| 1 | /**************************************************************************** | 
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| 2 | ** | 
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| 3 | ** Copyright (C) 2011 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). | 
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| 4 | ** All rights reserved. | 
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| 5 | ** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com) | 
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| 6 | ** | 
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| 7 | ** This file is part of the QtXmlPatterns module of the Qt Toolkit. | 
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| 8 | ** | 
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| 9 | ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ | 
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| 10 | ** Commercial Usage | 
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| 11 | ** Licensees holding valid Qt Commercial licenses may use this file in | 
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| 12 | ** accordance with the Qt Commercial License Agreement provided with the | 
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| 13 | ** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in | 
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| 14 | ** a written agreement between you and Nokia. | 
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| 15 | ** | 
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| 16 | ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage | 
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| 17 | ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser | 
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| 18 | ** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software | 
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| 19 | ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the | 
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| 20 | ** packaging of this file.  Please review the following information to | 
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| 21 | ** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements | 
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| 22 | ** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. | 
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| 23 | ** | 
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| 24 | ** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional | 
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| 25 | ** rights.  These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception | 
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| 26 | ** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package. | 
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| 27 | ** | 
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| 28 | ** GNU General Public License Usage | 
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| 29 | ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU | 
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| 30 | ** General Public License version 3.0 as published by the Free Software | 
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| 31 | ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL included in the | 
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| 32 | ** packaging of this file.  Please review the following information to | 
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| 33 | ** ensure the GNU General Public License version 3.0 requirements will be | 
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| 34 | ** met: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html. | 
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| 35 | ** | 
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| 36 | ** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact | 
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| 37 | ** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com. | 
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| 38 | ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ | 
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| 39 | ** | 
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| 40 | ****************************************************************************/ | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | // | 
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| 43 | //  W A R N I N G | 
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| 44 | //  ------------- | 
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| 45 | // | 
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| 46 | // This file is not part of the Qt API.  It exists purely as an | 
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| 47 | // implementation detail.  This header file may change from version to | 
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| 48 | // version without notice, or even be removed. | 
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| 49 | // | 
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| 50 | // We mean it. | 
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| 51 |  | 
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| 52 | /** | 
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| 53 | * @file | 
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| 54 | * @short Contains Doxygen documentation for groups. | 
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| 55 | */ | 
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| 56 |  | 
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| 57 | namespace QPatternist | 
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| 58 | { | 
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| 59 | /** | 
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| 60 | * @short The abstract syntax tree nodes that implements the builtin | 
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| 61 | * functions, such as @c fn:concat(). | 
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| 62 | * | 
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| 63 | * @defgroup Patternist_functions Function Implementations | 
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| 64 | * @author Frans Englich <frans.englich@nokia.com> | 
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| 65 | */ | 
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| 66 |  | 
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| 67 | /** | 
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| 68 | * @short The abstract syntax tree nodes that is generated for XPath, | 
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| 69 | * XQuery, and XSL-T code. | 
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| 70 | * | 
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| 71 | * XPath's approach of compilation is traditional. An Abstract Syntax | 
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| 72 | * Tree(AST) is built, where the Expression class is the abstract base | 
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| 73 | * class for all kinds of implementations of expressions. | 
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| 74 | * | 
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| 75 | * What perhaps can be said to be characteristic for Patternist is that the | 
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| 76 | * base class, Expression, performs a lot of work, and that sub-classes | 
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| 77 | * declares what specific behaviors they need, which the Expression's | 
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| 78 | * functions then bring into action. | 
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| 79 | * | 
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| 80 | * XPath expressions often have different amount of operands. For example, | 
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| 81 | * the 'and' expression takes two, the context item(".") none, and the | 
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| 82 | * if-expression three. To help expression implementations with that, there | 
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| 83 | * exist the abstract EmptyContainer, SingleContainer, PairContainer, | 
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| 84 | * TripleContainer, and UnlimitedContainer classes for avoiding duplicating | 
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| 85 | * code. | 
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| 86 | * | 
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| 87 | * @defgroup Patternist_expressions Expressions | 
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| 88 | * @author Frans Englich <frans.englich@nokia.com> | 
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| 89 | */ | 
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| 90 |  | 
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| 91 | /** | 
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| 92 | * @short Various classes that contains small utility functions. | 
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| 93 | * | 
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| 94 | * @defgroup Patternist Utility Classes | 
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| 95 | * @author Frans Englich <frans.englich@nokia.com> | 
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| 96 | */ | 
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| 97 |  | 
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| 98 | /** | 
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| 99 | * @short Classes for the type system in the XQuery & XSL-T language. | 
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| 100 | * | 
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| 101 | * @defgroup Patternist_types Type system | 
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| 102 | * @author Frans Englich <frans.englich@nokia.com> | 
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| 103 | */ | 
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| 104 |  | 
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| 105 | /** | 
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| 106 | * @defgroup Patternist_xdm XQuery/XPath Data Model | 
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| 107 | * @author Frans Englich <frans.englich@nokia.com> | 
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| 108 | */ | 
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| 109 |  | 
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| 110 | /** | 
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| 111 | * @short Patternist's family of iterators in one of the most central parts | 
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| 112 | * of Patternist's API, and are responsible for carrying, and typically | 
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| 113 | * also creating, data. | 
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| 114 | * | 
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| 115 | * An iterator, which always is an Iterator sub-class, is similar to a | 
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| 116 | * Java-style iterator. What signifies Patternist's iterators is that they | 
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| 117 | * almost always contains business logic(which is the cause to their | 
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| 118 | * efficiency). | 
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| 119 | * | 
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| 120 | * An example which illustrates this principle is the RangeIterator. When | 
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| 121 | * the RangeExpression is told to create a sequence of integers between 1 | 
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| 122 | * and 1000, it doesn't enter a loop that allocates 1000 Integer instances, | 
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| 123 | * but instead return an RangeIterator that incrementally creates the | 
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| 124 | * numbers when asked to do so via its RangeIterator::next() function. If | 
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| 125 | * it turns out that the expression that has the range expression as | 
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| 126 | * operand only needs three items from it, that is what gets created, not | 
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| 127 | * 1000. | 
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| 128 | * | 
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| 129 | * All iterators operates by that principle, perhaps suitably labeled as | 
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| 130 | * "pull-based", "lazy loaded" or "serialized". Central for the XPath | 
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| 131 | * language is that it filters and selects data, and the iterators supports | 
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| 132 | * this well by letting the demand of the filter expressions(the callees) | 
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| 133 | * decide how "much" source that gets computed. In this way the evaluation | 
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| 134 | * of an expression tree can lead to a chain of pipelined iterators, where | 
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| 135 | * the first asks the second for data and then performs its specific | 
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| 136 | * operations, the second subsequently asks the third, and so forth. | 
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| 137 | * | 
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| 138 | * However, the iterators are not limited to be used for representing | 
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| 139 | * sequences of items in the XPath Data Model. The Iterator is | 
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| 140 | * parameterized on one argument, meaning any type of "units" can be | 
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| 141 | * iterated, be it Item or any other. One use of this is in the | 
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| 142 | * ExpressionSequence(which implements the comma operator) where it creates | 
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| 143 | * Iterator instances over Expression instances -- its operands. The | 
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| 144 | * parameterization is often used in combination with the MappingIterator | 
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| 145 | * and the MappingCallback. | 
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| 146 | * | 
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| 147 | * @defgroup Patternist_iterators Iterators | 
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| 148 | * @author Frans Englich <frans.englich@nokia.com> | 
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| 149 | */ | 
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| 150 | } | 
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