HTML tutorial
CSS3 tutorial
Bootstrap tutorial
JavaScript tutorial
JQuery tutorial
AngularJS tutorial
React tutorial
NodeJS tutorial
PHP tutorial
Python tutorial
Python3 tutorial
Django tutorial
Linux tutorial
Docker tutorial
Ruby tutorial
Java tutorial
C tutorial
C ++ tutorial
Perl tutorial
JSP tutorial
Lua tutorial
Scala tutorial
Go tutorial
ASP.NET tutorial
C # tutorial
With XML Schemas, one element can substitute another element
Let's say that we have users from two different countries: England and Norway. We would like the ability to let the user choose whether he or she would like to use the Norwegian element names or the English element names in the XML document.
To solve this problem, we could define a substitutionGroup in the XML schema. First, we declare a head element and then we declare the other elements which state that they are substitutable for the head element.
<xs:element name="name" type="xs:string"/>
<xs:element name="navn" substitutionGroup="name"/>
In the example above, the "name" element is the head element and the "navn" element is substitutable for "name".
Look at this fragment of an XML schema:
<xs:element name="name" type="xs:string"/>
<xs:element name="navn" substitutionGroup="name"/>
<xs:complexType name="custinfo">
<xs:sequence>
<xs:element ref="name"/>
</xs:sequence>
</xs:complexType>
<xs:element name="customer" type="custinfo"/>
<xs:element name="kunde" substitutionGroup="customer"/>
A valid XML document (according to the schema above) could look like this:
<customer>
<name>John Smith</name>
</customer>
or like this:
<kunde>
<navn>John Smith</navn>
</kunde>
To prevent other elements from substituting with a specified element, use the block attribute:
<xs:element name="name" type="xs:string" block="substitution"/>
Look at this fragment of an XML schema:
<xs:element name="name" type="xs:string" block="substitution"/>
<xs:element name="navn" substitutionGroup="name"/>
<xs:complexType name="custinfo">
<xs:sequence>
<xs:element ref="name"/>
</xs:sequence>
</xs:complexType>
<xs:element name="customer" type="custinfo" block="substitution"/>
<xs:element name="kunde" substitutionGroup="customer"/>
A valid XML document (according to the schema above) looks like this:
<customer>
<name>John Smith</name>
</customer>
BUT THIS IS NO LONGER VALID:
<kunde>
<navn>John Smith</navn>
</kunde>
The type of the substitutable elements must be the same as, or derived from, the type of the head element. If the type of the substitutable element is the same as the type of the head element you will not have to specify the type of the substitutable element.
Note that all elements in the substitutionGroup (the head element and the substitutable elements) must be declared as global elements, otherwise it will not work!
Global elements are elements that are immediate children of the "schema" element! Local elements are elements nested within other elements.