5543eb9de8
git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/poi/trunk@1824563 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68
532 lines
28 KiB
HTML
532 lines
28 KiB
HTML
<!doctype HTML public "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Frameset//EN">
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<!-- Copyright 2004 The Apache Software Foundation
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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You may obtain a copy of the License at
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http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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limitations under the License. -->
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<html>
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<head>
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<!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="doctitle" -->
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<title>Getting Started with XMLBeans</title>
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<!-- InstanceEndEditable -->
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<!--(Meta)==========================================================-->
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<meta http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=$CHARSET;">
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<!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="metatags" -->
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<meta name="author" content="your name">
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<meta name="description" content="A description of the topic contents.">
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<meta name="keywords" content="keywords to help in searches">
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<meta name="date last modified" content="10/25/02">
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<!-- InstanceEndEditable -->
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<!--(Links)=========================================================-->
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<!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="head" -->
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<link href="../xmlbeans.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css">
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<!-- InstanceEndEditable -->
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<link href="../xmlbeans.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css">
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<a href="../../../core/index.html" id="index"></a>
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<script language="JavaScript" src="../../../core/topicInfo.js"></script>
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<script language="JavaScript" src="../../../core/CookieClass.js"></script>
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<script language="JavaScript" src="../../../core/displayContent.js"></script>
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</head>
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<!--(Body)==========================================================-->
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<body>
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<script language="JavaScript">
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</script>
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<!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="body" -->
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<h1> Getting Started with XMLBeans</h1>
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<div id="topictext">
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<p>XMLBeans provides intuitive ways to handle XML that make it easier for you
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to access and manipulate XML data and documents in Java. </p>
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<p>Characteristics of XMLBeans approach to XML:</p>
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</div>
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<ul>
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<li>
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<div>It provides a familiar Java object-based view of XML data without losing
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access to the original, native XML structure.</div>
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</li>
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<li>
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<div>The XML's integrity as a document is not lost with XMLBeans. XML-oriented
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APIs commonly take the XML apart in order to bind to its parts. With XMLBeans,
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the entire XML instance document is handled as a whole. The XML data is
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stored in memory as XML. This means that the document order is preserved
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as well as the original element content with whitespace.</div>
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</li>
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<li>
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<div>With types generated from schema, access to XML instances is through
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JavaBean-like accessors, with get and set methods.</div>
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</li>
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<li>
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<div>It is designed with XML schema in mind from the beginning — XMLBeans
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supports all XML schema definitions.</div>
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</li>
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<li>Access to XML is fast.</li>
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</ul>
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<div>
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<p>The starting point for XMLBeans is XML schema. A schema (contained in an
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XSD file) is an XML document that defines a set of rules to which other XML
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documents must conform. The XML Schema specification provides a rich data
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model that allows you to express sophisticated structure and constraints on
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your data. For example, an XML schema can enforce control over how data is
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ordered in a document, or constraints on particular values (for example, a
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birth date that must be later than 1900). Unfortunately, the ability to enforce
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rules like this is typically not available in Java without writing custom
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code. XMLBeans honors schema constraints.</p>
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<p class="notepara"><strong>Note:</strong> Where an XML schema defines rules
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for an XML document, an XML <em>instance</em> is an XML document that conforms
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to the schema.</p>
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<p>You compile a schema (XSD) file to generate a set of Java interfaces that
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mirror the schema. With these types, you process XML instance documents that
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conform to the schema. You bind an XML instance document to these types; changes
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made through the Java interface change the underlying XML representation.</p>
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<p>Previous options for handling XML include using XML programming interfaces
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(such as DOM or SAX) or an XML marshalling/binding tool (such as JAXB). Because
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it lacks strong schema-oriented typing, navigation in a DOM-oriented model
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is more tedious and requires an understanding of the complete object model.
