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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en">
+
+<head>
+ <title>XSD 4.0.0 Compiler Command Line Manual</title>
+
+ <meta name="copyright" content="&copy; 2005-2014 Code Synthesis Tools CC"/>
+ <meta name="keywords" content="xsd,xml,schema,c++,mapping,data,binding,code,generator,manual,man,page"/>
+ <meta name="description" content="XSD Compiler Command Line Manual"/>
+
+ <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="default.css" />
+
+<style type="text/css">
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+ #synopsis {
+ list-style-type: none;
+ }
+
+ #synopsis li {
+ padding-top : 0.0em;
+ padding-bottom : 0.0em;
+ }
+
+ #commands dt {
+ padding-top : 0.4em;
+ }
+
+ #commands dd {
+ padding-bottom : 0.4em;
+ padding-left : 2em;
+ }
+
+ .options dt {
+ padding-top : 0.4em;
+ }
+
+ .options dd {
+ padding-top : 0.1em;
+ padding-bottom : 0.4em;
+ padding-left : 1.4em;
+ }
+
+</style>
+</head>
+
+<body>
+<div id="container">
+ <div id="content">
+
+ <h1>NAME</h1>
+
+ <p>xsd - W3C XML Schema to C++ Compiler</p>
+
+ <h1>SYNOPSIS</h1>
+
+ <dl id="synopsis">
+ <dt><code><b>xsd</b> <i>command</i> [<i>options</i>] <i>file</i> [<i>file</i> ...]</code></dt>
+ <dt><code><b>xsd help</b> [<i>command</i>]</code></dt>
+ <dt><code><b>xsd version</b></code></dt>
+ </dl>
+
+ <h1>DESCRIPTION</h1>
+
+ <p><code><b>xsd</b></code> generates vocabulary-specific, statically-typed
+ C++ mapping from W3C XML Schema definitions. Particular mapping to
+ produce is selected by a <code><i>command</i></code>. Each mapping has
+ a number of mapping-specific <code><i>options</i></code> that should
+ appear, if any, after the <code><i>command</i></code>. Input files should
+ be W3C XML Schema definitions. The exact set of the generated files depends
+ on the selected mapping and options.</p>
+
+ <h1>COMMANDS</h1>
+
+ <dl id="commands">
+ <dt><code><b>cxx-tree</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate the C++/Tree mapping. For each input file in the form
+ <code><b>name.xsd</b></code> the following C++ files are generated:
+ <code><b>name.hxx</b></code> (header file),
+ <code><b>name.ixx</b></code> (inline file, generated only if the
+ <code><b>--generate-inline</b></code> option is specified),
+ <code><b>name.cxx</b></code> (source file), and
+ <code><b>name-fwd.hxx</b></code> (forward declaration file, generated
+ only if the <code><b>--generate-forward</b></code> option is
+ specified).</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>cxx-parser</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate the C++/Parser mapping. For each input file in the form
+ <code><b>name.xsd</b></code> the following C++ files are generated:
+ <code><b>name-pskel.hxx</b></code> (parser skeleton header file),
+ <code><b>name-pskel.ixx</b></code> (parser skeleton inline file,
+ generated only if the <code><b>--generate-inline</b></code>
+ option is specified), and
+ <code><b>name-pskel.cxx</b></code> (parser skeleton source file).
+ If the <code><b>--generate-noop-impl</b></code> or
+ <code><b>--generate-print-impl</b></code> option is specified,
+ the following additional sample implementation files are generated:
+ <code><b>name-pimpl.hxx</b></code> (parser implementation header
+ file) and
+ <code><b>name-pimpl.cxx</b></code> (parser implementation source
+ file). If the <code><b>--generate-test-driver</b></code> option
+ is specified, the additional <code><b>name-driver.cxx</b></code>
+ test driver file is generated.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>help</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Print usage information and exit. Use
+ <p><code><b>xsd help</b> <i>command</i></code></p>
+ for command-specific help.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>version</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Print version and exit.</dd>
+ </dl>
+
+ <h1>OPTIONS</h1>
+
+ <p>Command-specific <code><i>options</i></code>, if any, should appear
+ after the corresponding <code><i>command</i></code>.</p>
+
+ <h2>COMMON OPTIONS</h2>
+
+<!--
+ The following documentation was generated by CLI, a command
+ line interface compiler for C++.
+-->
+
+<dl class="options">
+ <dt><code><b>--std</b></code> <i>version</i></dt>
+ <dd>Specify the C++ standard that the generated code should conform to. Valid
+ values are <code><b>c++98</b></code> (default) and
+ <code><b>c++11</b></code>.
+
+ <p>The C++ standard affects various aspects of the generated code that are
+ discussed in more detail in various mapping-specific documentation. Overall,
+ when C++11 is selected, the generated code relies on the move semantics and
+ uses <code><b>std::unique_ptr</b></code> instead of deprecated
+ <code><b>std::auto_ptr</b></code>.</p>
+
+ <p>When the C++11 mode is selected, you normally don't need to perform any
+ extra steps other than enable C++11 in your C++ compiler, if required. The
+ XSD compiler will automatically add the necessary macro defines to the
+ generated header files that will switch the header-only XSD runtime library
+ (<code><b>libxsd</b></code>) to the C++11 mode. However, if you include any
+ of the XSD runtime headers directly in your application (normally you just
+ include the generated headers), then you will need to define the
+ <code><b>XSD_CXX11</b></code> macro for your entire project.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--char-type</b></code> <i>type</i></dt>
+ <dd>Generate code using the provided character <i>type</i> instead of the
+ default <code><b>char</b></code>. Valid values are <code><b>char</b></code>
+ and <code><b>wchar_t</b></code>.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--char-encoding</b></code> <i>enc</i></dt>
+ <dd>Specify the character encoding that should be used in the generated code.
+ Valid values for the <code><b>char</b></code> character type are
+ <code><b>utf8</b></code> (default), <code><b>iso8859-1</b></code>,
+ <code><b>lcp</b></code> (Xerces-C++ local code page), and
+ <code><b>custom</b></code>. If you pass <code><b>custom</b></code> as the
+ value then you will need to include the transcoder implementation header for
+ your encoding at the beginning of the generated header files (see the
+ <code><b>--hxx-prologue</b></code> option).
+
+ <p>For the <code><b>wchar_t</b></code> character type the only valid value
+ is <code><b>auto</b></code> and the encoding is automatically selected
+ between UTF-16 and UTF-32/UCS-4, depending on the
+ <code><b>wchar_t</b></code> type size.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--output-dir</b></code> <i>dir</i></dt>
+ <dd>Write generated files to <i>dir</i> instead of the current directory.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-inline</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate simple functions inline. This option triggers creation of the
+ inline file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-xml-schema</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate a C++ header file as if the schema being compiled defines the XML
+ Schema namespace. For the C++/Tree mapping, the resulting file will contain
+ definitions for all XML Schema built-in types. For the C++/Parser mapping,
+ the resulting file will contain definitions for all the parser skeletons and
+ implementations corresponding to the XML Schema built-in types.
