Jeff -

Have you tried WOXMLCoder instead ? it's output is much simpler and easier to control. If you JUST want to dump entity attributes out to XML and then XSLT that into something more useful it's the best tool out the two in my opinion. Castor (http://www.castor.org/) is also worth a look if you need more powerful mapping.

Simon



On 30 Jan 2008, at 20:47, Jeff Schmitz wrote:

I don't know if you'd call it "on top". I downloaded the libraries to a different place, and then updated the WOLips config (actually I just used the woswitch script that popped up on the message list, but I think that's pretty much what it did).

I did have xalan and xercesImpl in the webobjects extensions from when I was playing around trying to fix my previous problem, but I removed them and restarted and I still get the same thing. I am of course using the jdom related jars built into my woa bundle as referenced in my previous problem (jdom-1.0, jaxen-jdom, jaxen-core and saxpath), but I need to keep those.


On Jan 30, 2008, at 1:39 PM, Chuck Hill wrote:

Did you install that on top of 5.4? Is there anything in /Library/ Java/Extensions or /Library/WebObjects/Extensions that might have a newer version of XML "stuff"?

Chuck


On Jan 30, 2008, at 11:19 AM, Jeff Schmitz wrote:

I'm seeing this using WO 5.3 on Leopard. I haven't tried it yet deployed on Tiger/5.3.


On Jan 30, 2008, at 1:11 PM, Chuck Hill wrote:


On Jan 30, 2008, at 9:06 AM, Jeff Schmitz wrote:

Using the NSXmlOutputStream class as described in Practical Webobjects and passing in a key value, e.g.

   xml_stream.writeObject(first(), "first")

I'm getting output with a structure that doesn't match what is shown in the book. For example, here is a snippet of my output:

      <string id="7" xml:space="preserve">jeff</string>
      <string idRef="7" key="first"/>

Note the extra level of indirection where the key value is in its own element that has a reference to another element that contains the associated key data.

According to the book, and Apple's own documentation, I would have expected something more like:

<string id="7" key="first" xml:space="preserve">jeff</ string>

I'm thinking the format I'm getting is going to make any XSL I write a little more complicated, and it also worries me that in the future this format could change, breaking all my xsl's. Any idea why this might be?

My first, and only, guess is a difference in versions between the libraries used waaay back when that was written and what you have installed on your machine. Which WO version? Hopefully there is some way to control how this gets generated. XSL is annoying enough for the easy version.

Chuck


--

Practical WebObjects - for developers who want to increase their overall knowledge of WebObjects or who are trying to solve specific problems.
http://www.global-village.net/products/practical_webobjects








--

Practical WebObjects - for developers who want to increase their overall knowledge of WebObjects or who are trying to solve specific problems.
http://www.global-village.net/products/practical_webobjects






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