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| 2 | ** | 
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| 3 | ** Copyright (C) 2011 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). | 
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| 16 | ** GNU Free Documentation License | 
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| 26 | ****************************************************************************/ | 
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| 27 |  | 
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| 28 | /*! | 
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| 29 | \page xmlprocessing.html | 
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| 30 | \title XQuery | 
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| 31 |  | 
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| 32 | \previouspage Working with the DOM Tree | 
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| 33 | \contentspage XML Processing | 
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| 34 |  | 
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| 35 | \keyword Patternist | 
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| 36 |  | 
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| 37 | \brief An overview of Qt's support for using XML technologies in | 
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| 38 | Qt programs. | 
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| 39 |  | 
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| 40 | \tableofcontents | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | \section1 Introduction | 
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| 43 |  | 
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| 44 | XQuery is a language for traversing XML documents to select and | 
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| 45 | aggregate items of interest and to transform them for output as | 
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| 46 | XML or some other format. XPath is the \e{element selection} part | 
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| 47 | of XQuery. | 
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| 48 |  | 
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| 49 | The QtXmlPatterns module supports using | 
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| 50 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery} {XQuery 1.0} and | 
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| 51 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath20} {XPath 2.0} in Qt applications, | 
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| 52 | for querying XML data \e{and} for querying | 
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| 53 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel} {non-XML data that can be modeled to | 
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| 54 | look like XML}. | 
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| 55 | Readers who are not familiar with the XQuery/XPath language can read | 
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| 56 | \l {A Short Path to XQuery} for a brief introduction. | 
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| 57 |  | 
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| 58 | \section1 Advantages of using QtXmlPatterns and XQuery | 
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| 59 |  | 
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| 60 | The XQuery/XPath language simplifies data searching and | 
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| 61 | transformation tasks by eliminating the need for doing a lot of | 
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| 62 | C++ or Java procedural programming for each new query task. Here | 
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| 63 | is an XQuery that constructs a bibliography of the contents of a | 
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| 64 | library: | 
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| 65 |  | 
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| 66 | \target qtxmlpatterns_example_query | 
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| 67 | \quotefile snippets/patternist/introductionExample.xq | 
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| 68 |  | 
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| 69 | First, the query opens a \c{<bibliography>} element in the | 
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| 70 | output. The | 
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| 71 | \l{xquery-introduction.html#using-path-expressions-to-match-and-select-items} | 
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| 72 | {embedded path expression} then loads the XML document describing | 
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| 73 | the contents of the library (\c{library.xml}) and begins the | 
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| 74 | search. For each \c{<book>} element it finds, where the publisher | 
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| 75 | was Addison-Wesley and the publication year was after 1991, it | 
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| 76 | creates a new \c{<book>} element in the output as a child of the | 
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| 77 | open \c{<bibliography>} element. Each new \c{<book>} element gets | 
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| 78 | the book's title as its contents and the book's publication year | 
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| 79 | as an attribute. Finally, the \c{<bibliography>} element is | 
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| 80 | closed. | 
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| 81 |  | 
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| 82 | The advantages of using QtXmlPatterns and XQuery in your Qt | 
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| 83 | programs are summarized as follows: | 
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| 84 |  | 
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| 85 | \list | 
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| 86 |  | 
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| 87 | \o \bold{Ease of development}: All the C++ programming required to | 
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| 88 | perform data query tasks can be replaced by a simple XQuery | 
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| 89 | like the example above. | 
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| 90 |  | 
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| 91 | \o \bold{Comprehensive functionality}: The | 
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| 92 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery/#id-expressions} {expression | 
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| 93 | syntax} and rich set of | 
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| 94 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath-functions} {functions and | 
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| 95 | operators} provided by XQuery are sufficient for performing any | 
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| 96 | data searching, selecting, and sorting tasks. | 
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| 97 |  | 
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| 98 | \o \bold{Conformance to standards}: Conformance to all applicable | 
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| 99 | XML and XQuery standards ensures that QtXmlPatterns can always | 
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| 100 | process XML documents generated by other conformant | 
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| 101 | applications, and that XML documents created with QtXmlPatterns | 
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| 102 | can be processed by other conformant applications. | 
