| 1 | /** @mainpage | 
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| 2 |  | 
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| 3 | <h1> TinyXML </h1> | 
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| 4 |  | 
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| 5 | TinyXML is a simple, small, C++ XML parser that can be easily | 
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| 6 | integrated into other programs. | 
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| 7 |  | 
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| 8 | <h2> What it does. </h2> | 
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| 9 |  | 
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| 10 | In brief, TinyXML parses an XML document, and builds from that a | 
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| 11 | Document Object Model (DOM) that can be read, modified, and saved. | 
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| 12 |  | 
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| 13 | XML stands for "eXtensible Markup Language." It allows you to create | 
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| 14 | your own document markups. Where HTML does a very good job of marking | 
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| 15 | documents for browsers, XML allows you to define any kind of document | 
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| 16 | markup, for example a document that describes a "to do" list for an | 
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| 17 | organizer application. XML is a very structured and convenient format. | 
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| 18 | All those random file formats created to store application data can | 
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| 19 | all be replaced with XML. One parser for everything. | 
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| 20 |  | 
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| 21 | The best place for the complete, correct, and quite frankly hard to | 
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| 22 | read spec is at <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xml-20040204/"> | 
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| 23 | http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xml-20040204/</a>. An intro to XML | 
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| 24 | (that I really like) can be found at | 
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| 25 | <a href="http://skew.org/xml/tutorial/">http://skew.org/xml/tutorial</a>. | 
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| 26 |  | 
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| 27 | There are different ways to access and interact with XML data. | 
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| 28 | TinyXML uses a Document Object Model (DOM), meaning the XML data is parsed | 
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| 29 | into a C++ objects that can be browsed and manipulated, and then | 
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| 30 | written to disk or another output stream. You can also construct an XML document | 
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| 31 | from scratch with C++ objects and write this to disk or another output | 
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| 32 | stream. | 
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| 33 |  | 
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| 34 | TinyXML is designed to be easy and fast to learn. It is two headers | 
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| 35 | and four cpp files. Simply add these to your project and off you go. | 
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| 36 | There is an example file - xmltest.cpp - to get you started. | 
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| 37 |  | 
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| 38 | TinyXML is released under the ZLib license, | 
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| 39 | so you can use it in open source or commercial code. The details | 
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| 40 | of the license are at the top of every source file. | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | TinyXML attempts to be a flexible parser, but with truly correct and | 
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| 43 | compliant XML output. TinyXML should compile on any reasonably C++ | 
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| 44 | compliant system. It does not rely on exceptions or RTTI. It can be | 
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| 45 | compiled with or without STL support. TinyXML fully supports | 
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| 46 | the UTF-8 encoding, and the first 64k character entities. | 
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| 47 |  | 
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| 48 |  | 
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| 49 | <h2> What it doesn't do. </h2> | 
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| 50 |  | 
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| 51 | TinyXML doesn't parse or use DTDs (Document Type Definitions) or XSLs | 
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| 52 | (eXtensible Stylesheet Language.) There are other parsers out there | 
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| 53 | (check out www.sourceforge.org, search for XML) that are much more fully | 
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| 54 | featured. But they are also much bigger, take longer to set up in | 
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| 55 | your project, have a higher learning curve, and often have a more | 
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| 56 | restrictive license. If you are working with browsers or have more | 
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| 57 | complete XML needs, TinyXML is not the parser for you. | 
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| 58 |  | 
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| 59 | The following DTD syntax will not parse at this time in TinyXML: | 
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| 60 |  | 
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| 61 | @verbatim | 
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| 62 | <!DOCTYPE Archiv [ | 
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| 63 | <!ELEMENT Comment (#PCDATA)> | 
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| 64 | ]> | 
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| 65 | @endverbatim | 
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| 66 |  | 
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| 67 | because TinyXML sees this as a !DOCTYPE node with an illegally | 
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| 68 | embedded !ELEMENT node. This may be addressed in the future. | 
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| 69 |  | 
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| 70 | <h2> Tutorials. </h2> | 
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| 71 |  | 
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| 72 | For the impatient, here are some tutorials to get you going. A great way to get started, | 
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| 73 | but it is worth your time to read this (very short) manual completely. | 
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| 74 |  | 
