From a8ce5c380c69539fe0c7c62c397634d9d0c9fde2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Karen Arutyunov Date: Fri, 18 Dec 2020 18:48:46 +0300 Subject: Switch to build2 --- examples/cxx/parser/README | 45 --------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 45 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 examples/cxx/parser/README (limited to 'examples/cxx/parser/README') diff --git a/examples/cxx/parser/README b/examples/cxx/parser/README deleted file mode 100644 index 01906c7..0000000 --- a/examples/cxx/parser/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,45 +0,0 @@ -This directory contains a number of examples that show how to use -the C++/Parser mapping. The following list gives an overview of -each example. See the README files in example directories for -more information on each example. - -hello - A simple "Hello, world!" example that shows how to parse XML - documents. - -generated - Shows how to use the sample implementation and test driver - generation feature. This example does not have any hand-written - C++ code; everything is generated by the XSD compiler. - -library - Shows how to handle more complex data structures and construct - a custom in-memory object model. - -mixin - Shows how to reuse implementations of base parsers in derived - parsers using the mixin C++ idiom. - -wildcard - Shows how to parse the XML data matched by XML Schema wildcards - (any and anyAttribute). - -multiroot - Shows how to handle XML vocabularies with multiple root elements. - -polymorphism - Shows how to use XML Schema polymorphism features such as the - xsi:type attribute and substitution groups. - -polyroot - Shows how to handle the xsi:type attribute when it is used on root - elements. - -performance - Measures the performance of XML parsing. This example also shows how - to structure your code to achieve the maximum performance for this - operation. - -mixed - Shows how to handle raw, "type-less content" such as mixed content - models, anyType/anySimpleType, and any/anyAttribute. \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.1