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JAXB provides support for the XML schema specification, but handles only a
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subset of it; XMLBeans supports all of it. Also, by storing the data in memory
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as XML, XMLBeans is able to reduce the overhead of marshalling and demarshalling.</p>
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<h1>Accessing XML Using Its Schema</h1>
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<p>To get a glimpse of the kinds of things you can do with XMLBeans, take a
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look at an example using XML for a purchase order. The purchase order XML
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contains data exchanged by two parties, such as two companies. Both parties
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need to be able to rely on a consistent message shape, and a schema specifies
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the common ground. </p>
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<p>Here's what a purchase order XML instance might look like.</p>
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<pre>
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<po:purchase-order xmlns:po="http://openuri.org/easypo">
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<po:customer>
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<po:name>Gladys Kravitz</po:name>
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<po:address>Anytown, PA</po:address>
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</po:customer>
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<po:date>2003-01-07T14:16:00-05:00</po:date>
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<po:line-item>
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<po:description>Burnham's Celestial Handbook, Vol 1</po:description>
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<po:per-unit-ounces>5</po:per-unit-ounces>
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<po:price>21.79</po:price>
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<po:quantity>2</po:quantity>
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</po:line-item>
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<po:line-item>
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<po:description>Burnham's Celestial Handbook, Vol 2</po:description>
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<po:per-unit-ounces>5</po:per-unit-ounces>
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<po:price>19.89</po:price>
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<po:quantity>2</po:quantity>
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</po:line-item>
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<po:shipper>
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<po:name>ZipShip</po:name>
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<po:per-ounce-rate>0.74</po:per-ounce-rate>
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</po:shipper>
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</po:purchase-order></pre>
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<p>This XML includes a root element, <span class="langinline">purchase-order</span>,
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that has three kinds of child elements: <span class="langinline">customer</span>,
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<span class="langinline">date</span>, <span class="langinline">line-item</span>,
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and <span class="langinline">shipper</span>. An intuitive, object-based view
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of this XML would provide an object representing the <span class="langinline">purchase-order</span>
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element, and it would have methods for getting the date and for getting subordinate
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objects for <span class="langinline">customer</span>, <span class="langinline">line-item</span>,
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and <span class="langinline">shipper</span> elements. Each of the last three
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would have its own methods for getting the data inside them as well.</p>
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<h2>Looking at the Schema</h2>
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<p>The following XML is the the schema for the preceding purchase order XML.
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It defines the XML's "shape" — what its elements are, what
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order they appear in, which are children of which, and so on.</p>
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</div>
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<div>
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<pre>
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<xs:schema targetNamespace="http://openuri.org/easypo"
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xmlns:po="http://openuri.org/easypo"
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xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
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elementFormDefault="qualified">
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<xs:element name="purchase-order">
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<xs:complexType>
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<xs:sequence>
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<xs:element name="customer" type="po:customer"/>
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<xs:element name="date" type="xs:dateTime"/>
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<xs:element name="line-item" type="po:line-item" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
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<xs:element name="shipper" type="po:shipper" minOccurs="0"/>
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</xs:sequence>
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</xs:complexType>
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</xs:element>
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<xs:complexType name="customer">
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<xs:sequence>
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<xs:element name="name" type="xs:string"/>
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<xs:element name="address" type="xs:string"/>
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</xs:sequence>
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</xs:complexType>
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<xs:complexType name="line-item">
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<xs:sequence>
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<xs:element name="description" type="xs:string"/>
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<xs:element name="per-unit-ounces" type="xs:decimal"/>
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<xs:element name="price" type="xs:double"/>
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<xs:element name="quantity" type="xs:int"/>
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</xs:sequence>
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</xs:complexType>
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<xs:complexType name="shipper">
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<xs:sequence>
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<xs:element name="name" type="xs:string"/>
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<xs:element name="per-ounce-rate" type="xs:decimal"/>
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</xs:sequence>
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</xs:complexType>
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</xs:schema></pre>
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<div>
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<p>This schema describes the purchase order XML instance by defining the following:</p>
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</div>
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<ul>
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<li>
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<div>Definitions for three complex types — customer, line-item, and
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shipper. These are the types used for the children of the purchase-order
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element. In schema, a complex type is one that defines an element that
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may have child elements and attributes. The sequence element nested in
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the complex type lists its child elements.</div>
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<p>These are also <em>global</em> types. They are global because they are
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at the top level of the schema (in other words, just beneath the <span class="langinline">schema</span>
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root element). This means that they may be referenced from anywhere else
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in the schema.</p>
