css"/> </head> <body class="main"> <h1>Calling Java Instance-Level Methods</h1> <p><b>Instance-level methods</b> (that is, non-static methods) are called by supplying an extra first argument of type Java Object which is the object on which the method is to be invoked. A Java Object is usually created by calling an extension function (e.g. a constructor) that returns an object; it may also be passed to the style sheet as the value of a global parameter. Matching of method names is done as for static methods. If there are several methods in the class that match the localname, the system again tries to find the one that is the best fit, according to the types of the supplied arguments.</p> <p>For example, the following XSLT stylesheet prints the date and time. (In XSLT 2.0, of course, this no longer requires extension functions, but the example is still valid.)</p> <div class="codeblock" style="border: solid thin; background-color: #B1CCC7; padding: 2px"> <pre> <code> <xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" xmlns:date="java:java.util.Date"> <xsl:template match="/"> <html> <xsl:if test="function-available('date:to-string') and function-available('date:new')"> <p><xsl:value-of select="date:to-string(date:new())"/></p> </xsl:if> </html> </xsl:template> </xsl:stylesheet> </code> </pre> </div> <p>The equivalent in XQuery is:</p> <div class="codeblock" style="border: solid thin; background-color: #B1CCC7; padding: 2px"> <pre> <code> declare namespace date="java:java.util.Date"; <p>{date:to-string(date:new())}</p> </code> </pre> </div> <p>As with static methods, an instance-level Java method called as an extension function may have an extra first argument of class <a class="bodylink" href="../../javadoc/net/sf/saxon/expr/XPathContext.html"><code>net.sf.saxon.expr.XPathContext</code></a>. This argument is not supplied by the calling XPath or XQuery code, but by Saxon itself. The <code>XPathContext</code> object provides methods to access many internal Saxon resources, the most useful being <code>getContextItem()</code> which returns the context item from the dynamic context. The XPathContext object is not available with constructors.</p> <p>If any exceptions are thrown by the method, or if a matching method cannot be found, processing of the stylesheet will be abandoned. If the tracing option has been set (-T) on the command line, a full stack trace will be output. The exception will be wrapped in a <code>TransformerException</code> and passed to any user-specified <code>ErrorListener</code> object, so the <code>ErrorListener</code> can also produce extra diagnostics.</p> <table width="100%"> <tr> <td> <p align="right"><a class="nav" href="../converting-args.xml">Next</a></p> </td> </tr> </table> </body> </html>