Okay, I get it: They are located here:
https://www.hl7.org/store/viewitem.cfm?Item=ACCESS - instead of using
schemas, which IMHO seems like a good idea, would anything be won by using
a DB abstraction on it like Hibernate?
On 12 March 2013 21:46, Christian Ohr <christian....@gmail.com> wrote:
> Some time ago I thought about using the HL7 XML Schema files as a
> source for creating the structure libs (using a schema parser like
> xsom). I did not follow up on this very thoroughly, but on first
> glance it seems that most (if not all) of the required data can be
> also found in the schema files.
> The advantage would be that the schema files are available to all HL7
> subscribers (and eventually maybe to everyone depending on the final
> HL7 licenses) and can thus be built independently from running and
> accessing a database.
>
> The schema files have their bugs, but in the past it turned out that
> the database was also buggy and required some custom coding in the
> generator.
> Speaking of student projects.... ;-)
>
> cheers
> Christian
>
>
> 2013/3/12 James Agnew <ja...@jamesagnew.ca>:
> > Hi Rahul,
> >
> > I actually gave this a shot once, basically exporting all of the data
> into a
> > MySQL database and then running the queries against that. Unfortunately
> > basically none of the data queries worked at all and after spending a
> while
> > trying to clean them up I eventually gave up.
> >
> > I'm actually not sure what HL7's movement to open the specification will
> > mean to the database. At least as far as I have seen there have been no
> > announcements about what will happen with it, but if I were to guess I
> would
> > say they won't be making it available for free. If anyone knows either
> way
> > I'd love to hear about it- It would be great to try and find a volunteer
> to
> > have another go at that conversion. Might actually make a good student
> > project now that I think about it.
> >
> > Cheers,
> > James
> >
> >
> >
> > On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 12:16 PM, Rahul Somasunderam
> > <r...@certifydatasystems.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> Is it possible to export MS Access to a SQL Dump and then use any other
> >> database (H2 or HSQLDB) such that the build can be performed easily?
> >> It has been a problem so long because of the way HL7 licensed their
> >> database. Now that they mentioned they are open sourcing their database,
> >> would it be any easier?
> >>
> >> R,
> >> rahul
> >>
> >> On Mar 12, 2013, at 9:08 AM, James Agnew <ja...@jamesagnew.ca> wrote:
> >>
> >> > Hi everyone,
> >> >
> >> > Just a quick note to anyone who is wondering where HAPI 2.1 is. At
> this
> >> > point there are no remaining showstoppers blocking release, so we
> should be
> >> > out very soon. I would say that it should be safe for anyone doing new
> >> > development to begin using the 2-1-beta1 release, with the
> expectation that
> >> > they can migrate to the final shortly.
> >> >
> >> > If anyone is curious, the only thing blocking our release is an issue
> >> > with the structures JAR builds. The HAPI structures are generated
> using the
> >> > HL7 database, which is an Access DB. The hapi-sourcegen project reads
> this
> >> > DB using the Microsoft Access ODBC bridge, which they have only ever
> >> > released for 32 bit windows (grrrr) so the HAPI build is done on a
> Windows
> >> > XP virtual machine. At this point, the structures JARs are generating
> so
> >> > many files in each JAR that we are hitting some kind of "maximum line
> >> > length" limit in XP because of the way that the Maven Compiler plugin
> uses
> >> > Javac. We worked around this in the last release by doing the
> generation
> >> > step in XP and them doing the compile step in OSX, but this was
> clunky and I
> >> > feel like it's bound to fail one day and cause us to release a JAR
> that is
> >> > missing files.
> >> >
> >> > The holdup therefore has been trying to diagnose why maven-compiler is
> >> > failing. I feel like we're almost there!
> >> >
> >> > Cheers,
> >> > James
> >> >
> >> >
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> >> >
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> >> > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/hl7api-devel
> >>
> >
> >
> >
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