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</li>
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</ul>
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</div>
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<div>
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<ul>
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<li>Use of simple types within the complex types. The name, address, and description
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elements (among others) are typed as simple types. As it happens, these
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are also <em>built-in</em> types. A built-in type (here, one with the "xs"
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prefix) is part of the schema specification. (The specification defines
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46 built-in types.)</li>
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<li>A global element called purchase-order. This element definition includes
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a nested complex type definition that specifies the child elements for a
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purchase-order element. Notice that the complex type includes references
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to the other complex types defined in this schema.</li>
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</ul>
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<div></div>
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<p>In other words, the schema defines types for the child elements and describes
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their position as subordinate to the root element, <span class="langinline">purchase-order</span>.</p>
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<p>When you use the XMLBean compiler with an XSD file such as this one, you
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generate a JAR file containing the interfaces generated from the schema.</p>
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<h2>Writing Java Code That Uses the Interfaces</h2>
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<p>With the XMLBeans interfaces in your application, you can write code that
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uses the new types to handle XML based on the schema. Here's an example that
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extracts information about each of the ordered items in the purchase order
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XML, counts the items, and calculates a total of their prices. In particular,
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look at the use of types generated from the schema and imported as part of
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the <span class="langinline">org.openuri.easypo</span> package. </p>
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<p>The <span class="langinline">printItems</span> method receives a <span class="langinline">File</span>
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object containing the purchase order XML file.</p>
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<pre>
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package docs.xmlbeans;
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import java.io.File;
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import org.apache.xmlbeans.*;
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import org.openuri.easypo.PurchaseOrderDocument;
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import org.openuri.easypo.PurchaseOrder;
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import org.openuri.easypo.LineItem;
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public class POHandler
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{
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public static void printItems(File po) throws Exception
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{
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/*
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* All XMLBeans schema types provide a nested Factory class you can
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* use to bind XML to the type, or to create new instances of the type.
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* Note that a "Document" type such as this one is an XMLBeans
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* construct for representing a global element. It provides a way
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* for you to get and set the contents of the entire element.
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*
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* Also, note that the parse method will only succeed if the
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* XML you're parsing appears to conform to the schema.
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*/
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PurchaseOrderDocument poDoc =
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PurchaseOrderDocument.Factory.parse(po);
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/*
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* The PurchaseOrder type represents the purchase-order element's
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* complex type.
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*/
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PurchaseOrder po = poDoc.getPurchaseOrder();
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/*
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* When an element may occur more than once as a child element,
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* the schema compiler will generate methods that refer to an
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* array of that element. The line-item element is defined with
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* a maxOccurs attribute value of "unbounded", meaning that
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* it may occur as many times in an instance document as needed.
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* So there are methods such as getLineItemArray and setLineItemArray.
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*/
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LineItem[] lineitems = po.getLineItemArray();
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System.out.println("Purchase order has " + lineitems.length + " line items.");
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double totalAmount = 0.0;
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int numberOfItems = 0;
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/*
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* Loop through the line-item elements, using generated accessors to
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* get values for child elements such a description, quantity, and
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* price.
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*/
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for (int j = 0; j < lineitems.length; j++)
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{
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System.out.println(" Line item: " + j);
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System.out.println(
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" Description: " + lineitems[j].getDescription());
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System.out.println(" Quantity: " + lineitems[j].getQuantity());
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System.out.println(" Price: " + lineitems[j].getPrice());
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numberOfItems += lineitems[j].getQuantity();
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totalAmount += lineitems[j].getPrice() * lineitems[j].getQuantity();
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}
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System.out.println("Total items: " + numberOfItems);
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System.out.println("Total amount: " + totalAmount);
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}
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}
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</pre>
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<p>Notice that types generated from the schema reflect what's in the XML:</p>
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</div>
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<ul>
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<li>
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<div>A <span class="langinline">PurchaseOrderDocument</span> represents the
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global root element.</div>
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</li>
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<li>
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<div>A <span class="langinline">getPurchaseOrder</span> method returns a <span class="langinline">PurchaseOrderDocument.PurchaseOrder</span>
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type that contains child elements, including <span class="langinline">line-item</span>.
