Thanks guys for your thoughts. (Rush, I did reply to your last communication with me re: library selection, but it bounced on your address. I think I tried resending, not sure.)
To address some of the questions raised about how the Profile will be used, the use case here is quite simple. The profile is read-only, there will never be a reason for the application to modify its own configuration. The application opens the profile once at initialization, reads its config parameters, which may be a small subset of the total depending on how many applications it contains, and discards the profile. The queries themselves are quite simple, just "gimme the value that matches this application/section/item ID". It seems to me that either way, the contents of the file must be loaded into a memory structure, either a DOM or one of my own creation, and then a means must be provided for randomly accessing specific pieces of the data. Going DOM/XPath, that is all provided by the API. Going the marshalling route, I have to build all that myself, and the additional flexibility/capabilities this method provides aren't needed here. Given the simplicity of what we are doing, marshalling seems to be unnecessary work. If I did do it, I would certainly use the SAX interface. No need to load the data into one structure just to reload it into another. Thanks again, you've given me some things to consider. -will -----Original Message----- From: Rush Manbert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, February 14, 2007 2:08 PM To: John Dennis Cc: Will Sappington; [email protected] Subject: Re: [xml] "Proper" way to use XML (not library specific) John Dennis wrote: > On Wed, 2007-02-14 at 11:58 -0500, Will Sappington wrote: >>be designed to do specifically that with XML data. So why would it >>not be an appropriate tool to use for migrating our existing >>name/value pairs (.ini files) to XML? > > > Bottom line, you can do it either way. Irrespective of whether you > marshal the data into your own data structure or reference it directly > in the DOM tree you still will as a first step need to locate the data > in the XML file, XPath is a very convenient way to do this. But it does > require you know what to query a priori, a lot of times that's not the > case (see comment about SAX below) > > As to whether the queries in your API reference the DOM directly via > XPath, or a private data structure you built from the DOM is an > implementation choice dictated by your particular circumstances. > > However, do consider the option of using SAX, not DOM for your purpose. > SAX is well suited to marshaling config file entries. The idea is your > SAX callbacks build the marshaled data structure as the file is parsed. > There is a tremendous advantage to this because the marshaled data > "builds itself". > > It's not unusual to discover a marshaled data structure is easier to > work with once built, especially if any of the data needs to be > normalized, validated, or cross referenced in any manner. Hi Will, What he said. :-) You can expose the same top level API in either case. However, if you do marshal the data into classes and use STL (I'm thinking maps or multimaps here), then you get a lot of pretty direct support from the STL classes. Your data is also highly mutable, if you need that sort of thing, and would be easy to un-marshal back to XML if you need to write out the config. If I needed to do that, it would tip me to use classes because it's not very easy to modify the DOM. (I don't know about streaming APIs because I haven't used them.) As in the original library selection discussion, it might come down to that "today we make cigars, but next year we're going to start making H-bombs" thing again. But then, if you used Xpath and wrapped it in a class with a good API and good encapsulation, then when it's time to start making nuclear devices you could always change the underlying implementation to use classes/STL and no one would be the wiser. On the third hand, though, maybe you should just make your boss happy and use the class approach. It's a good excuse to learn to use STL if you haven't done it before, and it might get you a better raise come next review time. There are just so many factors to consider here! - Rush _______________________________________________ xml mailing list, project page http://xmlsoft.org/ [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/xml