+
+ <p>The schema file provided to the compiler need not exist and is only used
+ to derive the name of the resulting header file. Use the
+ <code><b>--extern-xml-schema</b></code> option to include this file in the
+ generated files for other schemas.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--extern-xml-schema</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Include a header file derived from <i>file</i> instead of generating the XML
+ Schema namespace mapping inline. The provided file need not exist and is
+ only used to derive the name of the included header file. Use the
+ <code><b>--generate-xml-schema</b></code> option to generate this header
+ file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--namespace-map</b></code> <i>xns</i>=<i>cns</i></dt>
+ <dd>Map XML Schema namespace <i>xns</i> to C++ namespace <i>cns</i>. Repeat this
+ option to specify mapping for more than one XML Schema namespace. For
+ example, the following option:
+
+ <p><code><b>--namespace-map
+ http://example.com/foo/bar=foo::bar</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>Will map the <code><b>http://example.com/foo/bar</b></code> XML Schema
+ namespace to the <code><b>foo::bar</b></code> C++ namespace.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--namespace-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema namespace names to C++ namespace names. <i>regex</i> is a Perl-like
+ regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. Any
+ character can be used as a delimiter instead of <code><b>/</b></code>.
+ Escaping of the delimiter character in <code><i>pattern</i></code> or
+ <code><i>replacement</i></code> is not supported.
+
+ <p>All the regular expressions are pushed into a stack with the last
+ specified expression considered first. The first match that succeeds is
+ used. Regular expressions are applied to a string in the form</p>
+
+ <p><code><i>filename</i> <i>namespace</i></code></p>
+
+ <p>For example, if you have file <code><b>hello.xsd</b></code> with
+ namespace <code><b>http://example.com/hello</b></code> and you run
+ <code><b>xsd</b></code> on this file, then the string in question will
+ be:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>hello.xsd. http://example.com/hello</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>For the built-in XML Schema namespace the string is:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>XMLSchema.xsd http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>The following three steps are performed for each regular expression until
+ the match is found:</p>
+
+ <p>1. The expression is applied and if the result is empty the next
+ expression is considered.</p>
+
+ <p>2. All <code><b>/</b></code> are replaced with
+ <code><b>::</b></code>.</p>
+
+ <p>3. The result is verified to be a valid C++ scope name (e.g.,
+ <code><b>foo::bar</b></code>). If this test succeeds, the result is used as
+ a C++ namespace name.</p>
+
+ <p>As an example, the following expression maps XML Schema namespaces in
+ the form <code><b>http://example.com/foo/bar</b></code> to C++ namespaces in
+ the form <code><b>foo::bar</b></code>:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>%.* http://example.com/(.+)%$1%</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>See also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--namespace-regex-trace</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Trace the process of applying regular expressions specified with the
+ <code><b>--namespace-regex</b></code> option. Use this option to find out
+ why your regular expressions don't do what you expected them to do.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--reserved-name</b></code> <i>n</i>[=<i>r</i>]</dt>
+ <dd>Add name <i>n</i> to the list of names that should not be used as
+ identifiers. The name can optionally be followed by <code><b>=</b></code>
+ and the replacement name <i>r</i> that should be used instead. All the C++
+ keywords are already in this list.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--include-with-brackets</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Use angle brackets (&lt;>) instead of quotes ("") in generated
+ <code><b>#include</b></code> directives.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--include-prefix</b></code> <i>prefix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>prefix</i> to generated <code><b>#include</b></code> directive paths.
+
+ <p>For example, if you had the following import element in your schema</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>&lt;import namespace="..."
+ schemaLocation="base.xsd"/></b></code></p>
+
+ <p>and compiled this fragment with <code><b>--include-prefix
+ schemas/</b></code>, then the include directive in the generated code would
+ be:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>#include "schemas/base.hxx"</b></code></p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--include-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to transform
+ <code><b>#include</b></code> directive paths. <i>regex</i> is a Perl-like
+ regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. Any
+ character can be used as a delimiter instead of <code><b>/</b></code>.
+ Escaping of the delimiter character in <code><i>pattern</i></code> or
+ <code><i>replacement</i></code> is not supported.
+
+ <p>All the regular expressions are pushed into a stack with the last
+ specified expression considered first. The first match that succeeds is
+ used.</p>
+
+ <p>As an example, the following expression transforms paths in the form
+ <code><b>schemas/foo/bar</b></code> to paths in the form
+ <code><b>generated/foo/bar</b></code>:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>%schemas/(.+)%generated/$1%</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>See also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--include-regex-trace</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Trace the process of applying regular expressions specified with the
+ <code><b>--include-regex</b></code> option. Use this option to find out why
+ your regular expressions don't do what you expected them to do.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--guard-prefix</b></code> <i>prefix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>prefix</i> to generated header inclusion guards. The prefix is
+ transformed to upper case and characters that are illegal in a preprocessor
+ macro name are replaced with underscores. If this option is not specified
+ then the directory part of the input schema file is used as a prefix.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--hxx-suffix</b></code> <i>suffix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided <i>suffix</i> instead of the default
+ <code><b>.hxx</b></code> to construct the name of the header file. Note that
+ this suffix is also used to construct names of header files corresponding to
+ included/imported schemas.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--ixx-suffix</b></code> <i>suffix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided <i>suffix</i> instead of the default
+ <code><b>.ixx</b></code> to construct the name of the inline file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--cxx-suffix</b></code> <i>suffix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided <i>suffix</i> instead of the default
+ <code><b>.cxx</b></code> to construct the name of the source file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--fwd-suffix</b></code> <i>suffix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided <i>suffix</i> instead of the default
+ <code><b>-fwd.hxx</b></code> to construct the name of the forward
+ declaration file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--hxx-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided expression to construct the name of the header file.
+ <i>regex</i> is a Perl-like regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. Note
+ that this expression is also used to construct names of header files
+ corresponding to included/imported schemas. See also the REGEX AND SHELL
+ QUOTING section below.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--ixx-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided expression to construct the name of the inline file.
+ <i>regex</i> is a Perl-like regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. See
+ also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--cxx-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided expression to construct the name of the source file.
+ <i>regex</i> is a Perl-like regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. See
+ also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--fwd-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided expression to construct the name of the forward declaration
+ file. <i>regex</i> is a Perl-like regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. See
+ also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--hxx-prologue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the beginning of the header file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--ixx-prologue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the beginning of the inline file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--cxx-prologue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the beginning of the source file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--fwd-prologue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the beginning of the forward declaration file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--prologue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the beginning of each generated file for which there
+ is no file-specific prologue.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--hxx-epilogue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the end of the header file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--ixx-epilogue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the end of the inline file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--cxx-epilogue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the end of the source file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--fwd-epilogue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the end of the forward declaration file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--epilogue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the end of each generated file for which there is no
+ file-specific epilogue.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--hxx-prologue-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert the content of the <i>file</i> at the beginning of the header file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--ixx-prologue-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert the content of the <i>file</i> at the beginning of the inline file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--cxx-prologue-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert the content of the <i>file</i> at the beginning of the source file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--fwd-prologue-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert the content of the <i>file</i> at the beginning of the forward
+ declaration file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--prologue-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert the content of the <i>file</i> at the beginning of each generated
+ file for which there is no file-specific prologue file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--hxx-epilogue-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert the content of the <i>file</i> at the end of the header file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--ixx-epilogue-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert the content of the <i>file</i> at the end of the inline file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--cxx-epilogue-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert the content of the <i>file</i> at the end of the source file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--fwd-epilogue-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert the content of the <i>file</i> at the end of the forward declaration
+ file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--epilogue-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert the content of the <i>file</i> at the end of each generated file for
+ which there is no file-specific epilogue file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--export-symbol</b></code> <i>symbol</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>symbol</i> in places where DLL export/import control statements
+ (<code><b>__declspec(dllexport/dllimport)</b></code>) are necessary.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--export-xml-schema</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Export/import types in the XML Schema namespace using the export symbol
+ provided with the <code><b>--export-symbol</b></code> option. The
+ <code><b>XSD_NO_EXPORT</b></code> macro can be used to omit this code during
+ C++ compilation, which may be useful if you would like to use the same
+ generated code across multiple platforms.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--export-maps</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Export polymorphism support maps from a Win32 DLL into which this generated
+ code is placed. This is necessary when your type hierarchy is split across
+ several DLLs since otherwise each DLL will have its own set of maps. In this
+ situation the generated code for the DLL which contains base types and/or
+ substitution group heads should be compiled with this option and the
+ generated code for all other DLLs should be compiled with
+ <code><b>--import-maps</b></code>. This option is only valid together with
+ <code><b>--generate-polymorphic</b></code>. The
+ <code><b>XSD_NO_EXPORT</b></code> macro can be used to omit this code during
+ C++ compilation, which may be useful if you would like to use the same
+ generated code across multiple platforms.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--import-maps</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Import polymorphism support maps to a Win32 DLL or executable into which
+ this generated code is linked. See the <code><b>--export-maps</b></code>
+ option documentation for details. This options is only valid together with
+ <code><b>--generate-polymorphic</b></code>. The
+ <code><b>XSD_NO_EXPORT</b></code> macro can be used to omit this code during
+ C++ compilation, which may be useful if you would like to use the same
+ generated code across multiple platforms.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-dep</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate <code><b>make</b></code> dependency information. This option
+ triggers the creation of the <code><b>.d</b></code> file containing the
+ dependencies of the generated files on the main schema file as well as all
+ the schema files that it includes/imports, transitively. This dependency
+ file is then normally included into the main <code><b>makefile</b></code> to
+ implement automatic dependency tracking.