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A <span class="langinline">getLineItemArray</span> method returns a <span class="langinline">LineItem</span>
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array containing the <span class="langinline">line-item</span> elements.</div>
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</li>
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<li>Other methods, such as <span class="langinline">getQuantity</span>, <span class="langinline">getPrice</span>,
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and so on, follow naturally from what the schema describes, returning corresponding
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children of the <span class="langinline">line-item</span> element.</li>
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<li>The name of the package containing these types is derived from the schema's
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target namespace.</li>
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</ul>
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<div>
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<p>Capitalization and punctuation for generated type names follow Java convention.
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Also, while this example parses the XML from a file, other <span class="langinline">parse</span>
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methods support a Java <span class="langinline">InputStream</span> object,
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a <span class="langinline">Reader</span> object, and so on.</p>
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<p>The preceding Java code prints the following to the console:</p>
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</div>
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<div>
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<pre>
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Purchase order has 3 line items.
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Line item 0
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Description: Burnham's Celestial Handbook, Vol 1
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Quantity: 2
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Price: 21.79
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Line item 1
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Description: Burnham's Celestial Handbook, Vol 2
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Quantity: 2
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Price: 19.89
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Total items: 4
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Total amount: 41.68</pre>
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<h2>Creating New XML Instances from Schema</h2>
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<p>As you've seen XMLBeans provides a "factory" class you can use
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to create new instances. The following example creates a new <span class="langinline">purchase-order</span>
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element and adds a <span class="langinline">customer</span> child element.
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It then inserts <span class="langinline">name</span> and <span class="langinline">address</span>
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child elements, creating the elements and setting their values with a single
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call to their <span class="langinline">set</span> methods.</p>
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<pre>
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public PurchaseOrderDocument createPO()
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{
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PurchaseOrderDocument newPODoc = PurchaseOrderDocument.Factory.newInstance();
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PurchaseOrder newPO = newPODoc.addNewPurchaseOrder();
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Customer newCustomer = newPO.addNewCustomer();
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newCustomer.setName("Doris Kravitz");
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newCustomer.setAddress("Bellflower, CA");
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return newPODoc;
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}
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</pre>
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<p>The following is the XML that results. Note that XMLBeans assigns the correct
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namespace based on the schema, using an "ns1" (or, "namespace
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1") prefix. For practical purposes, the prefix itself doesn't really
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matter — it's the namespace URI (http://openuri.org/easypo) that defines
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the namespace. The prefix is merely a marker that represents it.</p>
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<pre><ns1:purchase-order xmlns:ns1="http://openuri.org/easypo">
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<ns1:customer>
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<ns1:name>Doris Kravitz</ns1:name>
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<ns1:address>Bellflower, CA</ns1:address>
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</ns1:customer>
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</ns1:purchase-order>
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</pre>
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<p>Note that all types (including those generated from schema) inherit from
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<span class="langinline">XmlObject</span>, and so provide a <span class="langinline">Factory</span>
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class. For an overview of the type system in which <span class="langinline">XmlObject</span>
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fits, see <a href="conXMLBeansSupportBuiltInSchemaTypes.html">XMLBeans Support
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for Built-In Schema Types</a>. For reference information, see <a href="../reference/org/apache/xmlbeans/XmlObject.html">XmlObject
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Interface</a>.</p>
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<h1>XMLBeans Hierarchy</h1>
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<p>The generated types you saw used in the preceding example are actually part
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of a hierarchy of XMLBeans types. This hierarchy is one of the ways in which
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XMLBeans presents an intuitive view of schema. At the top of the hierarchy
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is <span class="langinline">XmlObject</span>, the base interface for XMLBeans
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types. Beneath this level, there are two main type categories: generated types
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that represent user-derived schema types, and included types that represent
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built-in schema types.</p>
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This topic has already introduced generated types. For more information, see
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<a href="conJavaTypesGeneratedFromUserDerived.html">Java Types Generated from
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User-Derived Schema Types.</a>
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<h2>Built-In Type Support</h2>
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<p>In addition to types generated from a given schema, XMLBeans provides 46
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Java types that mirror the 46 built-in types defined by the XML schema specification.
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Where schema defines <span class="langinline">xs:string</span>, <span class="langinline">xs:decimal</span>,
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and <span class="langinline">xs:int</span>, for example, XMLBeans provides
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<span class="langinline"><a href="../reference/org/apache/xmlbeans/XmlString.html">XmlString</a></span>,
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<span class="langinline"><a href="../reference/org/apache/xmlbeans/XmlDecimal.html">XmlDecimal</a></span>,
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and <span class="langinline"><a href="../reference/org/apache/xmlbeans/XmlInt.html">XmlInt</a></span>.