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| 75 | - @subpage ticppTutorial | 
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| 76 | - @subpage tutorial0 | 
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| 77 |  | 
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| 78 | <h2> Code Status.  </h2> | 
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| 79 |  | 
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| 80 | TinyXML is mature, tested code. It is very stable. If you find | 
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| 81 | bugs, please file a bug report on the sourceforge web site | 
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| 82 | (www.sourceforge.net/projects/tinyxml). We'll get them straightened | 
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| 83 | out as soon as possible. | 
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| 84 |  | 
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| 85 | There are some areas of improvement; please check sourceforge if you are | 
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| 86 | interested in working on TinyXML. | 
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| 87 |  | 
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| 88 | <h2> Related Projects </h2> | 
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| 89 |  | 
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| 90 | TinyXML projects you may find useful! (Descriptions provided by the projects.) | 
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| 91 |  | 
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| 92 | <ul> | 
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| 93 | <li> <b>TinyXPath</b> (http://tinyxpath.sourceforge.net). TinyXPath is a small footprint | 
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| 94 | XPath syntax decoder, written in C++.</li> | 
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| 95 | <li> <b>@subpage ticpp</b> (http://code.google.com/p/ticpp/). TinyXML++ is a completely new | 
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| 96 | interface to TinyXML that uses MANY of the C++ strengths. Templates, | 
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| 97 | exceptions, and much better error handling.</li> | 
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| 98 | </ul> | 
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| 99 |  | 
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| 100 | <h2> Features </h2> | 
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| 101 |  | 
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| 102 | <h3> Using STL </h3> | 
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| 103 |  | 
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| 104 | TinyXML can be compiled to use or not use STL. When using STL, TinyXML | 
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| 105 | uses the std::string class, and fully supports std::istream, std::ostream, | 
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| 106 | operator<<, and operator>>. Many API methods have both 'const char*' and | 
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| 107 | 'const std::string&' forms. | 
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| 108 |  | 
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| 109 | When STL support is compiled out, no STL files are included whatsoever. All | 
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| 110 | the string classes are implemented by TinyXML itself. API methods | 
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| 111 | all use the 'const char*' form for input. | 
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| 112 |  | 
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| 113 | Use the compile time #define: | 
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| 114 |  | 
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| 115 | TIXML_USE_STL | 
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| 116 |  | 
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| 117 | to compile one version or the other. This can be passed by the compiler, | 
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| 118 | or set as the first line of "tinyxml.h". | 
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| 119 |  | 
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| 120 | Note: If compiling the test code in Linux, setting the environment | 
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| 121 | variable TINYXML_USE_STL=YES/NO will control STL compilation. In the | 
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| 122 | Windows project file, STL and non STL targets are provided. In your project, | 
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| 123 | It's probably easiest to add the line "#define TIXML_USE_STL" as the first | 
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| 124 | line of tinyxml.h. | 
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| 125 |  | 
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| 126 | <h3> UTF-8 </h3> | 
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| 127 |  | 
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| 128 | TinyXML supports UTF-8 allowing to manipulate XML files in any language. TinyXML | 
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| 129 | also supports "legacy mode" - the encoding used before UTF-8 support and | 
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| 130 | probably best described as "extended ascii". | 
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| 131 |  | 
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| 132 | Normally, TinyXML will try to detect the correct encoding and use it. However, | 
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| 133 | by setting the value of TIXML_DEFAULT_ENCODING in the header file, TinyXML | 
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| 134 | can be forced to always use one encoding. | 
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| 135 |  | 
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| 136 | TinyXML will assume Legacy Mode until one of the following occurs: | 
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| 137 | <ol> | 
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| 138 | <li> If the non-standard but common "UTF-8 lead bytes" (0xef 0xbb 0xbf) | 
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| 139 | begin the file or data stream, TinyXML will read it as UTF-8. </li> | 
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| 140 | <li> If the declaration tag is read, and it has an encoding="UTF-8", then | 
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| 141 | TinyXML will read it as UTF-8. </li> | 
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| 142 | <li> If the declaration tag is read, and it has no encoding specified, then TinyXML will | 
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| 143 | read it as UTF-8. </li> | 
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| 144 | <li> If the declaration tag is read, and it has an encoding="something else", then TinyXML | 
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| 145 | will read it as Legacy Mode. In legacy mode, TinyXML will work as it did before. It's | 
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| 146 | not clear what that mode does exactly, but old content should keep working.</li> | 
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| 147 | <li> Until one of the above criteria is met, TinyXML runs in Legacy Mode.</li> | 
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| 148 | </ol> | 