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| 103 |  | 
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| 104 | \o \bold{Maximal flexibility} The QtXmlPatterns module can be used | 
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| 105 | to query XML data \e{and} non-XML data that can be | 
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| 106 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel} {modeled to look like XML}. | 
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| 107 |  | 
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| 108 | \endlist | 
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| 109 |  | 
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| 110 | \section1 Using the QtXmlPatterns module | 
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| 111 |  | 
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| 112 | There are two ways QtXmlPatterns can be used to evaluate queries. | 
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| 113 | You can run the query engine in your Qt application using the | 
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| 114 | QtXmlPatterns C++ API, or you can run the query engine from the | 
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| 115 | command line using Qt's \c{xmlpatterns} command line utility. | 
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| 116 |  | 
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| 117 | \section2 Running the query engine from your Qt application | 
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| 118 |  | 
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| 119 | If we save the example XQuery shown above in a text file (e.g. | 
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| 120 | \c{myquery.xq}), we can run it from a Qt application using a | 
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| 121 | standard QtXmlPatterns code sequence: | 
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| 122 |  | 
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| 123 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_xmlpatterns_api_qxmlquery.cpp 3 | 
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| 124 |  | 
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| 125 | First construct a QFile for the text file containing the XQuery | 
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| 126 | (\c{myquery.xq}). Then create an instance of QXmlQuery and call | 
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| 127 | its \l{QXmlQuery::}{setQuery()} function to load and parse the | 
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| 128 | XQuery file. Then create an \l{QXmlSerializer} {XML serializer} to | 
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| 129 | output the query's result set as unformatted XML. Finally, call | 
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| 130 | the \l{QXmlQuery::}{evaluateTo()} function to evaluate the query | 
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| 131 | and serialize the results as XML. | 
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| 132 |  | 
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| 133 | \note If you compile Qt yourself, the QtXmlPatterns module will | 
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| 134 | \e{not} be built if exceptions are disabled, or if you compile Qt | 
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| 135 | with a compiler that doesn't support member templates, e.g., MSVC | 
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| 136 | 6. | 
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| 137 |  | 
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| 138 | See the QXmlQuery documentation for more information about the | 
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| 139 | QtXmlPatterns C++ API. | 
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| 140 |  | 
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| 141 | \section2 Running the query engine from the command line utility | 
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| 142 |  | 
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| 143 | \e xmlpatterns is a command line utility for running XQueries.  It | 
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| 144 | expects the name of a file containing the XQuery text. | 
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| 145 |  | 
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| 146 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qtxmlpatterns.qdoc 2 | 
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| 147 |  | 
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| 148 | The XQuery in \c{myQuery.xq} will be evaluated and its output | 
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| 149 | written to \c stdout. Pass the \c -help switch to get the list of | 
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| 150 | input flags and their meanings. | 
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| 151 |  | 
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| 152 | xmlpatterns can be used in scripting. However, the descriptions | 
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| 153 | and messages it outputs were not meant to be parsed and may be | 
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| 154 | changed in future releases of Qt. | 
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| 155 |  | 
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| 156 | \target QtXDM | 
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| 157 | \section1 The XQuery Data Model | 
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| 158 |  | 
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| 159 | XQuery represents data items as \e{atomic values} or \e{nodes}. An | 
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| 160 | atomic value is a value in the domain of one of the | 
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| 161 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/#built-in-datatypes} {built-in | 
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| 162 | datatypes} defined in \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2} {Part | 
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| 163 | 2} of the W3C XML Schema. A node is normally an XML element or | 
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| 164 | attribute, but when non-XML data is \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel} | 
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| 165 | {modeled to look like XML}, a node can also represent a non-XML | 
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| 166 | data items. | 
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| 167 |  | 
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| 168 | When you run an XQuery using the C++ API in a Qt application, you | 
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| 169 | will often want to bind program variables to $variables in the | 
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| 170 | XQuery. After the query is evaluated, you will want to interpret | 
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| 171 | the sequence of data items in the result set. | 
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| 172 |  | 
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| 173 | \section2 Binding program variables to XQuery variables | 
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| 174 |  | 
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| 175 | When you want to run a parameterized XQuery from your Qt | 
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| 176 | application, you will need to \l{QXmlQuery::bindVariable()} {bind | 
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| 177 | variables} in your program to $name variables in your XQuery. | 
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| 178 |  | 
