From 4326461b99a97153dd20a24570712adb04df89a9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Boris Kolpackov Date: Tue, 12 Jan 2010 15:16:19 +0200 Subject: Include file component in regex strings for schema being compiled --- documentation/xsde.1 | 34 ++++++++-------------------------- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 26 deletions(-) (limited to 'documentation/xsde.1') diff --git a/documentation/xsde.1 b/documentation/xsde.1 index afafa8c..2562446 100644 --- a/documentation/xsde.1 +++ b/documentation/xsde.1 @@ -255,23 +255,19 @@ expressions are applied to a string in the form .I filename namespace -For example, - -.B XMLSchema.xsd http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema - -The -.I filename -for the current translation unit is empty. For example, if you have file +For example, if you have file .B hello.xsd with namespace .B http://example.com/hello and you run -.B xsde -on this file, then the string in question would be: +.B xsd +on this file, then the string in question will be: + +.B hello.xsd. http://example.com/hello -.B \ http://example.com/hello +For the built-in XML Schema namespace the string is: -Note the leading space. +.B XMLSchema.xsd http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema The following three steps are performed for each regular expression until the match is found: @@ -763,26 +759,12 @@ in the form .I filename namespace xpath -For example, +For instance: .B hello.xsd http://example.com/hello element .B hello.xsd http://example.com/hello type/element -The -.I filename -for the current translation unit is empty. For example, if you have file -.B hello.xsd -with namespace -.B http://example.com/hello -and you run -.B xsde -on this file, then the string in question would be: - -.B \ http://example.com/hello element - -Note the leading space. - As an example, the following expression makes all the derived names start with capital letters. This could be useful when your naming convention requires type names to start with -- cgit v1.1