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| 149 |  | 
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| 150 | What happens if the encoding is incorrectly set or detected? TinyXML will try | 
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| 151 | to read and pass through text seen as improperly encoded. You may get some strange results or | 
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| 152 | mangled characters. You may want to force TinyXML to the correct mode. | 
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| 153 |  | 
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| 154 | You may force TinyXML to Legacy Mode by using LoadFile( TIXML_ENCODING_LEGACY ) or | 
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| 155 | LoadFile( filename, TIXML_ENCODING_LEGACY ). You may force it to use legacy mode all | 
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| 156 | the time by setting TIXML_DEFAULT_ENCODING = TIXML_ENCODING_LEGACY. Likewise, you may | 
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| 157 | force it to TIXML_ENCODING_UTF8 with the same technique. | 
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| 158 |  | 
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| 159 | For English users, using English XML, UTF-8 is the same as low-ASCII. You | 
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| 160 | don't need to be aware of UTF-8 or change your code in any way. You can think | 
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| 161 | of UTF-8 as a "superset" of ASCII. | 
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| 162 |  | 
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| 163 | UTF-8 is not a double byte format - but it is a standard encoding of Unicode! | 
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| 164 | TinyXML does not use or directly support wchar, TCHAR, or Microsoft's _UNICODE at this time. | 
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| 165 | It is common to see the term "Unicode" improperly refer to UTF-16, a wide byte encoding | 
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| 166 | of unicode. This is a source of confusion. | 
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| 167 |  | 
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| 168 | For "high-ascii" languages - everything not English, pretty much - TinyXML can | 
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| 169 | handle all languages, at the same time, as long as the XML is encoded | 
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| 170 | in UTF-8. That can be a little tricky, older programs and operating systems | 
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| 171 | tend to use the "default" or "traditional" code page. Many apps (and almost all | 
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| 172 | modern ones) can output UTF-8, but older or stubborn (or just broken) ones | 
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| 173 | still output text in the default code page. | 
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| 174 |  | 
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| 175 | For example, Japanese systems traditionally use SHIFT-JIS encoding. | 
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| 176 | Text encoded as SHIFT-JIS can not be read by TinyXML. | 
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| 177 | A good text editor can import SHIFT-JIS and then save as UTF-8. | 
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| 178 |  | 
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| 179 | The <a href="http://skew.org/xml/tutorial/">Skew.org link</a> does a great | 
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| 180 | job covering the encoding issue. | 
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| 181 |  | 
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| 182 | The test file "utf8test.xml" is an XML containing English, Spanish, Russian, | 
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| 183 | and Simplified Chinese. (Hopefully they are translated correctly). The file | 
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| 184 | "utf8test.gif" is a screen capture of the XML file, rendered in IE. Note that | 
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| 185 | if you don't have the correct fonts (Simplified Chinese or Russian) on your | 
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| 186 | system, you won't see output that matches the GIF file even if you can parse | 
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| 187 | it correctly. Also note that (at least on my Windows machine) console output | 
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| 188 | is in a Western code page, so that Print() or printf() cannot correctly display | 
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| 189 | the file. This is not a bug in TinyXML - just an OS issue. No data is lost or | 
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| 190 | destroyed by TinyXML. The console just doesn't render UTF-8. | 
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| 191 |  | 
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| 192 |  | 
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| 193 | <h3> Entities </h3> | 
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| 194 | TinyXML recognizes the pre-defined "character entities", meaning special | 
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| 195 | characters. Namely: | 
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| 196 |  | 
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| 197 | @verbatim | 
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| 198 | &   & | 
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| 199 | <    < | 
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| 200 | >    > | 
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| 201 | "  " | 
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| 202 | '  ' | 
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| 203 | @endverbatim | 
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| 204 |  | 
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| 205 | These are recognized when the XML document is read, and translated to there | 
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| 206 | UTF-8 equivalents. For instance, text with the XML of: | 
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| 207 |  | 
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| 208 | @verbatim | 
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| 209 | Far & Away | 
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| 210 | @endverbatim | 
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| 211 |  | 
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| 212 | will have the Value() of "Far & Away" when queried from the TiXmlText object, | 
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| 213 | and will be written back to the XML stream/file as an ampersand. Older versions | 
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| 214 | of TinyXML "preserved" character entities, but the newer versions will translate | 
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| 215 | them into characters. | 
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| 216 |  | 
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| 217 | Additionally, any character can be specified by its Unicode code point: | 
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| 218 | The syntax " " or " " are both to the non-breaking space characher. | 