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| 179 | Suppose you want to parameterize the bibliography XQuery in the | 
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| 180 | example above. You could define variables for the catalog that | 
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| 181 | contains the library (\c{$file}), the publisher name | 
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| 182 | (\c{$publisher}), and the year of publication (\c{$year}): | 
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| 183 |  | 
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| 184 | \target qtxmlpatterns_example_query2 | 
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| 185 | \quotefile snippets/patternist/introExample2.xq | 
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| 186 |  | 
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| 187 | Modify the QtXmlPatterns code to use one of the \l{QXmlQuery::} | 
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| 188 | {bindVariable()} functions to bind a program variable to each | 
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| 189 | XQuery $variable: | 
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| 190 |  | 
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| 191 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_xmlpatterns_api_qxmlquery.cpp 4 | 
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| 192 |  | 
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| 193 | Each program variable is passed to QtXmlPatterns as a QVariant of | 
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| 194 | the type of the C++ variable or constant from which it is | 
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| 195 | constructed. Note that QtXmlPatterns assumes that the type of the | 
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| 196 | QVariant in the bindVariable() call is the correct type, so the | 
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| 197 | $variable it is bound to must be used in the XQuery accordingly. | 
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| 198 | The following table shows how QVariant types are mapped to XQuery | 
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| 199 | $variable types: | 
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| 200 |  | 
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| 201 | \table | 
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| 202 |  | 
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| 203 | \header | 
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| 204 | \o QVariant type | 
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| 205 | \o XQuery $variable type | 
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| 206 |  | 
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| 207 | \row | 
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| 208 | \o QVariant::LongLong | 
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| 209 | \o \c xs:integer | 
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| 210 |  | 
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| 211 | \row | 
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| 212 | \o QVariant::Int | 
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| 213 | \o \c xs:integer | 
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| 214 |  | 
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| 215 | \row | 
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| 216 | \o QVariant::UInt | 
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| 217 | \o \c xs:nonNegativeInteger | 
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| 218 |  | 
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| 219 | \row | 
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| 220 | \o QVariant::ULongLong | 
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| 221 | \o \c xs:unsignedLong | 
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| 222 |  | 
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| 223 | \row | 
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| 224 | \o QVariant::String | 
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| 225 | \o \c xs:string | 
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| 226 |  | 
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| 227 | \row | 
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| 228 | \o QVariant::Double | 
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| 229 | \o \c xs:double | 
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| 230 |  | 
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| 231 | \row | 
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| 232 | \o QVariant::Bool | 
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| 233 | \o \c xs:boolean | 
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| 234 |  | 
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| 235 | \row | 
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| 236 | \o QVariant::Double | 
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| 237 | \o \c xs:decimal | 
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| 238 |  | 
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| 239 | \row | 
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| 240 | \o QVariant::ByteArray | 
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| 241 | \o \c xs:base64Binary | 
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| 242 |  | 
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| 243 | \row | 
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| 244 | \o QVariant::StringList | 
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| 245 | \o \c xs:string* | 
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| 246 |  | 
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| 247 | \row | 
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| 248 | \o QVariant::Url | 
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| 249 | \o \c xs:string | 
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| 250 |  | 
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| 251 | \row | 
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| 252 | \o QVariant::Date | 
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| 253 | \o \c xs:date. | 
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| 254 |  | 
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| 255 | \row | 
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| 256 | \o QVariant::DateTime | 
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| 257 | \o \c xs:dateTime | 
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| 258 |  | 
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| 259 | \row | 
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| 260 | \o QVariant::Time. | 
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| 261 | \o \c xs:time. (see \l{Binding To Time}{Binding To | 
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| 262 | QVariant::Time} below) | 
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| 263 |  | 
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| 264 | \row | 
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| 265 | \o QVariantList | 
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| 266 | \o (see \l{Binding To QVariantList}{Binding To QVariantList} | 
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| 267 | below) | 
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| 268 |  | 
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| 269 | \endtable | 
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| 270 |  | 
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| 271 | A type not shown in the table is not supported and will cause | 
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| 272 | undefined XQuery behavior or a $variable binding error, depending | 
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| 273 | on the context in the XQuery where the variable is used. | 
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| 274 |  | 
