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RE: RelaxNG examples



Hi Tom,

Several, but the most trustworthy IMHO is XSV, co-authored
by Henry Thompson (co-editor of W3C XML Schema standards).

  http://www.w3.org/XML/Schema#XSV

Available for online web form access, Win32 self-installer,
and Python source for any platform - see

  http://www.ltg.ed.ac.uk/~ht/xsv-status.html

Cheers,
- Ira

Ira McDonald (Musician / Software Architect)
Blue Roof Music / High North Inc
PO Box 221  Grand Marais, MI  49839
phone: +1-906-494-2434
email: imcdonald@sharplabs.com

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-netconf@ops.ietf.org [mailto:owner-netconf@ops.ietf.org]On
Behalf Of tom.petch
Sent: Thursday, November 09, 2006 8:38 AM
To: j.schoenwaelder@iu-bremen.de
Cc: netconf@ops.ietf.org
Subject: Re: RelaxNG examples


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Juergen Schoenwaelder" <j.schoenwaelder@iu-bremen.de>
To: "Yoshifumi Atarashi" <atarashi@alaxala.net>
Cc: <netconf@ops.ietf.org>; "Hideki Okita" <hideki.okita.pf@hitachi.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 08, 2006 8:55 PM
Subject: Re: RelaxNG examples


> On Thu, Nov 09, 2006 at 02:25:05AM +0900, Yoshifumi Atarashi wrote:
> > I think there are a few style decision points.
> > 
> > 1) expression ability
> > 2) easy to understanding
> > 3) programming language/tool/library support
> > 4) capability
> > 
> > In my understanding,
> > RelaxNG
> > 1) good
> > 2) good
> > 3) not good
> > 4) not good, because RelaxNG is not mainstream in XML tool developer.
> >    (Our XML expert told us.)
> > 
> > xsd
> > 1) good (a little limited)
> > 2) good (a little limited)
> > 3) very good
> > 4) good
> > 
> > So I think we choice "xsd", for operator who can make netconf tools and
> > NMS programmers.
> 
> I assume that all sensible developers will use some other input format
> to generate the XSD. And I doubt the IETF has enough people who can
> really read and judge the correctness of XSDs - at least this WG seems
> to have proven that bugs in the XSD usually stay around for a long
> time undetected (even though there are all these great tools out
> there).
> 
Is there a publicly available tool for XSD like
  smilint@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de
or its successor is for SMIv2?

Tom Petch
> /js
> 
> -- 
> Juergen Schoenwaelder     International University Bremen
> <http://www.eecs.iu-bremen.de/>     P.O. Box 750 561, 28725 Bremen,
Germany
> 
> --
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