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| 219 |  | 
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| 220 | <h3> Printing </h3> | 
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| 221 | TinyXML can print output in several different ways that all have strengths and limitations. | 
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| 222 |  | 
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| 223 | - Print( FILE* ). Output to a std-C stream, which includes all C files as well as stdout. | 
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| 224 | - "Pretty prints", but you don't have control over printing options. | 
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| 225 | - The output is streamed directly to the FILE object, so there is no memory overhead | 
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| 226 | in the TinyXML code. | 
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| 227 | - used by Print() and SaveFile() | 
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| 228 |  | 
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| 229 | - operator<<. Output to a c++ stream. | 
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| 230 | - Integrates with standart C++ iostreams. | 
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| 231 | - Outputs in "network printing" mode without line breaks. Good for network transmission | 
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| 232 | and moving XML between C++ objects, but hard for a human to read. | 
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| 233 |  | 
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| 234 | - TiXmlPrinter. Output to a std::string or memory buffer. | 
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| 235 | - API is less concise | 
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| 236 | - Future printing options will be put here. | 
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| 237 | - Printing may change slightly in future versions as it is refined and expanded. | 
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| 238 |  | 
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| 239 | <h3> Streams </h3> | 
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| 240 | With TIXML_USE_STL on TinyXML supports C++ streams (operator <<,>>) streams as well | 
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| 241 | as C (FILE*) streams. There are some differences that you may need to be aware of. | 
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| 242 |  | 
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| 243 | C style output: | 
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| 244 | - based on FILE* | 
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| 245 | - the Print() and SaveFile() methods | 
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| 246 |  | 
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| 247 | Generates formatted output, with plenty of white space, intended to be as | 
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| 248 | human-readable as possible. They are very fast, and tolerant of ill formed | 
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| 249 | XML documents. For example, an XML document that contains 2 root elements | 
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| 250 | and 2 declarations, will still print. | 
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| 251 |  | 
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| 252 | C style input: | 
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| 253 | - based on FILE* | 
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| 254 | - the Parse() and LoadFile() methods | 
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| 255 |  | 
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| 256 | A fast, tolerant read. Use whenever you don't need the C++ streams. | 
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| 257 |  | 
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| 258 | C++ style output: | 
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| 259 | - based on std::ostream | 
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| 260 | - operator<< | 
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| 261 |  | 
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| 262 | Generates condensed output, intended for network transmission rather than | 
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| 263 | readability. Depending on your system's implementation of the ostream class, | 
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| 264 | these may be somewhat slower. (Or may not.) Not tolerant of ill formed XML: | 
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| 265 | a document should contain the correct one root element. Additional root level | 
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| 266 | elements will not be streamed out. | 
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| 267 |  | 
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| 268 | C++ style input: | 
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| 269 | - based on std::istream | 
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| 270 | - operator>> | 
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| 271 |  | 
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| 272 | Reads XML from a stream, making it useful for network transmission. The tricky | 
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| 273 | part is knowing when the XML document is complete, since there will almost | 
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| 274 | certainly be other data in the stream. TinyXML will assume the XML data is | 
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| 275 | complete after it reads the root element. Put another way, documents that | 
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| 276 | are ill-constructed with more than one root element will not read correctly. | 
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| 277 | Also note that operator>> is somewhat slower than Parse, due to both | 
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| 278 | implementation of the STL and limitations of TinyXML. | 
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| 279 |  | 
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| 280 | <h3> White space </h3> | 
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| 281 | The world simply does not agree on whether white space should be kept, or condensed. | 
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| 282 | For example, pretend the '_' is a space, and look at "Hello____world". HTML, and | 
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| 283 | at least some XML parsers, will interpret this as "Hello_world". They condense white | 
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| 284 | space. Some XML parsers do not, and will leave it as "Hello____world". (Remember | 
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| 285 | to keep pretending the _ is a space.) Others suggest that __Hello___world__ should become | 
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| 286 | Hello___world. | 
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| 287 |  | 
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| 288 | It's an issue that hasn't been resolved to my satisfaction. TinyXML supports the | 
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| 289 | first 2 approaches. Call TiXmlBase::SetCondenseWhiteSpace( bool ) to set the desired behavior. | 
