XPath Functions

You can use XML Path Language (Xpath) functions to refine XPath queries and enhance the programming power and flexibility of XPath.

The functions are divided into the following groups.

Node-Set Takes a node-set argument, returns a node-set, or returns/provides information about a particular node within a node-set.
String Performs evaluations, formatting, and manipulation on string arguments.
Boolean Evaluates the argument expressions to obtain a Boolean result.
Number Evaluates the argument expressions to obtain a numeric result.
Microsoft XPath Extension Functions Microsoft extension functions to XPath that provide the ability to select nodes by XSD type. Also includes string comparison, number comparison, and date/time conversion functions.

Each function in the function library is specified using a function prototype that provides the return type, function name, and argument type. If an argument type is followed by a question mark, the argument is optional; otherwise, the argument is required. Function names are case-sensitive.

About XPath Functions

The XPath language provides for a core library of functions that deal with:

  • node sets
  • strings
  • Booleans
  • numbers

The following are some examples of XPath functions:

  • Determine the number of articles written by Mr. Jones:count(/journal/article[author/last="Jones"])
  • Find all authors whose last name begins with Mc:/journal/article[starts-with(author/last,"Mc")]

In addition to the core XPath functions defined by the XPath standard, a number of extended functions are also supported with OSM. These extended functions provide additional functionality that is useful to create behaviors, but does not conform to the XPath standard.

Absolute Location paths and descendant selection
Formatting Objects

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