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| 275 | \target Binding To Time | 
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| 276 | \section3 Binding To QVariant::Time | 
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| 277 |  | 
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| 278 | Because the instance of QTime used in QVariant::Time does not | 
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| 279 | include a zone offset, an instance of QVariant::Time should not be | 
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| 280 | bound to an XQuery variable of type \c xs:time, unless the QTime is | 
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| 281 | UTC. When binding a non-UTC QTime to an XQuery variable, it should | 
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| 282 | first be passed as a string, or converted to a QDateTime with an arbitrary | 
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| 283 | date, and then bound to an XQuery variable of type \c xs:dateTime. | 
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| 284 |  | 
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| 285 | \target Binding To QVariantList | 
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| 286 | \section3 Binding To QVariantList | 
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| 287 |  | 
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| 288 | A QVariantList can be bound to an XQuery $variable. All the | 
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| 289 | \l{QVariant}s in the list must be of the same atomic type, and the | 
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| 290 | $variable the variant list is bound to must be of that same atomic | 
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| 291 | type. If the QVariants in the list are not all of the same atomic | 
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| 292 | type, the XQuery behavior is undefined. | 
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| 293 |  | 
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| 294 | \section2 Interpreting XQuery results | 
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| 295 |  | 
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| 296 | When the results of an XQuery are returned in a sequence of \l | 
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| 297 | {QXmlResultItems} {result items}, atomic values in the sequence | 
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| 298 | are treated as instances of QVariant. Suppose that instead of | 
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| 299 | serializing the results of the XQuery as XML, we process the | 
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| 300 | results programatically. Modify the standard QtXmlPatterns code | 
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| 301 | sequence to call the overload of QXmlQuery::evaluateTo() that | 
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| 302 | populates a sequence of \l {QXmlResultItems} {result items} with | 
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| 303 | the XQuery results: | 
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| 304 |  | 
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| 305 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_xmlpatterns_api_qxmlquery.cpp 5 | 
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| 306 |  | 
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| 307 | Iterate through the \l {QXmlResultItems} {result items} and test | 
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| 308 | each QXmlItem to see if it is an atomic value or a node. If it is | 
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| 309 | an atomic value, convert it to a QVariant with \l {QXmlItem::} | 
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| 310 | {toAtomicValue()} and switch on its \l {QVariant::type()} {variant | 
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| 311 | type} to handle all the atomic values your XQuery might return. | 
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| 312 | The following table shows the QVariant type to expect for each | 
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| 313 | atomic value type (or QXmlName): | 
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| 314 |  | 
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| 315 | \table | 
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| 316 |  | 
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| 317 | \header | 
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| 318 | \o XQuery result item type | 
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| 319 | \o QVariant type returned | 
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| 320 |  | 
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| 321 | \row | 
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| 322 | \o \c xs:QName | 
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| 323 | \o QXmlName (see \l{Handling QXmlNames}{Handling QXmlNames} | 
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| 324 | below) | 
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| 325 |  | 
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| 326 | \row | 
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| 327 | \o \c xs:integer | 
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| 328 | \o QVariant::LongLong | 
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| 329 |  | 
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| 330 | \row | 
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| 331 | \o \c xs:string | 
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| 332 | \o QVariant::String | 
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| 333 |  | 
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| 334 | \row | 
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| 335 | \o \c xs:string* | 
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| 336 | \o QVariant::StringList | 
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| 337 |  | 
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| 338 | \row | 
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| 339 | \o \c xs:double | 
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| 340 | \o QVariant::Double | 
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| 341 |  | 
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| 342 | \row | 
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| 343 | \o \c xs:float | 
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| 344 | \o QVariant::Double | 
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| 345 |  | 
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| 346 | \row | 
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| 347 | \o \c xs:boolean | 
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| 348 | \o QVariant::Bool | 
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| 349 |  | 
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| 350 | \row | 
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| 351 | \o \c xs:decimal | 
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| 352 | \o QVariant::Double | 
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| 353 |  | 
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| 354 | \row | 
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| 355 | \o \c xs:hexBinary | 
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| 356 | \o QVariant::ByteArray | 
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| 357 |  | 
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| 358 | \row | 
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| 359 | \o \c xs:base64Binary | 
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| 360 | \o QVariant::ByteArray | 
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| 361 |  | 
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| 362 | \row | 
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| 363 | \o \c xs:gYear | 