+
+ <p>Note also that automatic dependency generation is not supported in the
+ file-per-type mode (<code><b>--file-per-type</b></code>). In this case, all
+ the generated files are produced with a single compiler invocation and
+ depend on all the schemas. As a result, it is easier to establish such a
+ dependency manually, perhaps with the help of the
+ <code><b>--file-list*</b></code> options.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-dep-only</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate <code><b>make</b></code> dependency information only.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--dep-phony</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate phony targets for included/imported schema files, causing each to
+ depend on nothing. Such dummy rules work around <code><b>make</b></code>
+ errors caused by the removal of schema files without also updating the
+ dependency file to match.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--dep-target</b></code> <i>target</i></dt>
+ <dd>Change the target of the dependency rule. By default it contains all the
+ generated C++ files as well as the dependency file itself, without any
+ directory prefixes. If you require multiple targets, then you can specify
+ them as a single, space-separated argument or you can repeat this option
+ multiple times.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--dep-suffix</b></code> <i>suffix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided <i>suffix</i> instead of the default <code><b>.d</b></code>
+ to construct the name of the dependency file.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--dep-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided expression to construct the name of the dependency file.
+ <i>regex</i> is a Perl-like regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. See
+ also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--disable-warning</b></code> <i>warn</i></dt>
+ <dd>Disable printing warning with id <i>warn</i>. If <code><b>all</b></code> is
+ specified for the warning id then all warnings are disabled.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--options-file</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Read additional options from <i>file</i>. Each option should appearing on a
+ separate line optionally followed by space and an option value. Empty lines
+ and lines starting with <code><b>#</b></code> are ignored. Option values can
+ be enclosed in double (<code><b>"</b></code>) or single
+ (<code><b>'</b></code>) quotes to preserve leading and trailing whitespaces
+ as well as to specify empty values. If the value itself contains trailing or
+ leading quotes, enclose it with an extra pair of quotes, for example
+ <code><b>'"x"'</b></code>. Non-leading and non-trailing quotes are
+ interpreted as being part of the option value.
+
+ <p>The semantics of providing options in a file is equivalent to providing
+ the same set of options in the same order on the command line at the point
+ where the <code><b>--options-file</b></code> option is specified except that
+ the shell escaping and quoting is not required. You can repeat this option
+ to specify more than one options file.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--show-sloc</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Show the number of generated physical source lines of code (SLOC).</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--sloc-limit</b></code> <i>num</i></dt>
+ <dd>Check that the number of generated physical source lines of code (SLOC) does
+ not exceed <i>num</i>.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--proprietary-license</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Indicate that the generated code is licensed under a proprietary license
+ instead of the GPL.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--custom-literals</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Load custom XML string to C++ literal mappings from <i>file</i>. This
+ mechanism can be useful if you are using a custom character encoding and
+ some of the strings in your schemas, for example element/attribute names or
+ enumeration values, contain non-ASCII characters. In this case you will need
+ to provide a custom mapping to C++ literals for such strings. The format of
+ this file is specified in the <code><b>custom-literals.xsd</b></code> XML
+ Schema file that can be found in the documentation directory.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--preserve-anonymous</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Preserve anonymous types. By default anonymous types are automatically named
+ with names derived from the enclosing elements/attributes. Because mappings
+ implemented by this compiler require all types to be named, this option is
+ only useful if you want to make sure your schemas don't have anonymous
+ types.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--show-anonymous</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Show elements and attributes that are of anonymous types. This option only
+ makes sense together with the <code><b>--preserve-anonymous</b></code>
+ option.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--anonymous-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to derive names for
+ anonymous types from the enclosing attributes/elements. <i>regex</i> is a
+ Perl-like regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. Any
+ character can be used as a delimiter instead of <code><b>/</b></code>.
+ Escaping of the delimiter character in <code><i>pattern</i></code> or
+ <code><i>replacement</i></code> is not supported.
+
+ <p>All the regular expressions are pushed into a stack with the last
+ specified expression considered first. The first match that succeeds is
+ used. Regular expressions are applied to a string in the form</p>
+
+ <p><code><i>filename</i> <i>namespace</i> <i>xpath</i></code></p>
+
+ <p>For instance:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>hello.xsd http://example.com/hello element</b></code></p>
+
+ <p><code><b>hello.xsd http://example.com/hello type/element</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>As an example, the following expression makes all the derived names start
+ with capital letters. This could be useful when your naming convention
+ requires type names to start with capital letters:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>%.* .* (.+/)*(.+)%\u$2%</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>See also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--anonymous-regex-trace</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Trace the process of applying regular expressions specified with the
+ <code><b>--anonymous-regex</b></code> option. Use this option to find out
+ why your regular expressions don't do what you expected them to do.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--location-map</b></code> <i>ol</i>=<i>nl</i></dt>
+ <dd>Map the original schema location <i>ol</i> that is specified in the XML
+ Schema include or import elements to new schema location <i>nl</i>. Repeat
+ this option to map more than one schema location. For example, the following
+ option maps the <code><b>http://example.com/foo.xsd</b></code> URL to the
+ <code><b>foo.xsd</b></code> local file.
+
+ <p><code><b>--location-map http://example.com/foo.xsd=foo.xsd</b></code></p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--location-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to map schema
+ locations that are specified in the XML Schema include or import elements.
+ <i>regex</i> is a Perl-like regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. Any
+ character can be used as a delimiter instead of <code><b>/</b></code>.
+ Escaping of the delimiter character in <code><i>pattern</i></code> or
+ <code><i>replacement</i></code> is not supported. All the regular
+ expressions are pushed into a stack with the last specified expression
+ considered first. The first match that succeeds is used.
