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[MS-XAML]:
Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006
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Certain Open Specifications are intended for use in conjunction with publicly available standard specifications and network programming art, and assumes that the reader either is familiar with the aforementioned material or has immediate access to it. ii [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Contents [MS-XAML]: .............................................................................................................................................1 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 ...............................................................................................1 Contents ..................................................................................................................................................2 Preface ....................................................................................................................................................6 About This Specification..........................................................................................................................6 Language Notes .......................................................................................................................................6 Section 1. Overview .............................................................................................................................7 1.1 Xaml Vocabularies and the Xaml Schema Information Set..................................................... 7 1.2 Xaml Instances, Xaml Documents and the Xaml Information Set .......................................... 8 1.3 Well-Formed and Valid Xaml Information Sets ...................................................................... 8 1.4 The Structure of Information in Xaml ..................................................................................... 8 1.5 A Note on Notation ................................................................................................................. 9 Section 2. Information Set Type System ........................................................................................... 10 2.1 Text String ............................................................................................................................. 10 2.2 XamlName ............................................................................................................................. 10 2.3 Namespace Uri ...................................................................................................................... 11 2.4 Boolean ................................................................................................................................. 11 2.5 Allowed Location ................................................................................................................... 11 2.6 XML Namespace Mapping .................................................................................................... 11 2.7 Set ......................................................................................................................................... 11 2.8 Ordered Collection ................................................................................................................ 11 Section 3. Xaml Schema Information Set .......................................................................................... 13 3.1 Schema Information Item ..................................................................................................... 14 3.1.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 14 3.1.2. Notes (Non-Normative) ................................................................................................ 14 3.2 XamlType Information Item .................................................................................................. 15 3.2.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 17 3.2.2. Notes (Non-Normative) ................................................................................................ 18 3.3 XamlMember Information Item ............................................................................................ 18 3.3.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 19 3.3.2. Notes (Non-Normative) ................................................................................................ 20 3.4 Text Syntax Information Item ............................................................................................... 20 3.4.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 21 3.4.2. Notes (Non-Normative) ................................................................................................ 21 3.5 Value Syntax Information Item ............................................................................................. 21 3.5.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 22 3.6 Pattern Syntax Information Item .......................................................................................... 22 iii [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 3.6.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 22 3.7 Constructor Information Item .............................................................................................. 22 3.7.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 23 Section 4. Xaml Information Set ........................................................................................................ 24 4.1 Document Information Item ................................................................................................ 24 4.1.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 24 4.2 Object Node Information Item ............................................................................................. 25 4.2.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 26 4.2.2. Validity Constraints....................................................................................................... 26 4.2.3. Note (non-normative) .................................................................................................. 30 4.3 Member Node Information Item .......................................................................................... 30 4.3.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 30 4.3.2. Validity Constraints....................................................................................................... 32 4.3.3. Notes (Non-Normative) ................................................................................................ 35 4.4 Text Node Information Item ................................................................................................. 