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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-1369?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Alan Cabrera moved YOKO-361 to CXF-1369:
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Component/s: (was: Idl2Wsdl)
Yoko
Assignee: (was: Edell Nolan)
Affects Version/s: (was: v1.0.1)
Key: CXF-1369 (was: YOKO-361)
Project: CXF (was: Yoko - CORBA Server)
> Const expression suport for idltowsdl
> -------------------------------------
>
> Key: CXF-1369
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-1369
> Project: CXF
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: Yoko
> Reporter: Edell Nolan
>
> Matteo Vescovi [25/Apr/07 06:07 AM]
> I have a few questions about const declarators... Let's use the following
> const declarations as examples:
> const string s1 = "hello";
> const string<10> s2 = "hello";
> const string<10 + 2> s3 = "hello";
> const string s4 = "hello" + "world";
> const string s5 = "hello" << "world";
> const string<10 + 2> s6 = "hello" + "world";
> const long l1 = 10;
> const long l2 = 10 + 20;
> const long l3 = 10 + ((10 | 20 * (100 << 2)) / 2);
> const float f1 = 3.14 * 10;
> ...and now for the questions:
> - do we need to differentiate between const strings and const bounded
> strings? For example, strings s1 and s2 both have the constant value of
> "hello". The information about the bound is only used when validating the idl
> or when converting the wsdl back to idl. Can we relax our tool and generate
> the same XmlSchema and CorbaTypeMap for both?
> - do expressions on const strings even make sense? Take constant strings s4
> and s5 for example. The IDL grammar allows to produce those declarations, but
> are they semantically valid? How do you shift "hello" by "world"? Is the +
> operator overloaded to concatenate strings?
> - if we differentiate between const strings and const bounded strings, then
> we will have to compute the <10 + 2> bound spec for string s6, as we can't
> assign a string to the Corba anonstring type bound member. But if we do that,
> we lose information and cannot get the original IDL back.
> - in general, I think we should assign the full string of const_exp to the
> value="" attribute of the corba:const element in the corbatypemap. That is
> the value="10 + ((10 | 20 * (100 << 2)) / 2)" for the const long l3 or
> value="10 + 20" for const long l2, instead of value="30". Will the code
> generator (wsdl2java) be able to handle this?
> [ Show » ] Matteo Vescovi [25/Apr/07 06:07 AM] I have a few questions about
> const declarators... Let's use the following const declarations as examples:
> const string s1 = "hello"; const string<10> s2 = "hello"; const string<10 +
> 2> s3 = "hello"; const string s4 = "hello" + "world"; const string s5 =
> "hello" << "world"; const string<10 + 2> s6 = "hello" + "world"; const long
> l1 = 10; const long l2 = 10 + 20; const long l3 = 10 + ((10 | 20 * (100 <<
> 2)) / 2); const float f1 = 3.14 * 10; ...and now for the questions: - do we
> need to differentiate between const strings and const bounded strings? For
> example, strings s1 and s2 both have the constant value of "hello". The
> information about the bound is only used when validating the idl or when
> converting the wsdl back to idl. Can we relax our tool and generate the same
> XmlSchema and CorbaTypeMap for both? - do expressions on const strings even
> make sense? Take constant strings s4 and s5 for example. The IDL grammar
> allows to produce those declarations, but are they semantically valid? How do
> you shift "hello" by "world"? Is the + operator overloaded to concatenate
> strings? - if we differentiate between const strings and const bounded
> strings, then we will have to compute the <10 + 2> bound spec for string s6,
> as we can't assign a string to the Corba anonstring type bound member. But if
> we do that, we lose information and cannot get the original IDL back. - in
> general, I think we should assign the full string of const_exp to the
> value="" attribute of the corba:const element in the corbatypemap. That is
> the value="10 + ((10 | 20 * (100 << 2)) / 2)" for the const long l3 or
> value="10 + 20" for const long l2, instead of value="30". Will the code
> generator (wsdl2java) be able to handle this?
> [ Permlink | Delete | « Hide ] Balaji Ravi [26/Apr/07 06:19 AM]
> const strings & const bounded strings: I think we should map them
> differently. We should use a simple type with a restriction on the maxLength
> for bounded strings.
> expressions: Can we process these expressions and then output the result in
> the wsdl...
> I dont think we need to reproduce the same idl for these expressions. This is
> an edge case which we need not tackle. I would say we can process these
> expressions and simplify the wsdl generated.
> [ Show » ] Balaji Ravi [26/Apr/07 06:19 AM] const strings & const bounded
> strings: I think we should map them differently. We should use a simple type
> with a restriction on the maxLength for bounded strings. expressions: Can we
> process these expressions and then output the result in the wsdl... I dont
> think we need to reproduce the same idl for these expressions. This is an
> edge case which we need not tackle. I would say we can process these
> expressions and simplify the wsdl generated.
> [ Permlink | Delete | « Hide ] Edell Nolan [26/Apr/07 08:00 AM]
> But what happens in the case
> const string<10 + 2> s6 = "hello" + "world";
> Should we print the string then as "hello world" but this does not
> necessarily have to be another string. Its just another const expression.
> Edell.
> [ Show » ] Edell Nolan [26/Apr/07 08:00 AM] But what happens in the case
> const string<10 + 2> s6 = "hello" + "world"; Should we print the string then
> as "hello world" but this does not necessarily have to be another string. Its
> just another const expression. Edell.
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