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| 364 | \o QVariant::DateTime | 
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| 365 |  | 
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| 366 | \row | 
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| 367 | \o \c xs:gYearMonth | 
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| 368 | \o QVariant::DateTime | 
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| 369 |  | 
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| 370 | \row | 
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| 371 | \o \c xs:gMonthDay | 
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| 372 | \o QVariant::DateTime | 
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| 373 |  | 
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| 374 | \row | 
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| 375 | \o \c xs:gDay | 
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| 376 | \o QVariant::DateTime | 
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| 377 |  | 
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| 378 | \row | 
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| 379 | \o \c xs:gMonth | 
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| 380 | \o QVariant::DateTime | 
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| 381 |  | 
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| 382 | \row | 
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| 383 | \o \c xs:anyURI | 
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| 384 | \o QVariant::Url | 
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| 385 |  | 
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| 386 | \row | 
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| 387 | \o \c xs:untypedAtomic | 
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| 388 | \o QVariant::String | 
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| 389 |  | 
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| 390 | \row | 
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| 391 | \o \c xs:ENTITY | 
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| 392 | \o QVariant::String | 
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| 393 |  | 
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| 394 | \row | 
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| 395 | \o \c xs:date | 
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| 396 | \o QVariant::DateTime | 
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| 397 |  | 
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| 398 | \row | 
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| 399 | \o \c xs:dateTime | 
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| 400 | \o QVariant::DateTime | 
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| 401 |  | 
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| 402 | \row | 
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| 403 | \o \c xs:time | 
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| 404 | \o (see \l{xstime-not-mapped}{No mapping for xs:time} below) | 
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| 405 |  | 
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| 406 | \endtable | 
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| 407 |  | 
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| 408 | \target Handling QXmlNames | 
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| 409 | \section3 Handling QXmlNames | 
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| 410 |  | 
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| 411 | If your XQuery can return atomic value items of type \c{xs:QName}, | 
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| 412 | they will appear in your QXmlResultItems as instances of QXmlName. | 
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| 413 | Since the QVariant class does not support the QXmlName class | 
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| 414 | directly, extracting them from QXmlResultItems requires a bit of | 
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| 415 | slight-of-hand using the \l{QMetaType} {Qt metatype system}. We | 
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| 416 | must modify our example to use a couple of template functions, a | 
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| 417 | friend of QMetaType (qMetaTypeId<T>()) and a friend of QVariant | 
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| 418 | (qVariantValue<T>()): | 
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| 419 |  | 
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| 420 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_xmlpatterns_api_qxmlquery.cpp 6 | 
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| 421 |  | 
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| 422 | To access the strings in a QXmlName returned by an | 
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| 423 | \l{QXmlQuery::evaluateTo()} {XQuery evaluation}, the QXmlName must | 
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| 424 | be accessed with the \l{QXmlNamePool} {name pool} from the | 
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| 425 | instance of QXmlQuery that was used for the evaluation. | 
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| 426 |  | 
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| 427 | \target xstime-not-mapped | 
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| 428 | \section3 No mapping for xs:time | 
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| 429 |  | 
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| 430 | An instance of \c xs:time can't be represented correctly as an | 
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| 431 | instance of QVariant::Time, unless the \c xs:time is a UTC time. | 
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| 432 | This is because xs:time has a zone offset (0 for UTC) in addition | 
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| 433 | to the time value, which the QTime in QVariant::Time does not | 
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| 434 | have. This means that if an XQuery tries to return an atomic value | 
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| 435 | of type \c xs:time, an invalid QVariant will be returned. A query | 
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| 436 | can return an atomic value of type xs:time by either converting it | 
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| 437 | to an \c xs:dateTime with an arbitrary date, or to an \c xs:string. | 
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| 438 |  | 
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| 439 | \section1 Using XQuery with Non-XML Data | 
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| 440 |  | 
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| 441 | Although the XQuery language was designed for querying XML, with | 
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| 442 | QtXmlPatterns one can use XQuery for querying any data that can | 
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| 443 | be modeled to look like XML. Non-XML data is modeled to look like | 
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| 444 | XML by loading it into a custom subclass of QAbstractXmlNodeModel, | 
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| 445 | where it is then presented to the QtXmlPatterns XQuery engine via | 
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| 446 | the same API the XQuery engine uses for querying XML. | 
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| 447 |  | 
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| 448 | When QtXmlPatterns loads and queries XML files and produces XML | 
|---|
| 449 | output, it can always load the XML data into its default XML node | 
|---|
| 450 | model, where it can be traversed efficiently. The XQuery below | 