+
+ <p>For example, the following expression maps URL locations in the form
+ <code><b>http://example.com/foo/bar.xsd</b></code> to local files in the
+ form <code><b>bar.xsd</b></code>:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>%http://.+/(.+)%$1%</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>See also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--location-regex-trace</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Trace the process of applying regular expressions specified with the
+ <code><b>--location-regex</b></code> option. Use this option to find out why
+ your regular expressions don't do what you expected them to do.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--file-per-type</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate a separate set of C++ files for each type defined in XML Schema.
+ Note that in this mode you only need to compile the root schema(s) and the
+ code will be generated for all included and imported schemas. This
+ compilation mode is primarily useful when some of your schemas cannot be
+ compiled separately or have cyclic dependencies which involve type
+ inheritance. Other options related to this mode are:
+ <code><b>--type-file-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--schema-file-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--fat-type-file</b></code>, and <code><b>--file-list</b></code>.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--type-file-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate type
+ names to file names when the <code><b>--file-per-type</b></code> option is
+ specified. <i>regex</i> is a Perl-like regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. Any
+ character can be used as a delimiter instead of <code><b>/</b></code>.
+ Escaping of the delimiter character in <code><i>pattern</i></code> or
+ <code><i>replacement</i></code> is not supported. All the regular
+ expressions are pushed into a stack with the last specified expression
+ considered first. The first match that succeeds is used. Regular expressions
+ are applied to a string in the form
+
+ <p><code><i>namespace</i> <i>type-name</i></code></p>
+
+ <p>For example, the following expression maps type <code><b>foo</b></code>
+ that is defined in the <code><b>http://example.com/bar</b></code> namespace
+ to file name <code><b>bar-foo</b></code>:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>%http://example.com/(.+) (.+)%$1-$2%</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>See also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--type-file-regex-trace</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Trace the process of applying regular expressions specified with the
+ <code><b>--type-file-regex</b></code> option. Use this option to find out
+ why your regular expressions don't do what you expected them to do.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--schema-file-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate schema
+ file names when the <code><b>--file-per-type</b></code> option is specified.
+ <i>regex</i> is a Perl-like regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>. Any
+ character can be used as a delimiter instead of <code><b>/</b></code>.
+ Escaping of the delimiter character in <code><i>pattern</i></code> or
+ <code><i>replacement</i></code> is not supported. All the regular
+ expressions are pushed into a stack with the last specified expression
+ considered first. The first match that succeeds is used. Regular Expressions
+ are applied to the absolute filesystem path of a schema file and the result,
+ including the directory part, if any, is used to derive the
+ <code><b>#include</b></code> directive paths as well as the generated C++
+ file paths. This option, along with <code><b>--type-file-regex</b></code>
+ are primarily useful to place the generated files into subdirectories or to
+ resolve file name conflicts.
+
+ <p>For example, the following expression maps schema files in the
+ <code><b>foo/1.0.0/</b></code> subdirectory to the files in the
+ <code><b>foo/</b></code> subdirectory. As a result, the
+ <code><b>#include</b></code> directive paths for such schemas will be in the
+ <code><b>foo/schema.hxx</b></code> form and the generated C++ files will be
+ placed into the <code><b>foo/</b></code> subdirectory:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>%.*/foo/1.0.0/(.+)%foo/$1%</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>See also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--schema-file-regex-trace</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Trace the process of applying regular expressions specified with the
+ <code><b>--schema-file-regex</b></code> option. Use this option to find out
+ why your regular expressions don't do what you expected them to do.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--fat-type-file</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate code corresponding to global elements into type files instead of
+ schema files when the <code><b>--type-file-regex</b></code> option is
+ specified. This option is primarily useful when trying to minimize the
+ amount of object code that is linked to an executable by packaging compiled
+ generated code into a static (archive) library.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--file-list</b></code> <i>file</i></dt>
+ <dd>Write a list of generated C++ files to <i>file</i>. This option is primarily
+ useful in the file-per-type compilation mode
+ (<code><b>--file-per-type</b></code>) to create a list of generated C++
+ files, for example, as a makefile fragment.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--file-list-prologue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the beginning of the file list. As a convenience, all
+ occurrences of the <code><b>\n</b></code> character sequence in <i>text</i>
+ are replaced with new lines. This option can, for example, be used to assign
+ the generated file list to a makefile variable.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--file-list-epilogue</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Insert <i>text</i> at the end of the file list. As a convenience, all
+ occurrences of the <code><b>\n</b></code> character sequence in <i>text</i>
+ are replaced with new lines.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--file-list-delim</b></code> <i>text</i></dt>
+ <dd>Delimit file names written to the file list with <i>text</i> instead of new
+ lines. As a convenience, all occurrences of the <code><b>\n</b></code>
+ character sequence in <i>text</i> are replaced with new lines.</dd>
+
+</dl>
+ <h2>CXX-TREE COMMAND OPTIONS</h2>
+
+<!--
+ The following documentation was generated by CLI, a command
+ line interface compiler for C++.
+-->
+
+<dl class="options">
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-polymorphic</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate polymorphism-aware code. Specify this option if you use
+ substitution groups or <code><b>xsi:type</b></code>. Use the
+ <code><b>--polymorphic-type</b></code> or
+ <code><b>--polymorphic-type-all</b></code> option to specify which type
+ hierarchies are polymorphic.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--polymorphic-type</b></code> <i>type</i></dt>
+ <dd>Indicate that <i>type</i> is a root of a polymorphic type hierarchy. The
+ compiler can often automatically determine which types are polymorphic based
+ on the substitution group declarations. However, you may need to use this
+ option if you are not using substitution groups or if substitution groups
+ are defined in another schema. You need to specify this option when
+ compiling every schema file that references <i>type</i>. The <i>type</i>
+ argument is an XML Schema type name that can be optionally qualified with a
+ namespace in the <code><i>namespace</i><b>#</b><i>name</i></code> form.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--polymorphic-type-all</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Indicate that all types should be treated as polymorphic.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--polymorphic-plate</b></code> <i>num</i></dt>
+ <dd>Specify the polymorphic map plate the generated code should register on.
+ This functionality is primarily useful to segregate multiple schemas that
+ define the same polymorphic types.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--ordered-type</b></code> <i>type</i></dt>
+ <dd>Indicate that element order in <i>type</i> is significant. An example would
+ be a complex type with unbounded choice as a content model where the element
+ order in XML has application-specific semantics. For ordered types the
+ compiler generates a special container data member and a corresponding set
+ of accessors and modifiers that are used to capture the order of elements
+ and, for mixed content, of text.
+
+ <p>The <i>type</i> argument is an XML Schema type name that can be
+ optionally qualified with a namespace in the
+ <code><i>namespace</i><b>#</b><i>name</i></code> form. Note also that you
+ will need to specify this option when compiling every schema file that has
+ other ordered types derived from this type.</p></dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--ordered-type-derived</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Automatically treat types derived from ordered bases as also ordered. This
+ is primarily useful if you would like to be able to iterate over the
+ complete content using the content order container.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--ordered-type-mixed</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Automatically treat complex types with mixed content as ordered.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--ordered-type-all</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Indicate that element order in all types is significant.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--order-container</b></code> <i>type</i></dt>
+ <dd>Specify a custom class template that should be used as a container for the
+ content order in ordered types instead of the default
+ <code><b>std::vector</b></code>. See <code><b>--ordered-type</b></code> for
+ more information on ordered type. This option is primarily useful if you
+ need to perform more complex lookups in the content order container, for
+ example by element id. In this case, a container like Boost multi-index may
+ be more convenient. Note that if using a custom container, you will also
+ most likely need to include the relevant headers using the
+ <code><b>--hxx-prologue*</b></code> options.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-serialization</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate serialization functions. Serialization functions convert the object
+ model back to XML.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-ostream</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate ostream insertion operators (<code><b>operator&lt;&lt;</b></code>)
+ for generated types. This allows one to easily print a fragment or the whole
+ object model for debugging or logging.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-doxygen</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate documentation comments suitable for extraction by the Doxygen
+ documentation system. Documentation from annotations is added to the
+ comments if present in the schema.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-comparison</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate comparison operators (<code><b>operator==</b></code> and
+ <code><b>operator!=</b></code>) for complex types. Comparison is performed
+ member-wise.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-default-ctor</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate default constructors even for types that have required members.