36 4.4.1. Constraints .................................................................................................................... 36 4.4.2. Notes (Non-Normative) ................................................................................................ 36 Section 5. Intrinsic Schema Information Items ................................................................................. 38 5.1 Intrinsic Schema Information Items ..................................................................................... 38 5.1.1. The x: Schema ............................................................................................................. 38 5.1.2. The XML Namespace Schema ....................................................................................... 38 5.2 Intrinsic XamlType Information Items .................................................................................. 39 5.2.1. x:ArrayExtension ........................................................................................................... 39 5.2.2. x:StaticExtension .......................................................................................................... 40 5.2.3. x:TypeExtension ............................................................................................................ 40 5.2.4. x:NullExtension ............................................................................................................. 40 5.2.5. x:Object......................................................................................................................... 41 5.2.6. x:String .......................................................................................................................... 41 5.2.7. x:Char ............................................................................................................................ 41 5.2.8. x:Single .......................................................................................................................... 41 5.2.9. x:Double ........................................................................................................................ 42 5.2.10. x:Byte ............................................................................................................................ 42 5.2.11. x:Int16 ........................................................................................................................... 42 5.2.12. x:Int32 ........................................................................................................................... 43 5.2.13. x:Int64 ........................................................................................................................... 43 5.2.14. x:Decimal ...................................................................................................................... 43 5.2.15. x:Uri .............................................................................................................................. 44 5.2.16. x:Timespan.................................................................................................................... 44 5.2.17. x:Boolean ...................................................................................................................... 44 5.2.18. x:Array .......................................................................................................................... 45 5.2.19. x:XamlType ................................................................................................................... 45 5.2.20. x:XamlEvent .................................................................................................................. 45 5.2.21. x:MarkupExtension ....................................................................................................... 46 iv [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 5.2.22. x:Code ........................................................................................................................... 46 5.2.23. x:XData .......................................................................................................................... 46 5.3 Intrinsic XamlMember Information Items ............................................................................ 46 5.3.1. x:Items ........................................................................................................................... 47 5.3.2. x:ConstructorArgs ......................................................................................................... 47 5.3.3. x:InitializationText ......................................................................................................... 47 5.3.4. x:Name Directive ........................................................................................................... 48 5.3.5. x:Key Directive............................................................................................................... 48 5.3.6. x:Uid Directive ............................................................................................................... 48 5.3.7. x:Class Directive ............................................................................................................ 49 5.3.8. x:Subclass Directive ....................................................................................................... 49 5.3.9. x:ClassModifier Directive .............................................................................................. 49 5.3.10. x:FieldModifier Directive ............................................................................................... 49 5.3.11. x:TypeArguments Directive ........................................................................................... 50 5.3.12. x:DirectiveChildren ........................................................................................................ 50 5.3.13. xml:lang Directive ......................................................................................................... 50 5.3.14. xml:space Directive ....................................................................................................... 50 5.3.15. xml:base Directive ......................................................................................................... 51 5.3.16. ArrayExtension.Items .................................................................................................... 51 5.3.17. ArrayExtension.Type ..................................................................................................... 51 5.3.18. StaticExtension.Member ............................................................................................... 51 5.3.19. TypeExtension.Type ...................................................................................................... 52 5.3.20. TypeExtension.TypeName ............................................................................................ 