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Home/ Questions/Q 831859
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T04:16:25+00:00 2026-05-15T04:16:25+00:00

I need an XSL solution to replace XML nodes with new nodes. Say I

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I need an XSL solution to replace XML nodes with new nodes.

Say I have the following existing XML structure:

<root>
    <criteria>
        <criterion>AAA</criterion>
    </criteria>
</root>

And I want to replace the one criterion node with:

<criterion>BBB</criterion>
<criterion>CCC</criterion>
<criterion>DDD</criterion>

So that the final XML result is:

<root>
    <criteria>
        <criterion>BBB</criterion>
        <criterion>CCC</criterion>
        <criterion>DDD</criterion>
    </criteria>
</root>

I have tried using substring-before and substring-after to just copy the first half of the structure, then just copy the second half (in order to fill in my new nodes in between the two halves) but it appears that the substring functions only recognize text in between the nodes’ tags, and not the tags themselves like I want them to. 🙁 🙁

Any other solutions?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T04:16:26+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 4:16 am

    XSL cannot replace anything. The best you can do is to copy the parts you want to keep, then output the parts you want to change instead of the parts you don’t want to keep.


    Example:

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
    <xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
        xmlns:msxsl="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xslt" exclude-result-prefixes="msxsl"
    >
        <xsl:output method="xml" indent="yes"/>
    
        <!-- This is an identity template - it copies everything
             that doesn't match another template -->
        <xsl:template match="@* | node()">
            <xsl:copy>
                <xsl:apply-templates select="@* | node()"/>
            </xsl:copy>
        </xsl:template>
    
      <!-- This is the "other template". It says to use your BBB-DDD elements
           instead of the AAA element -->
      <xsl:template match="criterion[.='AAA']">
        <xsl:element name="criterion">
          <xsl:text>BBB</xsl:text>
        </xsl:element>
        <xsl:element name="criterion">
          <xsl:text>CCC</xsl:text>
        </xsl:element>
        <xsl:element name="criterion">
          <xsl:text>DDD</xsl:text>
        </xsl:element>
      </xsl:template>
    </xsl:stylesheet>
    

    The template match @* | node() matches any attribute or any other kind of node. The trick is that template matches have priorities. You can think of the rule as being “the more specific match wins”. Anything is going to be more specific than “any attribute or other node”. This makes the “identity” match a very low priority.

    When it is matched, it simply copies any nodes it finds inside the matched attribute or node.

    Any other templates you have will have a higher priority. Whatever they match, it’s the code inside the more specific template that will have effect. For example, if you simply removed everything inside of the criterion[.='AAA'] template, you’d find that you had copied your input exactly, except for the “AAA” element.

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