+ Required members of an instance constructed using such a constructor are not
+ initialized and accessing them results in undefined behavior.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-from-base-ctor</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate constructors that expect an instance of a base type followed by all
+ required members.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--suppress-assignment</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Suppress the generation of copy assignment operators for complex types. If
+ this option is specified, the copy assignment operators for such types are
+ declared private and left unimplemented.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-detach</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate detach functions for required elements and attributes. Detach
+ functions for optional and sequence cardinalities are provided by the
+ respective containers. These functions, for example, allow you to move
+ sub-trees in the object model either within the same tree or between
+ different trees.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-wildcard</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate accessors and modifiers as well as parsing and serialization code
+ for XML Schema wildcards (<code><b>any</b></code> and
+ <code><b>anyAttribute</b></code>). XML content matched by wildcards is
+ presented as DOM fragments. Note that you need to initialize the Xerces-C++
+ runtime if you are using this option.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-any-type</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Extract and store content of the XML Schema <code><b>anyType</b></code> type
+ as a DOM fragment. Note that you need to initialize the Xerces-C++ runtime
+ if you are using this option.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-insertion</b></code> <i>os</i></dt>
+ <dd>Generate data representation stream insertion operators for the <i>os</i>
+ output stream type. Repeat this option to specify more than one stream type.
+ The ACE CDR stream (<code><b>ACE_OutputCDR</b></code>) and RPC XDR are
+ recognized by the compiler and the necessary <code><b>#include</b></code>
+ directives are automatically generated. For custom stream types use the
+ <code><b>--hxx-prologue*</b></code> options to provide the necessary
+ declarations.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-extraction</b></code> <i>is</i></dt>
+ <dd>Generate data representation stream extraction constructors for the
+ <i>is</i> input stream type. Repeat this option to specify more than one
+ stream type. The ACE CDR stream (<code><b>ACE_InputCDR</b></code>) and RPC
+ XDR are recognized by the compiler and the necessary
+ <code><b>#include</b></code> directives are automatically generated. For
+ custom stream types use the <code><b>--hxx-prologue*</b></code> options to
+ provide the necessary declarations.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-forward</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate a separate header file with forward declarations for the types
+ being generated.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--suppress-parsing</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Suppress the generation of the parsing functions and constructors. Use this
+ option to reduce the generated code size when parsing from XML is not
+ needed.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-element-type</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate types instead of parsing and serialization functions for root
+ elements. This is primarily useful to distinguish object models with the
+ same root type but with different root elements.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-element-map</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate a root element map that allows uniform parsing and serialization of
+ multiple root elements. This option is only valid together with
+ <code><b>--generate-element-type</b></code>.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-intellisense</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate workarounds for IntelliSense bugs in Visual Studio 2005 (8.0). When
+ this option is used, the resulting code is slightly more verbose.
+ IntelliSense in Visual Studio 2008 (9.0) and later does not require these
+ workarounds. Support for IntelliSense in Visual Studio 2003 (7.1) is
+ improved with this option but is still incomplete.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--omit-default-attributes</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Omit attributes with default and fixed values from serialized XML documents.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--type-naming</b></code> <i>style</i></dt>
+ <dd>Specify the type naming convention that should be used in the generated
+ code. Valid styles are <code><b>knr</b></code> (default),
+ <code><b>ucc</b></code>, and <code><b>java</b></code>. See the NAMING
+ CONVENTION section below for more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--function-naming</b></code> <i>style</i></dt>
+ <dd>Specify the function naming convention that should be used in the generated
+ code. Valid styles are <code><b>knr</b></code> (default),
+ <code><b>lcc</b></code>, and <code><b>java</b></code>. See the NAMING
+ CONVENTION section below for more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--type-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema type names to C++ type names. See the NAMING CONVENTION section below
+ for more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--accessor-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema names of elements/attributes to C++ accessor function names. See the
+ NAMING CONVENTION section below for more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--one-accessor-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema names of elements/attributes with cardinality one to C++ accessor
+ function names. See the NAMING CONVENTION section below for more
+ information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--opt-accessor-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema names of elements/attributes with cardinality optional to C++
+ accessor function names. See the NAMING CONVENTION section below for more
+ information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--seq-accessor-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema names of elements/attributes with cardinality sequence to C++
+ accessor function names. See the NAMING CONVENTION section below for more
+ information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--modifier-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema names of elements/attributes to C++ modifier function names. See the
+ NAMING CONVENTION section below for more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--one-modifier-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema names of elements/attributes with cardinality one to C++ modifier
+ function names. See the NAMING CONVENTION section below for more
+ information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--opt-modifier-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema names of elements/attributes with cardinality optional to C++
+ modifier function names. See the NAMING CONVENTION section below for more
+ information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--seq-modifier-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema names of elements/attributes with cardinality sequence to C++
+ modifier function names. See the NAMING CONVENTION section below for more
+ information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--parser-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema element names to C++ parsing function names. See the NAMING
+ CONVENTION section below for more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--serializer-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema element names to C++ serialization function names. See the NAMING
+ CONVENTION section below for more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--const-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema-derived names to C++ constant names. See the NAMING CONVENTION
+ section below for more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--enumerator-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema enumeration values to C++ enumerator names. See the NAMING CONVENTION
+ section below for more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--element-type-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Add <i>regex</i> to the list of regular expressions used to translate XML
+ Schema element names to C++ element type names. See the NAMING CONVENTION
+ section below for more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--name-regex-trace</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Trace the process of applying regular expressions specified with the name
+ transformation options. Use this option to find out why your regular
+ expressions don't do what you expected them to do.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--root-element-first</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Treat only the first global element as a document root. By default all
+ global elements are considered document roots.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--root-element-last</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Treat only the last global element as a document root. By default all global
+ elements are considered document roots.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--root-element-all</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Treat all global elements as document roots. This is the default behavior.
