Hi Mike,

thanks, I found the CSV one which was sufficient form e to find the right 
jumpin points (gee... scala is nice but also a pain in the ass, I forgot) : >

Julian

Am 11.09.19, 10:34 schrieb "Beckerle, Mike" <[email protected]>:

    Hi Julian,
    
    Within the DFDL tree, probably the simplest test that runs end-to-end, 
search for this line:
    
      @Test def test_unsignedInt() { runner.runOneTest("TestUnsignedInt") }
    
    This will compile a schema, then use it to parse a trivial unsigned text 
integer, but you can walk through the code and it will go through all the 
phases of execution.
    
    For a more interesting example, I generally suggest to people to try PCAP, 
because most people are familiar with IP packets and such, so the format, while 
binary, is familiar. It's not a practical way to parse PCAP files, but a useful 
tutorial.
    
    https://github.com/DFDLSchemas is where you will find it, and the other 
schemas that are public.
    
    ...mikeb
    
    ________________________________
    From: Julian Feinauer <[email protected]>
    Sent: Wednesday, September 11, 2019 12:07 PM
    To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
    Subject: Easy test to start
    
    Hi Mike and Steve,
    
    I just wanted to check out daffodil and hack a bit around to get used to it.
    Could you point me on an easy end-to-end test which I can use to enter and 
trace a bit around?
    
    Thanks!
    Julian
    

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