From 018e1ba581ec6f01f069a45ec4cf89f152b44d5f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?J=C3=B6rg=20Frings-F=C3=BCrst?= Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2025 15:41:36 +0100 Subject: remerge --- xsd/examples/cxx/tree/wildcard/README | 34 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 34 insertions(+) create mode 100644 xsd/examples/cxx/tree/wildcard/README (limited to 'xsd/examples/cxx/tree/wildcard/README') diff --git a/xsd/examples/cxx/tree/wildcard/README b/xsd/examples/cxx/tree/wildcard/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d451509 --- /dev/null +++ b/xsd/examples/cxx/tree/wildcard/README @@ -0,0 +1,34 @@ +This example shows how to use the optional wildcard mapping provided +by C++/Tree to parse, access, modify, and serialize the XML data +matched by XML Schema wildcards (any and anyAttribute). For an +alternative approach that employes type customization see the +custom/wildcard example. + +The example consists of the following files: + +email.xsd + XML Schema which describes a simple email format with the + extensible envelope type. + +email.xml + Sample email message. + +email.hxx +email.ixx +email.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 email.xsd. + Note that the --generate-wildcard option is used to request the + wildcard mapping. + +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 content of the object model to STDERR. Next the driver creates a + reply email which is then serialized to XML. + +To run the example on the sample XML instance document simply execute: + +$ ./driver email.xml -- cgit v1.2.3