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diff --git a/xsd/examples/cxx/tree/custom/mixed/README b/xsd/examples/cxx/tree/custom/mixed/README deleted file mode 100644 index 7b56812..0000000 --- a/xsd/examples/cxx/tree/custom/mixed/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,50 +0,0 @@ -This example shows how to use type customization to parse and serialize -mixed content. The example achieves this by customizing the type with  -the mixed content model to include a DOM document that stores the data  -as a raw XML representation. The customized type also provides its own -parsing constructor and serialization operator where the mixed content -is extracted from and inserted back to DOM, respectively. The use of -DOM for mixed content storage is one of the options. You may find other -data structures (e.g., a string) more suitable depending on your situation. - -For more information on the C++/Tree mapping customization see the C++/Tree -Mapping Customization Guide[1]. - -[1] http://wiki.codesynthesis.com/Tree/Customization_guide - -The example consists of the following files: - -people.xsd -  XML Schema definition for a simple person record vocabulary. Each -  record includes the bio element which represents arbitrary XHTML -  fragments as mixed content. - -people.xml -  Sample XML instance document. - -people.hxx -people.ixx -people.cxx -  C++ types that represent the given vocabulary, a set of parsing -  functions that convert XML instance documents to a tree-like in-memory -  object model, and a set of serialization functions that convert the -  object model back to XML. These are generated by XSD from people.xsd -  with the --custom-type option in order to customize the bio type. - -people-custom.hxx -  Header file which defines our own bio class by inheriting from the -  generated bio_base. It is included at the end of people.hxx using -  the --hxx-epilogue option. - -people-custom.cxx -  Source file which contains the implementation of our bio class. - -driver.cxx -  Driver for the example. It first calls one of the parsing functions -  that constructs the object model from the input file. It then prints -  the data to STDERR, including the bio information converted to text. -  Finally, the driver serializes the object model back to XML. - -To run the example on the sample XML instance document simply execute: - -$ ./driver people.xml  | 