|---|
| 451 | traverses the product orders found in the XML file \e myOrders.xml | 
|---|
| 452 | to find all the skin care product orders and output them ordered | 
|---|
| 453 | by shipping date. | 
|---|
| 454 |  | 
|---|
| 455 | \quotefile snippets/patternist/introAcneRemover.xq | 
|---|
| 456 |  | 
|---|
| 457 | QtXmlPatterns can be used out of the box to perform this | 
|---|
| 458 | query, provided \e myOrders.xml actually contains well-formed XML. It | 
|---|
| 459 | can be loaded directly into the default XML node model and | 
|---|
| 460 | traversed. But suppose we want QtXmlPatterns to perform queries on | 
|---|
| 461 | the hierarchical structure of the local file system. The default | 
|---|
| 462 | XML node model in QtXmlPatterns is not suitable for navigating the | 
|---|
| 463 | file system, because there is no XML file to load that contains a | 
|---|
| 464 | description of it. Such an XML file, if it existed, might look | 
|---|
| 465 | something like this: | 
|---|
| 466 |  | 
|---|
| 467 | \quotefile snippets/patternist/introFileHierarchy.xml | 
|---|
| 468 |  | 
|---|
| 469 | The \l{File System Example}{File System Example} does exactly this. | 
|---|
| 470 |  | 
|---|
| 471 | There is no such file to load into the default XML node model, but | 
|---|
| 472 | one can write a subclass of QAbstractXmlNodeModel to represent the | 
|---|
| 473 | file system. This custom XML node model, once populated with all | 
|---|
| 474 | the directory and file descriptors obtained directly from the | 
|---|
| 475 | system, presents the complete file system hierarchy to the query | 
|---|
| 476 | engine via the same API used by the default XML node model to | 
|---|
| 477 | present the contents of an XML file. In other words, once the | 
|---|
| 478 | custom XML node model is populated, it presents the file system to | 
|---|
| 479 | the query engine as if a description of it had been loaded into | 
|---|
| 480 | the default XML node model from an XML file like the one shown | 
|---|
| 481 | above. | 
|---|
| 482 |  | 
|---|
| 483 | Now we can write an XQuery to find all the XML files and parse | 
|---|
| 484 | them to find the ones that don't contain well-formed XML. | 
|---|
| 485 |  | 
|---|
| 486 | \quotefromfile snippets/patternist/introNavigateFS.xq | 
|---|
| 487 | \skipto <html> | 
|---|
| 488 | \printuntil | 
|---|
| 489 |  | 
|---|
| 490 | Without QtXmlPatterns, there is no simple way to solve this kind | 
|---|
| 491 | of problem. You might do it by writing a C++ program to traverse | 
|---|
| 492 | the file system, sniff out all the XML files, and submit each one | 
|---|
| 493 | to an XML parser to test that it contains valid XML. The C++ code | 
|---|
| 494 | required to write that program will probably be more complex than | 
|---|
| 495 | the C++ code required to subclass QAbstractXmlNodeModel, but even | 
|---|
| 496 | if the two are comparable, your custom C++ program can be used | 
|---|
| 497 | only for that one task, while your custom XML node model can be | 
|---|
| 498 | used by any XQuery that must navigate the file system. | 
|---|
| 499 |  | 
|---|
| 500 | The general approach to using XQuery to perform queries on non-XML | 
|---|
| 501 | data has been a three step process. In the first step, the data is | 
|---|
| 502 | loaded into a non-XML data model. In the second step, the non-XML | 
|---|
| 503 | data model is serialized as XML and output to XML (text) files. In | 
|---|
| 504 | the final step, an XML tool loads the XML files into a second, XML | 
|---|
| 505 | data model, where the XQueries can be performed.  The development | 
|---|
| 506 | cost of implementing this process is often high, and the three | 
|---|
| 507 | step system that results is inefficient because the two data | 
|---|
| 508 | models must be built and maintained separately. | 
|---|
| 509 |  | 
|---|
| 510 | With QtXmlPatterns, subclassing QAbstractXmlNodeModel eliminates | 
|---|
| 511 | the transformation required to convert the non-XML data model to | 
|---|
| 512 | the XML data model, because there is only ever one data model | 
|---|
| 513 | required. The non-XML data model presents the non-XML data to the | 
|---|
| 514 | query engine via the XML data model API. Also, since the query | 
|---|
| 515 | engine uses the API to access the QAbstractXmlNodeModel, the data | 
|---|
| 516 | model subclass can construct the elements, attributes and other | 
|---|
| 517 | data on demand, responding to the query's specific requests.  This | 
|---|
| 518 | can greatly improve efficiency, because it means the entire model | 
|---|
| 519 | might not have to be built. For example, in the file system model | 
|---|
| 520 | above, it is not necessary to build an instance for a whole | 
|---|
| 521 | XML file representing the whole file system. Instead nodes are | 
|---|
| 522 | created on demand, which also likely is a small subset of the file | 
|---|
| 523 | system. | 
|---|
| 524 |  | 
|---|
| 525 | Examples of other places where XQuery could be used in | 
|---|
| 526 | QtXmlPatterns to query non-XML data: | 
|---|
| 527 |  | 
|---|
| 528 | \list | 
|---|
| 529 |  | 
|---|
| 530 | \o The internal representation for word processor documents | 
|---|
| 531 |  | 
|---|
| 532 | \o The set of dependencies for a software build system | 
|---|
| 533 |  | 
|---|
| 534 | \o The hierarchy (or graph) that links a set of HTML documents | 
|---|
| 535 | from a web crawler | 
|---|
| 536 |  | 
|---|
| 537 | \o The images and meta-data in an image collection | 
|---|
| 538 |  | 
|---|
| 539 | \o The set of D-Bus interfaces available in a system | 
|---|
| 540 |  | 
|---|
| 541 | \o A QObject hierarchy, as seen in the \l{QObject XML Model | 
|---|
| 542 | Example} {QObject XML Model example}. | 
|---|
| 543 |  | 
|---|
| 544 | \endlist | 
|---|
| 545 |  | 
|---|
| 546 | See the QAbstractXmlNodeModel documentation for information about | 
|---|
| 547 | how to implement custom XML node models. | 
|---|
| 548 |  | 
|---|
| 549 | \section1 More on using QtXmlPatterns with non-XML Data | 
|---|
| 550 |  | 
|---|
| 551 | Subclassing QAbstractXmlNodeModel to let the query engine access | 
|---|
| 552 | non-XML data by the same API it uses for XML is the feature that | 
|---|
| 553 | enables QtXmlPatterns to query non-XML data with XQuery. It allows | 
|---|
| 554 | XQuery to be used as a mapping layer between different non-XML | 
|---|
| 555 | node models or between a non-XML node model and the built-in XML | 
|---|
| 556 | node model. Once the subclass(es) of QAbstractXmlNodeModel have | 
|---|
| 557 | been written, XQuery can be used to select a set of elements from | 
|---|
| 558 | one node model, transform the selected elements, and then write | 
|---|
| 559 | them out, either as XML using QXmlQuery::evaluateTo() and QXmlSerializer, | 
|---|
| 560 | or as some other format using a subclass of QAbstractXmlReceiver. | 
|---|
| 561 |  | 
|---|
| 562 | Consider a word processor application that must import and export | 
|---|
| 563 | data in several different formats. Rather than writing a lot of | 
|---|
| 564 | C++ code to convert each input format to an intermediate form, and | 
|---|
| 565 | more C++ code to convert the intermediate form back to each | 
|---|
| 566 | output format, one can implement a solution based on QtXmlPatterns | 
|---|
| 567 | that uses simple XQueries to transform each XML or non-XML format | 
|---|
| 568 | (e.g. MathFormula.xml below) to the intermediate form (e.g. the | 
|---|
| 569 | DocumentRepresentation node model class below), and more simple | 
|---|
| 570 | XQueries to transform the intermediate form back to each XML or | 
|---|
| 571 | non-XML format. | 
|---|
| 572 |  | 
|---|
| 573 | \image patternist-wordProcessor.png | 
|---|
| 574 |  | 
|---|
| 575 | Because CSV files are not XML, a subclass of QAbstractXmlNodeModel | 
|---|
| 576 | is used to present the CSV data to the XQuery engine as if it were | 
|---|
| 577 | XML. What are not shown are the subclasses of QAbstractXmlReceiver | 
|---|