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| 290 | The default is to condense white space. | 
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| 291 |  | 
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| 292 | If you change the default, you should call TiXmlBase::SetCondenseWhiteSpace( bool ) | 
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| 293 | before making any calls to Parse XML data, and I don't recommend changing it after | 
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| 294 | it has been set. | 
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| 295 |  | 
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| 296 |  | 
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| 297 | <h3> Handles </h3> | 
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| 298 |  | 
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| 299 | Where browsing an XML document in a robust way, it is important to check | 
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| 300 | for null returns from method calls. An error safe implementation can | 
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| 301 | generate a lot of code like: | 
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| 302 |  | 
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| 303 | @verbatim | 
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| 304 | TiXmlElement* root = document.FirstChildElement( "Document" ); | 
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| 305 | if ( root ) | 
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| 306 | { | 
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| 307 | TiXmlElement* element = root->FirstChildElement( "Element" ); | 
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| 308 | if ( element ) | 
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| 309 | { | 
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| 310 | TiXmlElement* child = element->FirstChildElement( "Child" ); | 
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| 311 | if ( child ) | 
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| 312 | { | 
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| 313 | TiXmlElement* child2 = child->NextSiblingElement( "Child" ); | 
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| 314 | if ( child2 ) | 
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| 315 | { | 
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| 316 | // Finally do something useful. | 
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| 317 | @endverbatim | 
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| 318 |  | 
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| 319 | Handles have been introduced to clean this up. Using the TiXmlHandle class, | 
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| 320 | the previous code reduces to: | 
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| 321 |  | 
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| 322 | @verbatim | 
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| 323 | TiXmlHandle docHandle( &document ); | 
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| 324 | TiXmlElement* child2 = docHandle.FirstChild( "Document" ).FirstChild( "Element" ).Child( "Child", 1 ).ToElement(); | 
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| 325 | if ( child2 ) | 
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| 326 | { | 
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| 327 | // do something useful | 
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| 328 | @endverbatim | 
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| 329 |  | 
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| 330 | Which is much easier to deal with. See TiXmlHandle for more information. | 
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| 331 |  | 
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| 332 |  | 
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| 333 | <h3> Row and Column tracking </h3> | 
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| 334 | Being able to track nodes and attributes back to their origin location | 
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| 335 | in source files can be very important for some applications. Additionally, | 
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| 336 | knowing where parsing errors occured in the original source can be very | 
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| 337 | time saving. | 
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| 338 |  | 
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| 339 | TinyXML can tracks the row and column origin of all nodes and attributes | 
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| 340 | in a text file. The TiXmlBase::Row() and TiXmlBase::Column() methods return | 
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| 341 | the origin of the node in the source text. The correct tabs can be | 
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| 342 | configured in TiXmlDocument::SetTabSize(). | 
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| 343 |  | 
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| 344 |  | 
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| 345 | <h2> Using and Installing </h2> | 
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| 346 |  | 
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| 347 | To Compile and Run xmltest: | 
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| 348 |  | 
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| 349 | A Linux Makefile and a Windows Visual C++ .dsw file is provided. | 
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| 350 | Simply compile and run. It will write the file demotest.xml to your | 
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| 351 | disk and generate output on the screen. It also tests walking the | 
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| 352 | DOM by printing out the number of nodes found using different | 
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| 353 | techniques. | 
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| 354 |  | 
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| 355 | The Linux makefile is very generic and runs on many systems - it | 
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| 356 | is currently tested on mingw and | 
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| 357 | MacOSX. You do not need to run 'make depend'. The dependecies have been | 
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| 358 | hard coded. | 
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| 359 |  | 
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| 360 | <h3>Windows project file for VC6</h3> | 
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| 361 | <ul> | 
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| 362 | <li>tinyxml:            tinyxml library, non-STL </li> | 
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| 363 | <li>tinyxmlSTL:         tinyxml library, STL </li> | 
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| 364 | <li>tinyXmlTest:        test app, non-STL </li> | 
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| 365 | <li>tinyXmlTestSTL: test app, STL </li> | 
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| 366 | </ul> | 
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| 367 |  | 
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| 368 | <h3>Makefile</h3> | 
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| 369 | At the top of the makefile you can set: | 
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| 370 |  | 
