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  • From: "bryan rasmussen" <rasmussen.bryan@g...>
  • To: "Ramkumar Menon" <ramkumar.menon@g...>
  • Date: Wed, 23 Apr 2008 22:03:37 +0200

There could be some situations where there  are incompatibilities, but
in your scenario not; as an example incompatibility IIRC { is allowed
in an anyURI but not in IRIs. As a general rule however the two are
the same.

I removed xsl-list from the cc on this email as it is outside the
scope of that list and continued usage will only prompt a scolding.

Cheers,
Bryan Rasmussen


On Wed, Apr 23, 2008 at 9:57 PM, bryan rasmussen
<rasmussen.bryan@g...> wrote:
> XML Schema URIs are IRIs.
>
>  Cheers,
>  Bryan Rasmussen
>
>
>
>  On Wed, Apr 23, 2008 at 9:48 PM, Ramkumar Menon
>  <ramkumar.menon@g...> wrote:
>  > I have a WSDL/XSD file whose targetNamespace is
>  >  http://großerJob.german.com. The namespace URI contains characters
>  >  from german language, as you can see.
>  >  If use a designer tool to view and validate this WSDL/XML, what should
>  >  be the behaviour?
>  >  a) Give an error stating that the targetNamespace is not in an anyURI format?
>  >  b) Proceed to percent encode it and then validate the URI.[as per UTF-8 maybe]
>  >
>  >  The confusion here is that the WSDL/Schema viewing/interpreting in the
>  >  tool by a human would be difficult if I use all percent encodings in
>  >  the URIs. Shouldn't the tools detect the character set and
>  >  appropriately encode it. For instance, if I take a print out of the
>  >  document, I would prefer to view the native language, as opposed to
>  >  the encoded URIs.
>  >  Humans should be able to read the URI in the viewer in the native
>  >  language as-is, whereas any tools that intend to process it should
>  >  treat it as a set of octets, and handle them accordingly.
>  >
>  >  So the  Q is : Should a designer tool emit errors when it validates
>  >  the document with the above behaviour?
>  >  Please advise.
>  >
>  >  Ram
>  >
>  >
>  >
>  >  --
>  >  Shift to the left, shift to the right!
>  >  Pop up, push down, byte, byte, byte!
>  >
>  >  -Ramkumar Menon
>  >   A typical Macroprocessor
>  >
>


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