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- From: Ken MacLeod <ken@bitsko.slc.ut.us>
- To: xml-dev <xml-dev@ic.ac.uk>
- Date: 17 Sep 1999 08:24:13 -0500
Francis Norton <francis@redrice.com> writes:
> Now that I have some feeling for the rationale behind Groves, I'd be
> very interested in knowing what this might mean for implementations.
>
> Could one come up with a language independent API like the DOM, to
> which Grove compliant APIs would conform? Presumably there is more
> complexity in that the DOM has a closed set of underlying object
> types whereas each Grove interface would would have different
> underlying object types. In Java terms, would this be an interface
> (a totally abstract class which guarantees a core functionality in
> any object which implements it)? Has anyone in fact built CORBA IDL
> or a Java interface defining the Grove API, or am I coming in at the
> wrong level?
I'd like to believe you're coming in at the wrong level. Many
languages have built-in syntax to access ``members of objects'' or
``fields of records'' that can often be applied to accessing
``properties of nodes''. In this case, the grove API is the
language's native syntax.
Where native syntax is not applicable, groves most closely resemble
container classes (dictionaries, mappings, hash tables; lists, arrays,
sequences). Again, a language's standard container class interface or
protocol can be used.
--
Ken MacLeod
ken@bitsko.slc.ut.us
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