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| 371 | PROFILE, DEBUG, and TINYXML_USE_STL. Details (such that they are) are in | 
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| 372 | the makefile. | 
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| 373 |  | 
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| 374 | In the tinyxml directory, type "make clean" then "make". The executable | 
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| 375 | file 'xmltest' will be created. | 
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| 376 |  | 
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| 377 |  | 
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| 378 |  | 
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| 379 | <h3>To Use in an Application:</h3> | 
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| 380 |  | 
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| 381 | Add tinyxml.cpp, tinyxml.h, tinyxmlerror.cpp, tinyxmlparser.cpp, tinystr.cpp, and tinystr.h to your | 
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| 382 | project or make file. That's it! It should compile on any reasonably | 
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| 383 | compliant C++ system. You do not need to enable exceptions or | 
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| 384 | RTTI for TinyXML. | 
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| 385 |  | 
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| 386 |  | 
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| 387 | <h2> How TinyXML works.  </h2> | 
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| 388 |  | 
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| 389 | An example is probably the best way to go. Take: | 
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| 390 | @verbatim | 
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| 391 | <?xml version="1.0" standalone=no> | 
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| 392 | <!-- Our to do list data --> | 
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| 393 | <ToDo> | 
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| 394 | <Item priority="1"> Go to the <bold>Toy store!</bold></Item> | 
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| 395 | <Item priority="2"> Do bills</Item> | 
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| 396 | </ToDo> | 
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| 397 | @endverbatim | 
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| 398 |  | 
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| 399 | Its not much of a To Do list, but it will do. To read this file | 
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| 400 | (say "demo.xml") you would create a document, and parse it in: | 
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| 401 | @verbatim | 
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| 402 | TiXmlDocument doc( "demo.xml" ); | 
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| 403 | doc.LoadFile(); | 
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| 404 | @endverbatim | 
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| 405 |  | 
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| 406 | And its ready to go. Now lets look at some lines and how they | 
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| 407 | relate to the DOM. | 
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| 408 |  | 
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| 409 | @verbatim | 
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| 410 | <?xml version="1.0" standalone=no> | 
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| 411 | @endverbatim | 
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| 412 |  | 
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| 413 | The first line is a declaration, and gets turned into the | 
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| 414 | TiXmlDeclaration class. It will be the first child of the | 
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| 415 | document node. | 
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| 416 |  | 
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| 417 | This is the only directive/special tag parsed by by TinyXML. | 
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| 418 | Generally directive tags are stored in TiXmlUnknown so the | 
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| 419 | commands wont be lost when it is saved back to disk. | 
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| 420 |  | 
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| 421 | @verbatim | 
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| 422 | <!-- Our to do list data --> | 
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| 423 | @endverbatim | 
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| 424 |  | 
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| 425 | A comment. Will become a TiXmlComment object. | 
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| 426 |  | 
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| 427 | @verbatim | 
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| 428 | <ToDo> | 
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| 429 | @endverbatim | 
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| 430 |  | 
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| 431 | The "ToDo" tag defines a TiXmlElement object. This one does not have | 
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| 432 | any attributes, but does contain 2 other elements. | 
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| 433 |  | 
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| 434 | @verbatim | 
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| 435 | <Item priority="1"> | 
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| 436 | @endverbatim | 
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| 437 |  | 
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| 438 | Creates another TiXmlElement which is a child of the "ToDo" element. | 
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| 439 | This element has 1 attribute, with the name "priority" and the value | 
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| 440 | "1". | 
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| 441 |  | 
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| 442 | @verbatim | 
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| 443 | Go to the | 
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| 444 | @endverbatim | 
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| 445 |  | 
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| 446 | A TiXmlText. This is a leaf node and cannot contain other nodes. | 
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| 447 | It is a child of the "Item" TiXmlElement. | 
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| 448 |  | 
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| 449 | @verbatim | 
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| 450 | <bold> | 
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| 451 | @endverbatim | 
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| 452 |  | 
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| 453 |  | 
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| 454 | Another TiXmlElement, this one a child of the "Item" element. | 
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| 455 |  | 
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| 456 | Etc. | 
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| 457 |  | 