+ By explicitly specifying this option you can suppress the warning that is
+ issued if more than one global element is defined.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--root-element-none</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Do not treat any global elements as document roots. By default all global
+ elements are considered document roots.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--root-element</b></code> <i>element</i></dt>
+ <dd>Treat only <i>element</i> as a document root. Repeat this option to specify
+ more than one root element.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--custom-type</b></code> <i>map</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use a custom C++ type instead of the generated class. The <i>map</i>
+ argument is in the form
+ <code><i>name</i>[<b>=</b><i>type</i>[<b>/</b><i>base</i>]]</code>, where
+ <i>name</i> is a type name as defined in XML Schema and <i>type</i> is a C++
+ type name that should be used instead. If <i>type</i> is not present or
+ empty then the custom type is assumed to have the same name and be defined
+ in the same namespace as the generated class would have. If <i>base</i> is
+ specified then the generated class is still generated but with that name.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--custom-type-regex</b></code> <i>regex</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use custom C++ types instead of the generated classes. The <i>regex</i>
+ argument is in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>name-pat</i><b>/</b>[<i>type-sub</i><b>/</b>[<i>base-sub</i><b>/</b>]]</code>,
+ where <i>name-pat</i> is a regex pattern that will be matched against type
+ names as defined in XML Schema and <i>type-sub</i> is a C++ type name
+ substitution that should be used instead. If <i>type-sub</i> is not present
+ or its substitution results in an empty string then the custom type is
+ assumed to have the same name and be defined in the same namespace as the
+ generated class would have. If <i>base-sub</i> is present and its
+ substitution results in a non-empty string then the generated class is still
+ generated but with the result of this substitution as its name. The pattern
+ and substitutions are in the Perl regular expression format. See also the
+ REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--parts</b></code> <i>num</i></dt>
+ <dd>Split generated source code into <i>num</i> parts. This is useful when
+ translating large, monolithic schemas and a C++ compiler is not able to
+ compile the resulting source code at once (usually due to insufficient
+ memory).</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--parts-suffix</b></code> <i>suffix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use <i>suffix</i> instead of the default '<code><b>-</b></code>' to separate
+ the file name from the part number.</dd>
+
+</dl>
+ <h2>CXX-PARSER COMMAND OPTIONS</h2>
+
+<!--
+ The following documentation was generated by CLI, a command
+ line interface compiler for C++.
+-->
+
+<dl class="options">
+ <dt><code><b>--type-map</b></code> <i>mapfile</i></dt>
+ <dd>Read XML Schema to C++ type mapping information from <i>mapfile</i>. Repeat
+ this option to specify several type maps. Type maps are considered in order
+ of appearance and the first match is used. By default all user-defined types
+ are mapped to <code><b>void</b></code>. See the TYPE MAP section below for
+ more information.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--xml-parser</b></code> <i>parser</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use <i>parser</i> as the underlying XML parser. Valid values are
+ <code><b>xerces</b></code> for Xerces-C++ (default) and
+ <code><b>expat</b></code> for Expat.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-validation</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate validation code. The validation code ("perfect parser") ensures
+ that instance documents conform to the schema. Validation code is generated
+ by default when the selected underlying XML parser is non-validating
+ (<code><b>expat</b></code>).</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--suppress-validation</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Suppress the generation of validation code. Validation is suppressed by
+ default when the selected underlying XML parser is validating
+ (<code><b>xerces</b></code>).</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-polymorphic</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate polymorphism-aware code. Specify this option if you use
+ substitution groups or <code><b>xsi:type</b></code>.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-noop-impl</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate a sample parser implementation that does nothing (no operation).
+ The sample implementation can then be filled with the application-specific
+ code. For an input file in the form <code><b>name.xsd</b></code> this option
+ triggers the generation of two additional C++ files in the form:
+ <code><b>name-pimpl.hxx</b></code> (parser implementation header file) and
+ <code><b>name-pimpl.cxx</b></code> (parser implementation source file).</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-print-impl</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate a sample parser implementation that prints the XML data to
+ <code>STDOUT</code>. For an input file in the form
+ <code><b>name.xsd</b></code> this option triggers the generation of two
+ additional C++ files in the form: <code><b>name-pimpl.hxx</b></code> (parser
+ implementation header file) and <code><b>name-pimpl.cxx</b></code> (parser
+ implementation source file).</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--generate-test-driver</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Generate a test driver for the sample parser implementation. For an input
+ file in the form <code><b>name.xsd</b></code> this option triggers the
+ generation of an additional C++ file in the form
+ <code><b>name-driver.cxx</b></code>.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--force-overwrite</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Force overwriting of the existing implementation and test driver files. Use
+ this option only if you do not mind loosing the changes you have made in the
+ sample implementation or test driver files.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--root-element-first</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Indicate that the first global element is the document root. This
+ information is used to generate the test driver for the sample
+ implementation.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--root-element-last</b></code></dt>
+ <dd>Indicate that the last global element is the document root. This information
+ is used to generate the test driver for the sample implementation.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--root-element</b></code> <i>element</i></dt>
+ <dd>Indicate that <i>element</i> is the document root. This information is used
+ to generate the test driver for the sample implementation.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--skel-type-suffix</b></code> <i>suffix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided <i>suffix</i> instead of the default
+ <code><b>_pskel</b></code> to construct the names of the generated parser
+ skeletons.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--skel-file-suffix</b></code> <i>suffix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided <i>suffix</i> instead of the default
+ <code><b>-pskel</b></code> to construct the names of the generated parser
+ skeleton files.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--impl-type-suffix</b></code> <i>suffix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided <i>suffix</i> instead of the default
+ <code><b>_pimpl</b></code> to construct the names of the parser
+ implementations for the built-in XML Schema types as well as sample parser
+ implementations.</dd>
+
+ <dt><code><b>--impl-file-suffix</b></code> <i>suffix</i></dt>
+ <dd>Use the provided <i>suffix</i> instead of the default
+ <code><b>-pimpl</b></code> to construct the names of the generated sample
+ parser implementation files.</dd>
+
+</dl>
+ <h1>NAMING CONVENTION</h1>
+
+ <p>The compiler can be instructed to use a particular naming
+ convention in the generated code. A number of widely-used
+ conventions can be selected using the <code><b>--type-naming</b></code>
+ and <code><b>--function-naming</b></code> options. A custom
+ naming convention can be achieved using the
+ <code><b>--type-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--accessor-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--one-accessor-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--opt-accessor-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--seq-accessor-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--modifier-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--one-modifier-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--opt-modifier-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--seq-modifier-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--parser-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--serializer-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--const-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--enumerator-regex</b></code>, and
+ <code><b>--element-type-regex</b></code> options.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>The <code><b>--type-naming</b></code> option specifies the
+ convention that should be used for naming C++ types. Possible
+ values for this option are <code><b>knr</b></code> (default),
+ <code><b>ucc</b></code>, and <code><b>java</b></code>. The
+ <code><b>knr</b></code> value (stands for K&amp;R) signifies
+ the standard, lower-case naming convention with the underscore
+ used as a word delimiter, for example: <code>foo</code>,
+ <code>foo_bar</code>. The <code><b>ucc</b></code> (stands
+ for upper-camel-case) and
+ <code><b>java</b></code> values a synonyms for the same
+ naming convention where the first letter of each word in the
+ name is capitalized, for example: <code>Foo</code>,
+ <code>FooBar</code>.</p>
+
+ <p>Similarly, the <code><b>--function-naming</b></code> option
+ specifies the convention that should be used for naming C++
+ functions. Possible values for this option are <code><b>knr</b></code>
+ (default), <code><b>lcc</b></code>, and <code><b>java</b></code>. The
+ <code><b>knr</b></code> value (stands for K&amp;R) signifies
+ the standard, lower-case naming convention with the underscore
+ used as a word delimiter, for example: <code>foo()</code>,
+ <code>foo_bar()</code>. The <code><b>lcc</b></code> value
+ (stands for lower-camel-case) signifies a naming convention
+ where the first letter of each word except the first is
+ capitalized, for example: <code>foo()</code>, <code>fooBar()</code>.