| 578 | that would then send the selected elements into the | 
|---|
| 579 | DocumentRepresentation node model, and the subclasses of | 
|---|
| 580 | QAbstractXmlNodeModel that would ultimately write the output files | 
|---|
| 581 | in each format. | 
|---|
| 582 |  | 
|---|
| 583 | \section1 Security Considerations | 
|---|
| 584 |  | 
|---|
| 585 | \section2 Code Injection | 
|---|
| 586 |  | 
|---|
| 587 | XQuery is vulnerable to | 
|---|
| 588 | \l{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_injection} {code injection | 
|---|
| 589 | attacks} in the same way as the SQL language. If an XQuery is | 
|---|
| 590 | constructed by concatenating strings, and the strings come from | 
|---|
| 591 | user input, the constructed XQuery could be malevolent. The best | 
|---|
| 592 | way to prevent code injection attacks is to not construct XQueries | 
|---|
| 593 | from user-written strings, but only accept user data input using | 
|---|
| 594 | QVariant and variable bindings. See QXmlQuery::bindVariable(). | 
|---|
| 595 |  | 
|---|
| 596 | The articles | 
|---|
| 597 | \l{http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/xml/library/x-xpathinjection.html} | 
|---|
| 598 | {Avoid the dangers of XPath injection}, by Robi Sen and | 
|---|
| 599 | \l{http://www.packetstormsecurity.org/papers/bypass/Blind_XPath_Injection_20040518.pdf} | 
|---|
| 600 | {Blind XPath Injection}, by Amit Klein, discuss the XQuery code | 
|---|
| 601 | injection problem in more detail. | 
|---|
| 602 |  | 
|---|
| 603 | \section2 Denial of Service Attacks | 
|---|
| 604 |  | 
|---|
| 605 | Applications using QtXmlPatterns are subject to the same | 
|---|
| 606 | limitations of software as other systems. Generally, these can not | 
|---|
| 607 | be checked. This means QtXmlPatterns does not prevent rogue | 
|---|
| 608 | queries from consuming too many resources. For example, a query | 
|---|
| 609 | could take too much time to execute or try to transfer too much | 
|---|
| 610 | data. A query could also do too much recursion, which could crash | 
|---|
| 611 | the system.  XQueries can do these things accidentally, but they | 
|---|
| 612 | can also be done as deliberate denial of service attacks. | 
|---|
| 613 |  | 
|---|
| 614 | \section1 Features and Conformance | 
|---|
| 615 |  | 
|---|
| 616 | \section2 XQuery 1.0 | 
|---|
| 617 |  | 
|---|
| 618 | QtXmlPatterns aims at being a | 
|---|
| 619 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery/#id-xquery-conformance} {conformant | 
|---|
| 620 | XQuery processor}. It adheres to | 
|---|
| 621 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery/#id-minimal-conformance} {Minimal | 
|---|
| 622 | Conformance} and supports the | 
|---|
| 623 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery/#id-serialization-feature} | 
|---|
| 624 | {Serialization Feature} and the | 
|---|
| 625 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery/#id-full-axis-feature} {Full Axis | 
|---|
| 626 | Feature}. QtXmlPatterns currently passes 97% of the tests in the | 
|---|
| 627 | \l{http://www.w3.org/XML/Query/test-suite} {XML Query Test Suite}. | 
|---|
| 628 | Areas where conformance may be questionable and where behavior may | 
|---|
| 629 | be changed in future releases include: | 
|---|
| 630 |  | 
|---|
| 631 | \list | 
|---|
| 632 |  | 
|---|
| 633 | \o Some corner cases involving namespaces and element constructors | 
|---|
| 634 | are incorrect. | 
|---|
| 635 |  | 
|---|
| 636 | \o XPath is a subset of XQuery and the implementation of | 
|---|
| 637 | QtXmlPatterns uses XPath 2.0 with XQuery 1.0. | 
|---|
| 638 |  | 
|---|
| 639 | \endlist | 
|---|
| 640 |  | 
|---|
| 641 | The specifications discusses conformance further: | 
|---|
| 642 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery/}{XQuery 1.0: An XML Query | 
|---|
| 643 | Language}.  W3C's XQuery testing effort can be of interest as | 
|---|
| 644 | well, \l{http://www.w3.org/XML/Query/test-suite/}{XML Query Test | 
|---|
| 645 | Suite}. | 
|---|
| 646 |  | 
|---|
| 647 | Currently \c fn:collection() does not access any data set, and | 
|---|
| 648 | there is no API for providing data through the collection. As a | 
|---|
| 649 | result, evaluating \c fn:collection() returns the empty | 
|---|
| 650 | sequence. We intend to provide functionality for this in a future | 
|---|
| 651 | release of Qt. | 
|---|
| 652 |  | 
|---|
| 653 | Only queries encoded in UTF-8 are supported. | 
|---|
| 654 |  | 
|---|
| 655 | \section2 XSLT 2.0 | 
|---|
| 656 |  | 
|---|
| 657 | Partial support for XSLT was introduced in Qt 4.5. Future | 
|---|
| 658 | releases of QtXmlPatterns will aim to support these XSLT | 
|---|
| 659 | features: | 
|---|
| 660 |  | 
|---|
| 661 | \list | 
|---|
| 662 | \o Basic XSLT 2.0 processor | 
|---|
| 663 | \o Serialization feature | 
|---|
| 664 | \o Backwards Compatibility feature | 
|---|
| 665 | \endlist | 
|---|
| 666 |  | 
|---|
| 667 | For details, see \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt20/#conformance}{XSL | 
|---|
| 668 | Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0, 21 Conformance}. | 
|---|
| 669 |  | 
|---|
| 670 | \note In this release, XSLT support is considered experimental. | 
|---|
| 671 |  | 
|---|
| 672 | Unsupported or partially supported XSLT features are documented | 
|---|
| 673 | in the following table. The implementation of XSLT in Qt 4.5 can | 
|---|
| 674 | be seen as XSLT 1.0 but with the data model of XPath 2.0 and | 
|---|
| 675 | XSLT 2.0, and using the using the functionality of XPath 2.0 and | 
|---|
| 676 | its accompanying function library. When QtXmlPatterns encounters | 
|---|
| 677 | an unsupported or partially support feature, it will either report | 
|---|
| 678 | a syntax error or silently continue, unless otherwise noted in the | 
|---|
| 679 | table. | 
|---|
| 680 |  | 
|---|
| 681 | The implementation currently passes 42% of W3C's XSLT test suite, | 
|---|
| 682 | which focus on features introduced in XSLT 2.0. | 
|---|
| 683 |  | 
|---|
| 684 | \table | 
|---|
| 685 | \header | 
|---|
| 686 | \o XSL Feature | 
|---|
| 687 | \o Support Status | 
|---|
| 688 | \row | 
|---|
| 689 | \o \c xsl:key and \c fn:key() | 
|---|
| 690 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 691 | \row | 
|---|
| 692 | \o \c xsl:include | 
|---|
| 693 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 694 | \row | 
|---|
| 695 | \o \c xsl:import | 
|---|
| 696 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 697 | \row | 
|---|
| 698 | \o \c xsl:copy | 
|---|
| 699 |  | 
|---|
| 700 | \o The \c copy-namespaces and \c inherit-namespaces attributes | 
|---|
| 701 | have no effect. For copied comments, attributes and | 
|---|
| 702 | processing instructions, the copy has the same node | 
|---|
| 703 | identity as the original. | 
|---|
| 704 |  | 
|---|
| 705 | \row | 
|---|
| 706 | \o \c xsl:copy-of | 
|---|
| 707 | \o The \c copy-namespaces attribute has no effect. | 
|---|
| 708 | \row | 
|---|
| 709 | \o \c fn:format-number() | 
|---|
| 710 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 711 | \row | 
|---|
| 712 | \o \c xsl:message | 
|---|
| 713 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 714 | \row | 
|---|
| 715 | \o \c xsl:use-when | 
|---|
| 716 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 717 | \row | 
|---|
| 718 | \o \c Tunnel Parameters | 
|---|
| 719 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 720 | \row | 
|---|
| 721 | \o \c xsl:attribute-set | 
|---|
| 722 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 723 | \row | 
|---|
| 724 | \o \c xsl:decimal-format | 
|---|
| 725 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 726 | \row | 
|---|
| 727 | \o \c xsl:fallback | 
|---|
| 728 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 729 | \row | 
|---|
| 730 | \o \c xsl:apply-imports | 
|---|
| 731 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 732 | \row | 
|---|
| 733 | \o \c xsl:character-map | 
|---|
| 734 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 735 | \row | 
