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Jacob Sebastian Commented 1 Years ago through Blogs | 1 Point
You are right. I just corrected it. Thank for catching this....
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Jacob Sebastian Commented 1 Years ago through Blogs | 1 Point
I did not understand what is the exact problem you are facing. Are you not able to read any specific value from the XML document?
If so, can you post a minimal representation of the XML that demonstrates the specific problem?...
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Jacob Sebastian Commented 1 Years ago through Blogs | 1 Point
I think people started their career in the DOS era might appreciate the command line tools more [I am one of them :-)]...
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Jacob Sebastian Commented 1 Years ago through Blogs | 1 Point
Good Luck Jason and Congrats Mariner!!! :-)...
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Jacob Sebastian Commented 1 Years ago through Blogs | 1 Point
@ stands for attributes. The original code I posted in this blog was looking for elements that do not have child elements. In your case, what we need is to locate elements that do not have attributes. "@*" is a wildcard expression that represents all a...
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Jacob Sebastian Commented 1 Years ago through Blogs | 1 Point
Faizoel,
When testing it on my side, it appears to be working. Can you show me the EXACT output you are looking for, based on the given input value?...
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Jacob Sebastian Commented 1 Years ago through Blogs | 1 Point
Try this and let me know if it works.
SET @x.modify('
delete /BenchmarkImport/Zorgaanbieder/Patient/Zorgtraject/DBCTraject/Meting[empty(./@*)]
')...
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