+ The <code><b>java</b></code> naming convention is similar to
+ the lower-camel-case one except that accessor functions are prefixed
+ with <code>get</code>, modifier functions are prefixed
+ with <code>set</code>, parsing functions are prefixed
+ with <code>parse</code>, and serialization functions are
+ prefixed with <code>serialize</code>, for example:
+ <code>getFoo()</code>, <code>setFooBar()</code>,
+ <code>parseRoot()</code>, <code>serializeRoot()</code>.</p>
+
+ <p>Note that the naming conventions specified with the
+ <code><b>--type-naming</b></code> and
+ <code><b>--function-naming</b></code> options perform only limited
+ transformations on the names that come from the schema in the
+ form of type, attribute, and element names. In other words, to
+ get consistent results, your schemas should follow a similar
+ naming convention as the one you would like to have in the
+ generated code. Alternatively, you can use the
+ <code><b>--*-regex</b></code> options (discussed below)
+ to perform further transformations on the names that come from
+ the schema.</p>
+
+ <p>The
+ <code><b>--type-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--accessor-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--one-accessor-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--opt-accessor-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--seq-accessor-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--modifier-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--one-modifier-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--opt-modifier-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--seq-modifier-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--parser-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--serializer-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--const-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--enumerator-regex</b></code>, and
+ <code><b>--element-type-regex</b></code> options allow you to
+ specify extra regular expressions for each name category in
+ addition to the predefined set that is added depending on
+ the <code><b>--type-naming</b></code> and
+ <code><b>--function-naming</b></code> options. Expressions
+ that are provided with the <code><b>--*-regex</b></code>
+ options are evaluated prior to any predefined expressions.
+ This allows you to selectively override some or all of the
+ predefined transformations. When debugging your own expressions,
+ it is often useful to see which expressions match which names.
+ The <code><b>--name-regex-trace</b></code> option allows you
+ to trace the process of applying regular expressions to
+ names.</p>
+
+ <p>The value for the <code><b>--*-regex</b></code> options should be
+ a perl-like regular expression in the form
+ <code><b>/</b><i>pattern</i><b>/</b><i>replacement</i><b>/</b></code>.
+ Any character can be used as a delimiter instead of <code><b>/</b></code>.
+ Escaping of the delimiter character in <code><i>pattern</i></code> or
+ <code><i>replacement</i></code> is not supported.
+ All the regular expressions for each category are pushed into a
+ category-specific stack with the last specified expression
+ considered first. The first match that succeeds is used. For the
+ <code><b>--one-accessor-regex</b></code> (accessors with cardinality one),
+ <code><b>--opt-accessor-regex</b></code> (accessors with cardinality optional), and
+ <code><b>--seq-accessor-regex</b></code> (accessors with cardinality sequence)
+ categories the <code><b>--accessor-regex</b></code> expressions are
+ used as a fallback. For the
+ <code><b>--one-modifier-regex</b></code>,
+ <code><b>--opt-modifier-regex</b></code>, and
+ <code><b>--seq-modifier-regex</b></code>
+ categories the <code><b>--modifier-regex</b></code> expressions are
+ used as a fallback. For the <code><b>--element-type-regex</b></code>
+ category the <code><b>--type-regex</b></code> expressions are
+ used as a fallback.</p>
+
+ <p>The type name expressions (<code><b>--type-regex</b></code>)
+ are evaluated on the name string that has the following
+ format:</p>
+
+ <p><code>[<i>namespace</i> ]<i>name</i>[,<i>name</i>][,<i>name</i>][,<i>name</i>]</code></p>
+
+ <p>The element type name expressions
+ (<code><b>--element-type-regex</b></code>), effective only when
+ the <code><b>--generate-element-type</b></code> option is specified,
+ are evaluated on the name string that has the following
+ format:</p>
+
+ <p><code><i>namespace</i> <i>name</i></code></p>
+
+ <p>In the type name format the <code><i>namespace</i></code> part
+ followed by a space is only present for global type names. For
+ global types and elements defined in schemas without a target
+ namespace, the <code><i>namespace</i></code> part is empty but
+ the space is still present. In the type name format after the
+ initial <code><i>name</i></code> component, up to three additional
+ <code><i>name</i></code> components can be present, separated
+ by commas. For example:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>http://example.com/hello type</b></code></p>
+ <p><code><b>foo</b></code></p>
+ <p><code><b>foo,iterator</b></code></p>
+ <p><code><b>foo,const,iterator</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>The following set of predefined regular expressions is used to
+ transform type names when the upper-camel-case naming convention
+ is selected:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>/(?:[^ ]* )?([^,]+)/\u$1/</b></code></p>
+ <p><code><b>/(?:[^ ]* )?([^,]+),([^,]+)/\u$1\u$2/</b></code></p>
+ <p><code><b>/(?:[^ ]* )?([^,]+),([^,]+),([^,]+)/\u$1\u$2\u$3/</b></code></p>
+ <p><code><b>/(?:[^ ]* )?([^,]+),([^,]+),([^,]+),([^,]+)/\u$1\u$2\u$3\u$4/</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>The accessor and modifier expressions
+ (<code><b>--*accessor-regex</b></code> and
+ <code><b>--*modifier-regex</b></code>) are evaluated on the name string
+ that has the following format:</p>
+
+ <p><code><i>name</i>[,<i>name</i>][,<i>name</i>]</code></p>
+
+ <p>After the initial <code><i>name</i></code> component, up to two
+ additional <code><i>name</i></code> components can be present,
+ separated by commas. For example:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>foo</b></code></p>
+ <p><code><b>dom,document</b></code></p>
+ <p><code><b>foo,default,value</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>The following set of predefined regular expressions is used to
+ transform accessor names when the <code><b>java</b></code> naming
+ convention is selected:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>/([^,]+)/get\u$1/</b></code></p>
+ <p><code><b>/([^,]+),([^,]+)/get\u$1\u$2/</b></code></p>
+ <p><code><b>/([^,]+),([^,]+),([^,]+)/get\u$1\u$2\u$3/</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>For the parser, serializer, and enumerator categories, the
+ corresponding regular expressions are evaluated on local names of
+ elements and on enumeration values, respectively. For example, the
+ following predefined regular expression is used to transform parsing
+ function names when the <code><b>java</b></code> naming convention
+ is selected:</p>
+
+ <p><code><b>/(.+)/parse\u$1/</b></code></p>
+
+ <p>The const category is used to create C++ constant names for the
+ element/wildcard/text content ids in ordered types.</p>
+
+ <p>See also the REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING section below.</p>
+
+ <h1>TYPE MAP</h1>
+
+ <p>Type map files are used in C++/Parser to define a mapping between
+ XML Schema and C++ types. The compiler uses this information
+ to determine the return types of <code><b>post_*</b></code>
+ functions in parser skeletons corresponding to XML Schema
+ types as well as argument types for callbacks corresponding
+ to elements and attributes of these types.</p>
+
+ <p>The compiler has a set of predefined mapping rules that map
+ built-in XML Schema types to suitable C++ types (discussed
+ below) and all other types to <code><b>void</b></code>.
+ By providing your own type maps you can override these predefined
+ rules. The format of the type map file is presented below:
+ </p>
+
+ <pre>
+namespace &lt;schema-namespace> [&lt;cxx-namespace>]
+{
+ (include &lt;file-name>;)*
+ ([type] &lt;schema-type> &lt;cxx-ret-type> [&lt;cxx-arg-type>];)*
+}
+ </pre>
+
+ <p>Both <code><i>&lt;schema-namespace></i></code> and
+ <code><i>&lt;schema-type></i></code> are regex patterns while
+ <code><i>&lt;cxx-namespace></i></code>,
+ <code><i>&lt;cxx-ret-type></i></code>, and
+ <code><i>&lt;cxx-arg-type></i></code> are regex pattern
+ substitutions. All names can be optionally enclosed in
+ <code><b>" "</b></code>, for example, to include white-spaces.</p>
+
+ <p><code><i>&lt;schema-namespace></i></code> determines XML
+ Schema namespace. Optional <code><i>&lt;cxx-namespace></i></code>
+ is prefixed to every C++ type name in this namespace declaration.