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| 458 | Looking at the entire object tree, you end up with: | 
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| 459 | @verbatim | 
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| 460 | TiXmlDocument                                   "demo.xml" | 
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| 461 | TiXmlDeclaration                        "version='1.0'" "standalone=no" | 
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| 462 | TiXmlComment                            " Our to do list data" | 
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| 463 | TiXmlElement                            "ToDo" | 
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| 464 | TiXmlElement                    "Item" Attribtutes: priority = 1 | 
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| 465 | TiXmlText                       "Go to the " | 
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| 466 | TiXmlElement            "bold" | 
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| 467 | TiXmlText               "Toy store!" | 
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| 468 | TiXmlElement                    "Item" Attributes: priority=2 | 
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| 469 | TiXmlText                       "Do bills" | 
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| 470 | @endverbatim | 
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| 471 |  | 
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| 472 | <h2> Documentation </h2> | 
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| 473 |  | 
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| 474 | The documentation is build with Doxygen, using the 'dox' | 
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| 475 | configuration file. | 
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| 476 |  | 
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| 477 | <h2> License </h2> | 
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| 478 |  | 
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| 479 | TinyXML is released under the zlib license: | 
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| 480 |  | 
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| 481 | This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied | 
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| 482 | warranty. In no event will the authors be held liable for any | 
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| 483 | damages arising from the use of this software. | 
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| 484 |  | 
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| 485 | Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any | 
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| 486 | purpose, including commercial applications, and to alter it and | 
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| 487 | redistribute it freely, subject to the following restrictions: | 
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| 488 |  | 
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| 489 | 1. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must | 
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| 490 | not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this | 
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| 491 | software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation | 
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| 492 | would be appreciated but is not required. | 
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| 493 |  | 
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| 494 | 2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and | 
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| 495 | must not be misrepresented as being the original software. | 
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| 496 |  | 
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| 497 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source | 
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| 498 | distribution. | 
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| 499 |  | 
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| 500 | <h2> References  </h2> | 
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| 501 |  | 
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| 502 | The World Wide Web Consortium is the definitive standard body for | 
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| 503 | XML, and there web pages contain huge amounts of information. | 
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| 504 |  | 
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| 505 | The definitive spec: <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xml-20040204/"> | 
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| 506 | http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xml-20040204/</a> | 
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| 507 |  | 
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| 508 | I also recommend "XML Pocket Reference" by Robert Eckstein and published by | 
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| 509 | OReilly...the book that got the whole thing started. | 
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| 510 |  | 
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| 511 | <h2> Contributors, Contacts, and a Brief History </h2> | 
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| 512 |  | 
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| 513 | Thanks very much to everyone who sends suggestions, bugs, ideas, and | 
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| 514 | encouragement. It all helps, and makes this project fun. A special thanks | 
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| 515 | to the contributors on the web pages that keep it lively. | 
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| 516 |  | 
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| 517 | So many people have sent in bugs and ideas, that rather than list here | 
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| 518 | we try to give credit due in the "changes.txt" file. | 
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| 519 |  | 
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| 520 | TinyXML was originally written by Lee Thomason. (Often the "I" still | 
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| 521 | in the documentation.) Lee reviews changes and releases new versions, | 
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| 522 | with the help of Yves Berquin, Andrew Ellerton, and the tinyXml community. | 
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| 523 |  | 
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| 524 | We appreciate your suggestions, and would love to know if you | 
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| 525 | use TinyXML. Hopefully you will enjoy it and find it useful. | 
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| 526 | Please post questions, comments, file bugs, or contact us at: | 
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| 527 |  | 
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| 528 | www.sourceforge.net/projects/tinyxml | 
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| 529 |  | 
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| 530 | Lee Thomason, Yves Berquin, Andrew Ellerton | 
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| 531 | */ | 
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