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author | Jörg Frings-Fürst <debian@jff.email> | 2025-05-02 07:42:02 +0200 |
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committer | Jörg Frings-Fürst <debian@jff.email> | 2025-05-02 07:42:02 +0200 |
commit | fc486627a4ecbae797fa6856d8a9204ea85f4db8 (patch) | |
tree | ff3dae4c0e5d980d8e2da4fc6256ae839269bbcd /xsd/examples/cxx/tree/order/element/README | |
parent | 1c188393cd2e271ed2581471b601fb5960777fd8 (diff) | |
parent | ecba0bbd9947036dd82f16ab95252f8db445e149 (diff) |
Merge tag 'debian/4.0.0-10' into developdevelop
Bugfix release
Diffstat (limited to 'xsd/examples/cxx/tree/order/element/README')
-rw-r--r-- | xsd/examples/cxx/tree/order/element/README | 35 |
1 files changed, 35 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/xsd/examples/cxx/tree/order/element/README b/xsd/examples/cxx/tree/order/element/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000..19f2381 --- /dev/null +++ b/xsd/examples/cxx/tree/order/element/README @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@ +This example shows how to use ordered types to capture and maintain +element order, including element wildcards. + +The example consists of the following files: + +transactions.xsd + XML Schema which describes various bank transactions. A batch of + transactions can contain any number of different transactions in + any order but the order of transaction in the batch is significant. + +library.xml + Sample XML instance document. + +transactions.hxx +transactions.cxx + C++ types that represent the given vocabulary as well as a set of + parsing and serialization functions. These are generated by XSD + from transactions.xsd. Note that the --ordered-type option is + used to indicate to the XSD compiler that the batch type is + ordered. We also use the --generate-wildcard option to enable + wildcard support. An element wildcard is used in the batch to + allow transaction extensions. + +driver.cxx + Driver for the example. It first calls one of the parsing functions + that constructs the object model from the input XML file. It then + iterates over transactions in the batch using the content order + sequence. The driver then performs various modifications of the + object model while showing how to maintain the content order. + Finally, it saves the modified transaction batch back to XML to + verify that the content order is preserved in the output document. + +To run the example on the sample XML instance document simply execute: + +$ ./driver transactions.xml |