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Each of these also inherits from <span class="langinline">XmlObject</span>,
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which corresponds to the built-in schema type <span class="langinline">xs:anyType</span>.</p>
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<p>XMLBeans provides a way for you to handle XML data as these built-in types.
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Where your schema includes an element whose type is, for example, <span class="langinline">xs:int</span>,
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XMLBeans will provide a generated method designed to return an <span class="langinline">XmlInt</span>.
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In addition, as you saw in the preceding example, for most types there will
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also be a method that returns a natural Java type such as <span class="langinline">int</span>.
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The following two lines of code return the <span class="langinline">quantity</span>
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element's value, but return it as different types.</p>
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<pre>
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// Methods that return simple types begin with an "x".
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XmlInt xmlQuantity = lineitems[j].xgetQuantity();
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// Methods that return a natural Java type are unadorned.
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int javaQuantity = lineitems[j].getQuantity();
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</pre>
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<p>In a sense both get methods navigate to the <span class="langinline">quantity</span>
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element; the <span class="langinline">getQuantity</span> method goes a step
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further and converts the elements value to the most appropriate natural Java
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type before returning it. (XMLBeans also provides a means for validating the
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XML as you work with it.)</p>
|
|
<p>If you know a bit about XML schema, XMLBeans types should seem fairly intuitive.
|
|
If you don't, you'll learn a lot by experimenting with XMLBeans using your
|
|
own schemas and XML instances based on them. </p>
|
|
<p>For more information on the methods of types generated from schema, see <a href="conMethodsForGeneratedJavaTypes.html">Methods
|
|
for Types Generated From Schema</a>. For more about the how XMLBeans represents
|
|
built-in schema types, see <a href="conXMLBeansSupportBuiltInSchemaTypes.html">XMLBeans
|
|
Support for Built-In Schema Types</a>.</p>
|
|
<h1>Using XQuery Expressions</h1>
|
|
<p>With XMLBeans you can use XQuery to query XML for specific pieces of data.
|
|
XQuery is sometimes referred to as "SQL for XML" because it provides
|
|
a mechanism to access data directly from XML documents, much as SQL provides
|
|
a mechanism for accessing data in traditional databases.</p>
|
|
<p>XQuery borrows some of its syntax from XPath, a syntax for specifying nested
|
|
data in XML. The following example returns all of the <span class="langinline">line-item</span>
|
|
elements whose <span class="langinline">price</span> child elements have values
|
|
less than or equal to 20.00:</p>
|
|
<pre>
|
|
PurchaseOrderDocument doc = PurchaseOrderDocument.Factory.parse(po);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* The XQuery expression is the following two strings combined. They're
|
|
* declared separately here for convenience. The first string declares
|
|
* the namespace prefix that's used in the query expression; the second
|
|
* declares the expression itself.
|
|
*/
|
|
String nsText = "declare namespace po = 'http://openuri.org/easypo'; ";
|
|
String pathText = "$this/po:purchase-order/po:line-item[po:price <= 20.00]";
|
|
String queryText = nsText + pathText;
|
|
|
|
XmlCursor itemCursor = doc.newCursor().execQuery(queryText);
|
|
System.out.println(itemCursor.xmlText());
|
|
</pre>
|
|
<p>This code creates a new cursor at the start of the document. From there,
|
|
it uses the <span class="langinline">XmlCursor</span> interface's <span class="langinline">execQuery</span>
|
|
method to execute the query expression. In this example, the method's parameter
|
|
is an XQuery expression that simply says, "From my current location,
|
|
navigate through the <span class="langinline">purchase-order</span> element
|
|
and retrieve those <span class="langinline">line-item</span> elements whose
|
|
