Right/left scroll fixes, java=Java remove reduntant passage

git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/jakarta/poi/trunk@352175 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68
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Andrew C. Oliver 2002-03-10 16:15:04 +00:00
parent 51e37ef1b8
commit b48b9c9344

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@ -6,6 +6,7 @@
<title>Record Generator HOWTO</title>
<authors>
<person email="glens@apache.org" name="Glen Stampoultzis" id="glens"/>
<person email="acoliver@apache.org" name="Andrew C. Oliver" id="acoliver"/>
</authors>
</header>
<body>
@ -13,13 +14,13 @@
<s2 title="History">
<p>
The record generator was born from my frustration with translating
The record generator was born from frustration with translating
the Excel records to Java classes. Doing this manually is a time
consuming process. It's also very easy to make mistakes.
</p>
<p>
I wanted something that would take the defintition of what a
record looked like and do all the boring stuff for me. Thus the
A utility was needed to take the defintition of what a
record looked like and do all the boring stuff. Thus the
record generator was born.
</p>
</s2>
@ -29,7 +30,7 @@
The record generator takes XML as input and produced the following
output:
<ul>
<li>A java file capabile of decoding and encoding the record.</li>
<li>A Java file capabile of decoding and encoding the record.</li>
<li>A test class with provides a fill-in-the-blanks implementation of a test case
for ensuring the record operates as designed.</li>
</ul>
@ -46,7 +47,8 @@
</p>
<source><![CDATA[
<record id="0x1032" name="Frame" package="org.apache.poi.hssf.record">
<description>The frame record indicates whether there is a border around the displayed text of a chart.</description>
<description>The frame record indicates whether there is a border
around the displayed text of a chart.</description>
<author>Glen Stampoultzis (glens at apache.org)</author>
<fields>
<field type="int" size="2" name="border type">
@ -54,54 +56,57 @@
<const name="shadow" value="1" description="rectangle with shadow"/>
</field>
<field type="int" size="2" name="options">
<bit number="0" name="auto size" description="excel calculates the size automatically if true"/>
<bit number="1" name="auto position" description="excel calculates the position automatically"/>
<bit number="0" name="auto size"
description="excel calculates the size automatically if true"/>
<bit number="1" name="auto position"
description="excel calculates the position automatically"/>
</field>
</fields>
</record>
]]></source>
<p>
Currently the type can be of type int, float or string. The 'int' type covers bytes, shorts and
integers which is selected using a size of 1, 2 or 4.
An additional type called varword is used to represent a array of word values where the first short
is the length of the array.
The string type generation is only partially implemented. If choosing string you must select a size
of 'var'.
Currently the type can be of type int, float or string. The 'int'
type covers bytes, shorts and integers which is selected using a
size of 1, 2 or 4. An additional type called varword is used to
represent a array of word values where the first short is the length
of the array. The string type generation is only partially
implemented. If choosing string you must select a size of 'var'.
</p>
<p>
The Java records are regenerated each time the record generator is run, however the test stubs are
only created if the test stub does not already exist. What this means is that you may change
test stubs but not the generated records.
The Java records are regenerated each time the record generator is
run, however the test stubs are only created if the test stub does
not already exist. What this means is that you may change test
stubs but not the generated records.
</p>
</s2>
<s2 title="How it Works">
<p>
The record generation works by taking an XML file and styling it using XLST. Given that
XSLT is a little limited in some ways it was necessary to add a little Java code to the mix.
This would probably have been better off done as javascript and may well be migrated in the
near future. Since the current Java code was written as a proof of concept it's a little
lacking in commenting and structure. Since this is converted to Javascript this should no
longer be a problem.
The record generation works by taking an XML file and styling it
using XLST. Given that XSLT is a little limited in some ways it was
necessary to add a little Java code to the mix.
</p>
<p>
See record.xsl, record_test.xsl, FieldIterator.java, RecordUtil.java, RecordGenerator.java
See record.xsl, record_test.xsl, FieldIterator.java,
RecordUtil.java, RecordGenerator.java
</p>
</s2>
<s2 title="Limitations">
<p>
The record generator does not handle all possible record types and is not ment to. Sometimes it's
going to make more sense to generate the records manually. The main point of this thing is to
make the easy stuff simple.
The record generator does not handle all possible record types and
is not ment to. Sometimes it's going to make more sense to generate
the records manually. The main point of this thing is to make the
easy stuff simple.
</p>
<p>
Currently the record generator is optimized to create Excel records. It could be adapted to create
Word records with a little poking around.
Currently the record generator is optimized to create Excel records.
It could be adapted to create Word records with a little poking
around.
</p>
<p>
Currently the the XSL file that generates the record calls out to java objects. This would have been
better done as Javascript inside the XSL file itself. The java code for the record generation is
currently quite messy with minimal comments. Sorry, I wrote it as a proof-of-concept and just went
too far.
Currently the the XSL file that generates the record calls out to
Java objects. This would have been better done as Javascript inside
the XSL file itself. The Java code for the record generation is
currently quite messy with minimal comments.
</p>
</s2>
</s1>