More XML XML schema, XPATH, XSLT

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More XML XML schema, XPATH, XSLT. CS 431 – February 21, 2005 Carl Lagoze – Cornell University. acknowledgements to http://www.w3schools.com/schema/default.asp. xHTML. HTML “expressed” in XML Corrects defects in HTML All tags closed Proper nesting Case sensitive (all tags lower case) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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More XMLXML schema, XPATH, XSLT

CS 431 – February 21, 2005Carl Lagoze – Cornell University

acknowledgements tohttp://www.w3schools.com/schema/default.asp

xHTML

• HTML “expressed” in XML• Corrects defects in HTML

– All tags closed– Proper nesting– Case sensitive (all tags lower case)– Strict well-formedness

• Defined by a DTD– <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0

Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">

– <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">

xHTML (cont.)

• All new HTML SHOULD be xHTML• W3C validator

– http://validator.w3.org

• Tidy– http://sourceforge.net/projects/jtidy

A little context

Traditional LibraryCentral control

Uniform expertise

Traditional WebDistributed, interlinkedViewable Documents

XMLMarkup Syntax

URIsName Convention

HTTPAccess Method

SchemaType Definition

NamespacesConcept

Integration

XpathData

Decomposition

XSLTData

Transformation

DTDTag Sets

RDFSemantic

Relationships

OWLConceptBuilding

XML Schema Define…

• elements• attributes• Nesting structure (parent/child rela.) • Sibling sequence • Sibling cardinality • Presence or absence of text values • Element and attribute data types • Element and attribute default values

Structure of a schema

• well-formed xml document• elements are in schema namespace• root is <schema> element

Instantiation of a schema

• Note namespaces!!

Simple vs. Complex Values

• Element with complex value contains other elements (has children)

• Element with simple value does not have children (e.g. text).

Simple Value Types

• Restriction on type of content• Syntax

– <xs:element name=“xxx” type=“yyy”/>

• Examples– <xs:element name=“lastname” type=“xs:string”/>– <xs:element name=“age” type=“xs:number”/>– <xs:element name=“age” type=“xs:date”/>

Facets

• Restrictions on values within type context• Examples

String types and patterns

Simple Example

• Memo Schema – http://www.cs.cornell.edu/lagoze/courses/

CS431/2005sp/Examples/Lecture9/memo.xsd

• Instance Document – http://www.cs.cornell.edu/lagoze/courses/

CS431/2005sp/Examples/Lecture9/memo.xml

Complex Types

• Type definition defines elements nesting

Controls on complex types

• sequence – specific order• all – any order• choice – only one

• cardinality – minOccurs, maxOccurs

Complex Type Extension

• Add values to sequence

Mixed Content

Declaring attributes

• Define type– xs:string – xs:decimal – xs:integer – xs:boolean – xs:date – xs:time

• Define optional or required

Use of attributes

• Always a complex type

Type Reuse

Type Reuse Example

• Address schema– http://www.cs.cornell.edu/lagoze/courses/

CS431/2005sp/Examples/Lecture9/address.xsd

• Person schema– http://www.cs.cornell.edu/lagoze/courses/

CS431/2005sp/Examples/Lecture9/person.xsd

• Instance document– http://www.cs.cornell.edu/lagoze/courses/

CS431/2005sp/Examples/Lecture9/person.xml

XPath

• Language for addressing parts of an XML document– XSLT– Xpointer

• Tree model similar to DOM• W3C Recommendation (1999)

– http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath

Xpath Concepts

• Context Node– current node in XML document that is basis of path

evaluation– Default to root

• Location Steps – selection from context node– Axis – sub-tree(s) selection from context node– Node Test – select specific elements or node type(s)– Predicates – predicate for filtering after axis and

node tests

Axis

• child: all children of context• descendent: all children, grandchildren, …• parent: • ancestor

Node Test

• Element name: e.g. “Book”• Wildcard: *• Type(): where type is “node”, “text”, etc.

Predicate

• Boolean and comparative operators• Types

– Numbers– Strings– node-sets

• Functions– Examples

• boolean starts-with(string, string)• number count(node-set)

Combining all into a location set specification

• Syntax: axis::node-test[predicate]• Examples:

– child::Book[position() <= 3] – first three <Book> child elements of context

– child::Book/attribute::color – “color” attributes of <Book> child elements of context

Abbreviations

• Child axis is default– child::Book Book

• Attribute axis @– Book[position() = 1]/@color

• “.” (self), “..” (parent), “//” (descendent-or-self)• position() = n n• Example

– Book[2]/@color

XML Transformations (XSLT)

• Origins: separate rendering from data– Roots in CSS

• W3C Recommendation– http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt

• Generalized notion of transformation for:– Multiple renderings– Structural transformation between different

languages– Dynamic documents

• XSLT – rule-based (declarative) language for transformations

XSLT Capabilities

• Generate constant text• Filter out content• Change tree ordering• Duplicate nodes• Sort nodes• Any computational task (XSLT is “turing

complete”)

XSLT Processing Model

Input XMLdoc

Parsedtree

Xformedtree

Outputdoc

(xml, html, etc)

parse XSLT serialize

XSLT “engine”

XMLinput

XSLT“program”

XSLTEngine

(SAXON)

OutputDocument

(xml, html, …)

Stylesheet Document or Program

• XML document rooted in <stylesheet> element

• Body is set of templates– Xpath expression specifies elements in source tree– Body of template specifies contribution of source

elements to result tree

• Not sequential execution

Template Form

• Elements from xsl namespace are transform instructions

• Match attribute value is xpath expression

• Non-xsl namespace elements are literals.

A simple example

• XML base file– http://www.cs.cornell.edu/Courses/cs502/2002SP/De

mos/xslt/simple.xml

• XSLT file– http://www.cs.cornell.edu/Courses/cs502/2002SP/De

mos/xslt/simple.xsl

XSLT Recursive Programming Style

• Document driven, template matching– Conflict resolution rules– Mode setting

• <xsl:apply-templates mode=“this”>• <xsl:template match=“foo” mode=“this”>• <xsl:template match=“foo” mode=“that”>

– Context setting• <xsl:apply-templates select=“//bar”>

XSLT Procedural Programming

• Sequential programming style• Basics

– for-each – loop through a set of elements– call-template – like a standard procedure call

For-each programming example

• XML base file– http://www.cs.cornell.edu/Courses/cs502/2002SP/De

mos/xslt/foreach.xml

• XSLT file– http://www.cs.cornell.edu/Courses/cs502/2002SP/De

mos/xslt/foreach.xsl

Call-template programming example

• XML base file– http://www.cs.cornell.edu/Courses/cs502/2002SP/

Demos/xslt/call.xml

• XSLT file– http://www.cs.cornell.edu/Courses/cs502/2002SP/De

mos/xslt/call.xsl

Result Tree Creation

• Literals – any element not in xsl namespace• <xsl:text> - content directly to output• <xsl:value-of> - expression processing• <xsl:copy> and <xsl:copyof> - Copy current

node or selected nodes into result tree• <xsl:element> - instantiate an element• <xsl:attribute> - instantiate an attribute

Various other programming constructs

• Conditionals• Variables (declaration and use)• Some type conversion• Sorting

Resources

• XSLT – WROX Press– ISBN 1-861005-06-7

• W3C XSLT Page– http://www.w3.org/Style/XSL/

• Arbortext XSL Tutorial– http://www.nwalsh.com/docs/tutorials/xsl/