hi bill,
good to hear that you solved your issues!
regarding the track-source feature: this can be left out if you don't
need the functionality, see the first chapter in
http://jibx.sourceforge.net/tutorial/binding-advanced.html
br,
günther
Am 20.11.2007 um 06:05 schrieb William Surowiec:
Gunther,
Thank you, it is now working using the second method you indicated.
It was not obvious to me that I could have multiple bindings in one
file. So, my binding.xml file is structured something like:
<binding name="bindingReportInput" direction="input" track-
source="true">
<mapping name="report" class="xxx.Report">
<BIG SNIP/>
</mapping>
</binding>
<binding name="bindingReportOutput1" direction="output" track-
source="true">
<mapping name="report" class="xxx.Report">
<BIG SNIP/>
</mapping>
</binding>
I am not sure if the track-source has any meaning for the output
direction, but nothing complained when simple cut and paste left it
unintentionally in there. I will remove it (and choose better names
for things as we get more serious.)
Really nice. Great tool.
Thank you again for the help (the "other" ingredient making for a
great tool),
Bill
Günther Wieser wrote:
hi bill,
there are two ways to accomplish that:
first, if your input and output binding will be the same in each
situation, you can use different mappings by specifying the
direction="output" or direction="input" attribute in the binding
element, see
http://jibx.sourceforge.net/tutorial/binding-advanced.html
second, you can use named bindings. you can specify a name in the
binding element, and in your java code, you can specify which named
binding you want to use. this allows you to use as many different
bindings as you like or need.
see the binding definition at http://jibx.sourceforge.net/details/binding-element.html
for more details on the attribute "name". i think there is also
some more detailed explanation in the tutorial, but i couldn't find
it now.
br,
günther
Am 19.11.2007 um 22:16 schrieb William Surowiec:
Hi,
I've recently started using JibX - really useful, thank you.
But, of course, I have a question. I sense there may be several
ways to accomplish what I wish to do and I would appreciate
guidance on the "best practice" way. Here is what I would like to
accomplish:
I have a complex, custom Java object. I receive an xml
representation of it (actually a subset of it.) I can parse the
subset without a problem. I now wish to produce another xml
representation of it (same object) but publishing different facets
of it. Structurally the resultant xml would look different than
the input xml: meta data inserted, aggregation performed, some
field elided.
In this specific situation, it makes sense to maintain a single
object with multiple views. Is there a "best practice" jibx
approach?
Thanks,
Bill
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