52 5.4 Intrinsic Text Syntax Information Items ................................................................................ 52 5.4.1. x:Char Text Syntax ......................................................................................................... 53 5.4.2. x:Single Text Syntax ....................................................................................................... 53 5.4.3. x:Double Text Syntax ..................................................................................................... 53 5.4.4. x:Byte Text Syntax ......................................................................................................... 54 5.4.5. x:Int16 Text Syntax ........................................................................................................ 54 5.4.6. x:Int32 Text Syntax ........................................................................................................ 54 5.4.7. x:Int64 Text Syntax ........................................................................................................ 54 5.4.8. x:Decimal Text Syntax ................................................................................................... 55 5.4.9. x:Uri Text Syntax ........................................................................................................... 55 5.4.10. x:Timespan Text Syntax ................................................................................................. 55 5.4.11. x:Boolean Text Syntax ................................................................................................... 55 5.4.12. x:XamlType Text Syntax ................................................................................................ 56 5.4.13. xml:space Text Syntax ................................................................................................... 56 5.4.14. x:XamlEvent Text Syntax ............................................................................................... 56 5.5 Intrinsic Constructor Information Items ............................................................................... 56 5.5.1. Static Extension String Constructor .............................................................................. 57 5.5.2. Type Extension String Constructor ................................................................................ 57 Section 6. Creating a Xaml Information Set from XML ..................................................................... 58 6.1 Unavailability of Xaml Schemas ............................................................................................ 58 v [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 6.2 Processing Errors .................................................................................................................. 58 6.3 Markup Compatibility ........................................................................................................... 58 6.3.1. Raw Mode ..................................................................................................................... 59 6.3.2. Preprocessed Mode ...................................................................................................... 59 6.3.3. Subsumption Behavior ................................................................................................. 59 6.4 XML Information Set References .......................................................................................... 59 6.5 Definitions ............................................................................................................................ 59 6.5.1. DottedXamlName ......................................................................................................... 60 6.5.2. Collapsible Whitespace Characters .............................................................................. 60 6.5.3. Linefeed Collapsing Characters .................................................................................... 60 6.5.4. Authoritative Schema ................................................................................................... 61 6.6 Document Processing Rules ................................................................................................. 61 6.6.1. XML:document Processing ........................................................................................... 62 6.6.2. Object Node Creation from an XML:element ............................................................... 63 6.6.3. Member Node Creation from an XML:attribute .......................................................... 68 6.6.4. Value Creation from Attribute Text .............................................................................. 71 6.6.5. Member Node Creation from an XML:element ........................................................... 72 6.6.6. Member Node Creation from Content ......................................................................... 74 6.6.7. Object Node Creation from a Markup Extension in an Attribute ................................. 76 6.6.8. Member Lookup ........................................................................................................... 82 6.6.9. Xml Namespace Mapping Conversion .......................................................................... 82 Appendix A: References .................................................................................................................... 84 Appendix B: Microsoft .NET Framework Behavior ........................................................................... 86
vi [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Preface About This Specification Xaml, the eXtensible Application Markup Language, is a system for representing structured information. This specification defines three aspects of Xaml: The Xaml Schema Information Set a model for defining a particular Xaml vocabulary. The Xaml Information Set a model for describing the information in a Xaml instance. The process for converting an XML [XML] document into the corresponding Xaml Information Set, as directed by one or more Xaml Schema Information Sets. This specification does not define any particular Xaml vocabulary. Language Notes In this specification, the words that are used to define the significance of each particular requirement are capitalized. These words are used in accordance with their definitions in RFC 2119 [RFC 2119] and their meaning is reproduced here for convenience: MUST. This word, or the adjective REQUIRED, means that the item is an absolute requirement of the specification. SHOULD. This word, or the adjective RECOMMENDED, means that there may exist valid reasons in particular circumstances to ignore this item, but the full implications should be understood and the case carefully weighed before choosing a different course. MAY. This word, or the adjective OPTIONAL, means that this item is truly optional. For example, one implementation may choose to include the item because a particular marketplace or scenario requires it or because it enhances the product. Another implementation may omit the same item.
