Jump to content

CodeSynthesis XSD

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the current revision of this page, as edited by Love Sun and Dreams (talk | contribs) at 19:22, 11 July 2022 (Remove reference: I don't understand how this relates to Bjarne Stroustrup, except that it is a C++ project.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
CodeSynthesis XSD
Developer(s)Code Synthesis
Stable release
4.0.0 / July 22, 2014; 10 years ago (2014-07-22)
Written inC++
Operating systemCross-platform C++
TypeXML Data Binding
LicenseGNU General Public License and Proprietary License
Websitewww.codesynthesis.com/products/xsd

CodeSynthesis XSD is an XML Data Binding compiler for C++ developed by Code Synthesis and dual-licensed under the GNU GPL and a proprietary license. Given an XML instance specification (XML Schema), it generates C++ classes that represent the given vocabulary as well as parsing and serialization code. It is supported on a large number of platforms, including AIX, Linux, HP-UX, OS X, Solaris, Windows, OpenVMS, and z/OS. Supported C++ compilers include GNU G++, Intel C++, HP aCC, Solaris Studio C++, IBM XL C++, and Microsoft Visual C++. A version for mobile and embedded systems, called CodeSynthesis XSD/e, is also available.

One of the unique features of CodeSynthesis XSD is its support for two different XML Schema to C++ mappings: in-memory C++/Tree and stream-oriented C++/Parser. The C++/Tree mapping is a traditional mapping with a tree-like, in-memory data structure. C++/Parser is a new, SAX-like mapping which represents the information stored in XML instance documents as a hierarchy of vocabulary-specific parsing events. In comparison to C++/Tree, the C++/Parser mapping allows one to handle large XML documents that would not fit in memory, perform stream-oriented processing, or use an existing in-memory representation. The XSD-generated code can target C++98/03 or C++11.

CodeSynthesis XSD itself is written in C++.

References

[edit]
[edit]