Subject: Discussion Topics Re-Revisited
***************************************************************************** The information in this email is confidential and may be legally privileged. It is intended solely for the addressee. Access to this email by anyone else is unauthorized. If you are not the intended recipient, any disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted to be taken in reliance on it, is prohibited and may be unlawful. When addressed to our clients any opinions or advice contained in this email are subject to the terms and conditions expressed in the governing KPMG client engagement letter. *****************************************************************************
Go on…rip it apart.
2) Unique IDs. There was also a great deal of talk today about what unique IDs would be used for and how they would be applied. It seems that the consensus was that unique IDs would be applied at the schema level, not the document level. This means that two XML documents which are from the same schema would have unique IDs for a specific tag, but not each content instance. As shown below, the IDs are unique for the tag <FRUIT> but the same in each document instance. (Be gentle now, these documents are only here to illustrate a point, not be full ebXML doc examples!)
<FOOD id=559849JUE98>
<FRUIT id=39408JEX98> apple</FRUIT>
</FOOD>
<FOOD id=559849JUE98>
<FRUIT id=39408JEX98> orange</FRUIT>
</FOOD>
Cheers, John
Petit
KPMG
XMLfs Team
Office: 970 728
9468
Mobile: 312 961
8956
Powered by
eList eXpress LLC