7 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Section 1. Overview Xaml, the eXtensible Application Markup Language, is a system for representing structured information. This specification defines two abstract information models: the Xaml Schema Information Set model, and the Xaml Information Set model. The Xaml Information Set (Xaml Infoset for short) defines the structure of information that a Xaml instance can represent. The Xaml Schema Information Set allows specific Xaml vocabularies to be defined. This specification also defines a set of rules for transforming an XML document into a Xaml Information Set. XML is a common format for Xaml. (The term Xaml Document refers to an XML document that represents a Xaml Information Set.) But while this specification does not define any other representations, any physical representation may be used as long as it can represent the information in the Xaml Information Set. This first section of the specification describes the roles of the information sets, how they relate to applications that use Xaml, and how the transformation rules come into play. 1.1 Xaml Vocabularies and the Xaml Schema Information Set This specification does not mandate any particular application or interpretation of a Xaml Document. Each individual application of Xaml will define its own Xaml Vocabulary. For example, Xaml could be used to define the structure of a graphical user interface, or it could be used to represent a list of pieces of music. This specification does not define any such application-specific vocabularies. This specification provides the information to enable such vocabularies to be defined. A particular Xaml vocabulary is defined as a Xaml Schema. A schema defines the object types that may be used in a Xaml instance, determining the members and content each type supports. (Individual applications will likely go further, assigning meanings to element types. However, that is beyond the scope of a Xaml Schema.) Furthermore, some schema features are advisory a schema may contain information which is not strictly required to process a Xaml Document, but which may be useful to tools. (For example, the information may enable compilers to provide better warnings, or for editors to offer better discoverability.) A Xaml Schema is always associated with a particular namespace URI. XML representations of Xaml indicate their vocabulary through XML namespaces the namespace URI of an element or attribute indicates the Xaml Schema to which that node belongs. This specification does not define a Xaml Schema file format. Instead, this specification defines an abstract data model for schemas, the Xaml Schema Information Set. This specifies the information required to form a complete schema. It is defined in Section 3, Xaml Schema Information Set. 8 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 1.2 Xaml Instances, Xaml Documents and the Xaml Information Set A Xaml Instance is a structured set of information, made up of the elements described in Section 4, Xaml Information Set. The term does not mandate any particular representation. The term Xaml Document means an XML document that represents a Xaml Instance. The process for converting the XML in a Xaml Document into the Xaml Instance it represents is described in Section 6, Creating a Xaml Information Set from XML. The conversion process is defined in terms of the XML Information Set [XML Infoset], so the input XML document does not need to be a text stream formatted as required by the XML specification. Any representation may be used, as long as it can be mapped to the logical XML Information Set structure. For example, a Xaml Document could use a binary format, or it might be held in memory as a set of objects or data structures. As with Xaml Schemas, this specification is not concerned with the physical representation of a Xaml Document, only the logical structure. 1.3 Well-Formed and Valid Xaml Information Sets This specification defines two characteristics that a Xaml Information Set may possess. It may be a well-formed Xaml Information Set. And it may be a valid Xaml Information Set. A Xaml Information Set is well-formed if it conforms to all of the rules for well-formedness in Section 4, Xaml Information Set. A Xaml Information Set is valid with respect to one or more schemas if it conforms to all of the rules for validity in Section 4, Xaml Information Set. A Xaml Document, i.e. an XML document representing a Xaml Instance, is valid with respect to a set of schemas if it can be successfully converted into a Xaml Infoset using the process defined in Section 6, and the resulting Xaml Infoset is valid with respect to those schemas. 1.4 The Structure of Information in Xaml There are obvious parallels between the world of XML and Xaml. Each have schemas, documents and concepts of being well-formed and valid. The main difference is that the structure of the Xaml Information Set is more specialized than the XML Information Set. In particular, although there is no requirement that a Xaml instance be represented as objects in an object-oriented programming system, the Xaml Information Set has been designed to make such a mapping straightforward. Xaml Schemas are correspondingly specialized. The structure of the information in a Xaml Information Set is described formally in Section 3, Xaml Schema Information Set, but as an aid to understanding, there follows a short, informal, non- normative description of the structure. 9 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Information in a Xaml Instance is in one of three forms: objects, members, or text. The root of a Xaml Instance is an object. Objects can have members; an objects members are unordered. Members have values, which consist either of objects or text. Some members may have multiple values (forming an ordered sequence); in such cases, a single members values may comprise a mixture of objects and text. Figure 1 shows an example XML representation of Xaml, and an illustration of the structure of the Xaml Infoset the XML represents.
Figure 1: Structure of Xaml Information (non-normative) Some non-normative sections of this specification use terminology common in object oriented programming systems. An instance of a type means an object of that type. Construction refers to the act of creating an object. 1.5 A Note on Notation When referring to Information Set properties (whether Xaml or XML), this specification uses bracketed notation. For example if elem refers to an XML element in an XML information set, elem[attributes] refers to the [attributes] property of that element.