+ <code><i>&lt;cxx-ret-type></i></code> is a C++ type name that is
+ used as a return type for the <code><b>post_*</b></code> functions.
+ Optional <code><i>&lt;cxx-arg-type></i></code> is an argument
+ type for callback functions corresponding to elements and attributes
+ of this type. If
+ <code><i>&lt;cxx-arg-type></i></code> is not specified, it defaults
+ to <code><i>&lt;cxx-ret-type></i></code> if <code><i>&lt;cxx-ret-type></i></code>
+ ends with <code><b>*</b></code> or <code><b>&amp;</b></code> (that is,
+ it is a pointer or a reference) and
+ <code><b>const</b>&nbsp;<i>&lt;cxx-ret-type></i><b>&amp;</b></code>
+ otherwise.
+ <code><i>&lt;file-name></i></code> is a file name either in the
+ <code><b>" "</b></code> or <code><b>&lt; ></b></code> format
+ and is added with the <code><b>#include</b></code> directive to
+ the generated code.</p>
+
+ <p>The <code><b>#</b></code> character starts a comment that ends
+ with a new line or end of file. To specify a name that contains
+ <code><b>#</b></code> enclose it in <code><b>" "</b></code>.
+ For example:</p>
+
+ <pre>
+namespace http://www.example.com/xmlns/my my
+{
+ include "my.hxx";
+
+ # Pass apples by value.
+ #
+ apple apple;
+
+ # Pass oranges as pointers.
+ #
+ orange orange_t*;
+}
+ </pre>
+
+ <p>In the example above, for the
+ <code><b>http://www.example.com/xmlns/my#orange</b></code>
+ XML Schema type, the <code><b>my::orange_t*</b></code> C++ type will
+ be used as both return and argument types.</p>
+
+ <p>Several namespace declarations can be specified in a single
+ file. The namespace declaration can also be completely
+ omitted to map types in a schema without a namespace. For
+ instance:</p>
+
+ <pre>
+include "my.hxx";
+apple apple;
+
+namespace http://www.example.com/xmlns/my
+{
+ orange "const orange_t*";
+}
+ </pre>
+
+ <p>The compiler has a number of predefined mapping rules that can be
+ presented as the following map files. The string-based XML Schema
+ built-in types are mapped to either <code><b>std::string</b></code>
+ or <code><b>std::wstring</b></code> depending on the character type
+ selected with the <code><b>--char-type</b></code> option
+ (<code><b>char</b></code> by default).</p>
+
+ <pre>
+namespace http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
+{
+ boolean bool bool;
+
+ byte "signed char" "signed char";
+ unsignedByte "unsigned char" "unsigned char";
+
+ short short short;
+ unsignedShort "unsigned short" "unsigned short";
+
+ int int int;
+ unsignedInt "unsigned int" "unsigned int";
+
+ long "long long" "long long";
+ unsignedLong "unsigned long long" "unsigned long long";
+
+ integer "long long" "long long";
+
+ negativeInteger "long long" "long long";
+ nonPositiveInteger "long long" "long long";
+
+ positiveInteger "unsigned long long" "unsigned long long";
+ nonNegativeInteger "unsigned long long" "unsigned long long";
+
+ float float float;
+ double double double;
+ decimal double double;
+
+ string std::string;
+ normalizedString std::string;
+ token std::string;
+ Name std::string;
+ NMTOKEN std::string;
+ NCName std::string;
+ ID std::string;
+ IDREF std::string;
+ language std::string;
+ anyURI std::string;
+
+ NMTOKENS xml_schema::string_sequence;
+ IDREFS xml_schema::string_sequence;
+
+ QName xml_schema::qname;
+
+ base64Binary std::auto_ptr&lt;xml_schema::buffer>
+ std::auto_ptr&lt;xml_schema::buffer>;
+ hexBinary std::auto_ptr&lt;xml_schema::buffer>
+ std::auto_ptr&lt;xml_schema::buffer>;
+
+ date xml_schema::date;
+ dateTime xml_schema::date_time;
+ duration xml_schema::duration;
+ gDay xml_schema::gday;
+ gMonth xml_schema::gmonth;
+ gMonthDay xml_schema::gmonth_day;
+ gYear xml_schema::gyear;
+ gYearMonth xml_schema::gyear_month;
+ time xml_schema::time;
+}
+ </pre>
+
+ <p>The last predefined rule maps anything that wasn't mapped by
+ previous rules to <code><b>void</b></code>:</p>
+
+ <pre>
+namespace .*
+{
+ .* void void;
+}
+ </pre>
+
+
+ <p>When you provide your own type maps with the
+ <code><b>--type-map</b></code> option, they are evaluated first.
+ This allows you to selectively override predefined rules.</p>
+
+ <h1>REGEX AND SHELL QUOTING</h1>
+
+ <p>When entering a regular expression argument in the shell
+ command line it is often necessary to use quoting (enclosing
+ the argument in <code><b>"&nbsp;"</b></code> or
+ <code><b>'&nbsp;'</b></code>) in order to prevent the shell
+ from interpreting certain characters, for example, spaces as
+ argument separators and <code><b>$</b></code> as variable
+ expansions.</p>
+
+ <p>Unfortunately it is hard to achieve this in a manner that is
+ portable across POSIX shells, such as those found on
+ GNU/Linux and UNIX, and Windows shell. For example, if you
+ use <code><b>"&nbsp;"</b></code> for quoting you will get a
+ wrong result with POSIX shells if your expression contains
+ <code><b>$</b></code>. The standard way of dealing with this
+ on POSIX systems is to use <code><b>'&nbsp;'</b></code> instead.
+ Unfortunately, Windows shell does not remove <code><b>'&nbsp;'</b></code>
+ from arguments when they are passed to applications. As a result you
+ may have to use <code><b>'&nbsp;'</b></code> for POSIX and
+ <code><b>"&nbsp;"</b></code> for Windows (<code><b>$</b></code> is
+ not treated as a special character on Windows).</p>
+
+ <p>Alternatively, you can save regular expression options into
+ a file, one option per line, and use this file with the
+ <code><b>--options-file</b></code> option. With this approach
+ you don't need to worry about shell quoting.</p>
+
+ <h1>DIAGNOSTICS</h1>
+
+ <p>If the input file is not a valid W3C XML Schema definition,
+ <code><b>xsd</b></code> will issue diagnostic messages to STDERR
+ and exit with non-zero exit code.</p>
+
+ <h1>BUGS</h1>
+
+ <p>Send bug reports to the
+ <a href="mailto:xsd-users@codesynthesis.com">xsd-users@codesynthesis.com</a> mailing list.</p>
+
+ </div>
+ <div id="footer">
+ &copy;2005-2014 <a href="http://codesynthesis.com">CODE SYNTHESIS TOOLS CC</a>
+
+ <div id="terms">
+ Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
+ document under the terms of the
+ <a href="http://codesynthesis.com/licenses/fdl-1.2.txt">GNU Free
+ Documentation License, version 1.2</a>; with no Invariant Sections,
+ no Front-Cover Texts and no Back-Cover Texts.
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