Well, it's not surprising at all that snowflake's stuff parses it fine,
since snowflake's a UK company, and they got started parsing OS Master Map
GML data.  I'm sure they've built more generic stuff by now, but I'm pretty
sure they built their original parsers to just deal with OS data.

Chris

On 9/12/07, Vince Darley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> At 22:10 12/09/2007, Jody Garnett wrote:
> >Vince Darley wrote:
> >>The freeware Snowflake GML viewer manages to load all this data and
> >>visualise it very nicely, however, so I can at least assure you the
> >>data is good!
> >Very cool, can you send us a link? It would be nice to see this in
> >action ... the parsers you have been using here with uDig really pay
> >attention to the XSD file; most of the viewers I have met just go
> >through the file and "guess" based on where they see Geometry used.
>
> There's a OS Master Map GML Viewer and a general GML Viewer (which
> seems to be a superset of the former).  They contain details of a
> number of schemas built in, it seems.  (And the website encourages
> users of other GML formats to email details of schemas they want to
> have supported better).
>
> The links are:
>
> http://www.snowflakesoftware.co.uk/products/viewer/index.htm
> http://www.snowflakesoftware.co.uk/products/gmlviewer/index.htm
>
> I've attached a screenshot of one of the tools in action on some data
> (actually the data we would really like to parse, which is in a
> different area to the small sample I sent you).
>
> regards,
>
> Vince.
> _______________________________________________
> User-friendly Desktop Internet GIS (uDig)
> http://udig.refractions.net
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>
>
>
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