value is less than or equal to 20.00." The <span class="langinline">$this</span>
|
|
variable means "the current position."</p>
|
|
<p>For more information about XQuery, see <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery/" target="_blank">XQuery
|
|
1.0: An XML Query Language</a> at the W3C web site.</p>
|
|
<h2>Using XML Cursors</h2>
|
|
<p>In the preceding example you may have noticed the <span class="langinline"><a href="../reference/org/apache/xmlbeans/XmlCursor.html">XmlCursor</a></span>
|
|
interface. In addition to providing a way to execute XQuery expression, an
|
|
XML cursors offers a fine-grained model for manipulating data. The XML cursor
|
|
API, analogous to the DOM's object API, is simply a way to point at a particular
|
|
piece of data. So, just like a cursor helps navigate through a word processing
|
|
document, the XML cursor defines a location in XML where you can perform actions
|
|
on the selected XML.</p>
|
|
<p>Cursors are ideal for moving through an XML document when there's no schema
|
|
available. Once you've got the cursor at the location you're interested in,
|
|
you can perform a variety of operations with it. For example, you can set
|
|
and get values, insert and remove fragments of XML, copy fragments of XML
|
|
to other parts of the document, and make other fine-grained changes to the
|
|
XML document.</p>
|
|
<p>The following example uses an XML cursor to navigate to the <span class="langinline">customer</span>
|
|
element's <span class="langinline">name</span> child element.</p>
|
|
<pre>
|
|
PurchaseOrderDocument doc =
|
|
PurchaseOrderDocument.Factory.parse(po);
|
|
|
|
XmlCursor cursor = doc.newCursor();
|
|
cursor.toFirstContentToken();
|
|
cursor.toFirstChildElement();
|
|
cursor.toFirstChildElement();
|
|
System.out.println(cursor.getText());
|
|
|
|
cursor.dispose();
|
|
</pre>
|
|
<p>What's happening here? As with the earlier example, the code loads the XML
|
|
from a <span class="langinline">File</span> object. After loading the document,
|
|
the code creates a cursor at its beginning. Moving the cursor a few times
|
|
takes it to the nested <span class="langinline">name </span> element. Once
|
|
there, the getText method retrieves the element's value.</p>
|
|
<p>This is just an introduction to XML cursors. For more information about using
|
|
cursors, see <a href="conNavigatingXMLwithCursors.html">Navigating XML with
|
|
Cursors</a>.</p>
|
|
<h2>Where to Go Next</h2>
|
|
</div>
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<div>XMLBeans provides intuitive ways to handle XML, particularly if you're
|
|
starting with schema. If you're accessing XML that's based on a schema,
|
|
you'll probably find it most efficient to access the XML through generated
|
|
types specific to the schema. To do this, you begin by compiling the schema
|
|
to generate interfaces. For more information on using XMLBeans types generated
|
|
by compiling schema, see <a href="conJavaTypesGeneratedFromUserDerived.html">Java
|
|
Types Generated From User-Derived Schema Types</a> and <a href="conMethodsForGeneratedJavaTypes.html">Methods
|
|
for Types Generated From Schema</a>.</div>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<div>You might be interested in reading more about the type system on which
|
|
XMLBeans is based, particularly if you're using types generated from schema.
|
|
XMLBeans provides a hierarchical system of types that mirror what you find
|
|
in the XML schema specification itself. If you're working with schema, you
|
|
might find it helps to understand how these types work. For more information,
|
|
see <a href="conXMLBeansSupportBuiltInSchemaTypes.html">XMLBeans Support
|
|
for Built-In Schema Types</a> and <a href="conIntroToTheSchemaTypeSystem.html">Introduction
|
|
to Schema Type Signatures</a>.</div>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<div>XMLBeans provides access to XML through XQuery, which borrows path syntax
|
|
from XPath. With XQuery, you can specify specific fragments of XML data
|
|
with or without schema. To learn more about using XQuery and XPath in XMLBeans,
|
|
see <a href="conSelectingXMLwithXQueryPathXPath.html">Selecting XML with
|
|
XQuery and XPath</a>.</div>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>You can use the <span class="langinline">XmlCursor</span> interface for
|
|
fine-grained navigation and manipulation of XML. For more information, see
|
|
<a href="conNavigatingXMLwithCursors.html">Navigating XML with Cursors</a>.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
<div>
|
|
<p class="notepara"><strong>Note:</strong> The xbean.jar file that contains
|
|
the XMLBeans library is fully functional as a standalone library.</p>
|
|
<h1>Related Topics</h1>
|
|
<p><a href="../../samples/navXMLBeansSamples.html">XMLBeans Samples</a></p>
|
|
</div>
|
|
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