|---|
| 736 | \o \c xsl:number | 
|---|
| 737 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 738 | \row | 
|---|
| 739 | \o \c xsl:namespace-alias | 
|---|
| 740 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 741 | \row | 
|---|
| 742 | \o \c xsl:output | 
|---|
| 743 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 744 | \row | 
|---|
| 745 | \o \c xsl:output-character | 
|---|
| 746 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 747 | \row | 
|---|
| 748 | \o \c xsl:preserve-space | 
|---|
| 749 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 750 | \row | 
|---|
| 751 | \o \c xsl:result-document | 
|---|
| 752 | \o not supported | 
|---|
| 753 | \row | 
|---|
| 754 | \o Patterns | 
|---|
| 755 | \o Complex patterns or patterns with predicates have issues. | 
|---|
| 756 | \row | 
|---|
| 757 | \o \c 2.0 Compatibility Mode | 
|---|
| 758 |  | 
|---|
| 759 | \o Stylesheets are interpreted as XSLT 2.0 stylesheets, even | 
|---|
| 760 | if the \c version attribute is in the XSLT source is | 
|---|
| 761 | 1.0. In other words, the version attribute is ignored. | 
|---|
| 762 |  | 
|---|
| 763 | \row | 
|---|
| 764 | \o Grouping | 
|---|
| 765 |  | 
|---|
| 766 | \o \c fn:current-group(), \c fn:grouping-key() and \c | 
|---|
| 767 | xsl:for-each-group. | 
|---|
| 768 |  | 
|---|
| 769 | \row | 
|---|
| 770 | \o Regexp elements | 
|---|
| 771 | \o \c xsl:analyze-string, \c xsl:matching-substring, | 
|---|
| 772 | \c xsl:non-matching-substring, and \c fn:regex-group() | 
|---|
| 773 | \row | 
|---|
| 774 | \o Date & Time formatting | 
|---|
| 775 | \o \c fn:format-dateTime(), \c fn:format-date() and fn:format-time(). | 
|---|
| 776 |  | 
|---|
| 777 | \row | 
|---|
| 778 | \o XPath Conformance | 
|---|
| 779 | \o Since XPath is a subset of XSLT, its issues are in affect too. | 
|---|
| 780 | \endtable | 
|---|
| 781 |  | 
|---|
| 782 | The QtXmlPatterns implementation of the XPath Data Model does not | 
|---|
| 783 | include entities (due to QXmlStreamReader not reporting them). | 
|---|
| 784 | This means that functions \c unparsed-entity-uri() and \c | 
|---|
| 785 | unparsed-entity-public-id() always return negatively. | 
|---|
| 786 |  | 
|---|
| 787 | \section2 XPath 2.0 | 
|---|
| 788 |  | 
|---|
| 789 | Since XPath 2.0 is a subset of XQuery 1.0, XPath 2.0 is | 
|---|
| 790 | supported. Areas where conformance may be questionable and, | 
|---|
| 791 | consequently, where behavior may be changed in future releases | 
|---|
| 792 | include: | 
|---|
| 793 |  | 
|---|
| 794 | \list | 
|---|
| 795 | \o Regular expression support is currently not conformant | 
|---|
| 796 | but follows Qt's QRegExp standard syntax. | 
|---|
| 797 |  | 
|---|
| 798 | \o Operators for \c xs:time, \c xs:date, and \c xs:dateTime | 
|---|
| 799 | are incomplete. | 
|---|
| 800 |  | 
|---|
| 801 | \o Formatting of very large or very small \c xs:double, \c | 
|---|
| 802 | xs:float, and \c xs:decimal values may be incorrect. | 
|---|
| 803 | \endlist | 
|---|
| 804 |  | 
|---|
| 805 | \section2 xml:id | 
|---|
| 806 |  | 
|---|
| 807 | Processing of XML files supports \c xml:id. This allows elements | 
|---|
| 808 | that have an attribute named \c xml:id to be looked up efficiently | 
|---|
| 809 | with the \c fn:id() function. See | 
|---|
| 810 | \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-id/}{xml:id Version 1.0} for details. | 
|---|
| 811 |  | 
|---|
| 812 | \section2 XML Schema 1.0 | 
|---|
| 813 |  | 
|---|
| 814 | There are two ways QtXmlPatterns can be used to validate schemas: | 
|---|
| 815 | You can use the C++ API in your Qt application using the classes | 
|---|
| 816 | QXmlSchema and QXmlSchemaValidator, or you can use the command line | 
|---|
| 817 | utility named xmlpatternsvalidator (located in the "bin" directory | 
|---|
| 818 | of your Qt build). | 
|---|
| 819 |  | 
|---|
| 820 | The QtXmlPatterns implementation of XML Schema validation supports | 
|---|
| 821 | the schema specification version 1.0 in large parts. Known problems | 
|---|
| 822 | of the implementation and areas where conformancy may be questionable | 
|---|
| 823 | are: | 
|---|
| 824 |  | 
|---|
| 825 | \list | 
|---|
| 826 | \o Large \c minOccurs or \c maxOccurs values or deeply nested ones | 
|---|
| 827 | require huge amount of memory which might cause the system to freeze. | 
|---|
| 828 | Such a schema should be rewritten to use \c unbounded as value instead | 
|---|
| 829 | of large numbers. This restriction will hopefully be fixed in a later release. | 
|---|
| 830 | \o Comparison of really small or large floating point values might lead to | 
|---|
| 831 | wrong results in some cases. However such numbers should not be relevant | 
|---|
| 832 | for day-to-day usage. | 
|---|
| 833 | \o Regular expression support is currently not conformant but follows | 
|---|
| 834 | Qt's QRegExp standard syntax. | 
|---|
| 835 | \o Identity constraint checks can not use the values of default or fixed | 
|---|
| 836 | attribute definitions. | 
|---|
| 837 | \endlist | 
|---|
| 838 |  | 
|---|
| 839 | \section2 Resource Loading | 
|---|
| 840 |  | 
|---|
| 841 | When QtXmlPatterns loads an XML resource, e.g., using the | 
|---|
| 842 | \c fn:doc() function, the following schemes are supported: | 
|---|
| 843 |  | 
|---|
| 844 | \table | 
|---|
| 845 | \header | 
|---|
| 846 | \o Scheme Name | 
|---|
| 847 | \o Description | 
|---|
| 848 | \row | 
|---|
| 849 | \o \c file | 
|---|
| 850 | \o Local files. | 
|---|
| 851 | \row | 
|---|
| 852 | \o \c data | 
|---|
| 853 |  | 
|---|
| 854 | \o The bytes are encoded in the URI itself. e.g., \c | 
|---|
| 855 | data:application/xml,%3Ce%2F%3E is \c <e/>. | 
|---|
| 856 |  | 
|---|
| 857 | \row | 
|---|
| 858 | \o \c ftp | 
|---|
| 859 | \o Resources retrieved via FTP. | 
|---|
| 860 | \row | 
|---|
| 861 | \o \c http | 
|---|
| 862 | \o Resources retrieved via HTTP. | 
|---|
| 863 | \row | 
|---|
| 864 | \o \c https | 
|---|
| 865 | \o Resources retrieved via HTTPS. This will succeed if no SSL | 
|---|
| 866 | errors are encountered. | 
|---|
| 867 | \row | 
|---|
| 868 | \o \c qrc | 
|---|
| 869 | \o Qt Resource files. Expressing it as an empty scheme, :/..., | 
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| 870 | is not supported. | 
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| 871 |  | 
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| 872 | \endtable | 
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| 873 |  | 
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| 874 | \section2 XML | 
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| 875 |  | 
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| 876 | XML 1.0 and XML Namespaces 1.0 are supported, as opposed to the | 
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| 877 | 1.1 versions. When a strings is passed to a query as a QString, | 
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| 878 | the characters must be XML 1.0 characters. Otherwise, the behavior | 
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| 879 | is undefined. This is not checked. | 
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| 880 |  | 
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| 881 | URIs are first passed to QAbstractUriResolver. Check | 
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| 882 | QXmlQuery::setUriResolver() for possible rewrites. | 
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| 883 | */ | 
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| 884 |  | 
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| 885 | /*! | 
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| 886 | \namespace QPatternist | 
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| 887 | \brief The QPatternist namespace contains classes and functions required by the QtXmlPatterns module. | 
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| 888 | \internal | 
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| 889 | */ | 
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