<MyElem Width="42" Quality="High">
<MyElem.Bar> <Child Less="More" /> </MyElem.Bar>
</MyElem> Object: MyElem Member: MyElem.Width Member: MyElem.Quality Text: 42 Text: High Member: MyElem.Bar Object: Child Member: Child.Less Text: More 10 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Section 2. Information Set Type System The Xaml Schema Information Set and the Xaml Information Set each define a data model. The models define various Information Item types. For example, the Xaml Schema Information Set defines a Schema Information Item (3.1). Information Items have various properties, each of which has a type. In some cases, the type is another Information Item defined elsewhere in the data model. For example, the XamlMember Information Item (3.3) in the Xaml Schema Information Set has a [value type] property, and its type is another part of the model: a XamlType Information Item (3.2). However, these data models are not defined entirely in terms of themselves. For example, a XamlType Information Item has a [name] property whose type is XamlName. The following sections define the types such as these that are used in the information sets in this specification. 2.1 Text String An ordered sequence of Unicode [Unicode] characters. 2.2 XamlName A XamlName is a Text String that conforms to the following grammar (using the syntax defined in RFC4234 [ABNF]): XamlName = NameStartChar *(NameChar) NameStartChar = UnicodeLu / UnicodeLl / UnicodeLo / UnicodeLt / UnicodeNl / "_" NameChar = NameStartChar / UnicodeNd / UnicodeMn / UnicodeMc / UnicodeLm This assumes the following general category values as defined in the Unicode Character Database [Unicode]: Table 1: Unicode Category Abbreviations Abbreviation Description UnicodeLu Letter, Uppercase UnicodeLl Letter, Lowercase UnicodeLt Letter, Titlecase UnicodeLm Letter, Modifier UnicodeLo Letter, Other UnicodeMn Mark, Non-Spacing UnicodeMc Mark, Spacing Combining UnicodeNd Number, Decimal UnicodeNl Number, Letter
11 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 2.3 Namespace Uri A Namespace Uri is a sequence of characters identifying an XML namespace. Implementations that process Xaml MUST accept any namespace name (as defined in section 2 of [XML Namespaces]) as a Namespace Uri. Implementations MAY tolerate as identifiers sequences of Unicode characters which are not valid namespace names. 2.4 Boolean A truth value: either True or False. 2.5 Allowed Location A value of this type represents an allowed location for a member in an XML representation some members (e.g., the xml:lang Directive defined in 5.3.13) may only be specified as attributes in XML, and not as member elements; some (e.g. the x:Items member defined in 5.3.1) may not appear in XML at all, and are only used in a Xaml Information Set. Values of this type are one of: Any, AttributeOnly, or None. 2.6 XML Namespace Mapping A value of this type represents an XML namespace prefix and the corresponding XML namespace URI. It has two properties: [prefix] of type Text String, and [uri] of type Namespace Uri. 2.7 Set Some properties have a type defined as a Set of some type, or a list of types. For example, XamlType Information Item (3.2) has a [types assignable to] property whose type is Set of XamlType Information Items. Such property may contain any number of values of the type or types in question. Order is not significant in a set. Sets do not contain duplicates any given value is either in a set or it is not. Sets may be empty. 2.8 Ordered Collection Some properties have a type defined as an Ordered Collection of some type, or a list of types. For example, Member Node Information Item (4.3) has a [values] property, whose type is defined as Ordered collection of information items; each item may be either an Object Node Information Item, or a Text Node Information Item. Such properties may contain any number of values of the type or types in question. The values are strictly ordered. Ordered collections may contain duplicates, e.g. the second and fourth item in an ordered collection may be the same value. An ordered collection may be empty.
12 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008
13 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Section 3. Xaml Schema Information Set A Xaml Schema is an abstract definition of a set of Xaml Instances. A Xaml Infoset is said to be an instance of a Xaml Schema if it conforms to all of the rules for well-formedness and validity in Section 4, Xaml Information Set. This specification does not mandate a representation or format for a Xaml Schema. Instead, it defines an abstract data model called the Xaml Schema Information Set, or Schema Infoset for short, which defines the elements that make up a Xaml Schema. A Xaml Schema Information Set can contain five kinds of items. These are listed in Table 2. Table 2: Xaml Schema Information Set Item Kinds Item Kind Purpose (non-normative) Schema Information Item Identifies a schema, and defines which information items constitute that schemas definition. XamlType Information Item Describes a type of element that instances of this schema may contain. XamlMember Information Item Describes a member that may be applied to elements in instances of this schema. Text Syntax Information Item Describes the valid textual representations of the values of a particular member or type. Constructor Information Item Describes the available constructor forms for a type. The information items that make up the Xaml Schema Information Set have identity. For example, given two XamlMember Information Items, it is meaningful to ask if their [value type] properties each refer to the same XamlType Information Item (or more informally, whether the two members have the same type). Since this specification does not mandate any particular representation for schema infosets, implementations are free to represent this in any way. For example, a programming system might choose to represent item identity through object identity where such a concept is supported; a serialized representation might choose to add identifiers that do not correspond directly to infoset properties purely to handle item identity. The following sections describe the data properties that make up each of the information item types. These sections also define constraints a Xaml Schema must meet. In some cases, notes are provided to describe the purpose of certain data properties in more detail. This is done in situations where the normative interpretation of these properties is defined in other sections, but where the intended meaning of the properties would be hard to infer. These notes are provided purely as an aid to understanding, and are marked as non-normative to indicate that they does not constitute a formal part of the Xaml Schema Infoset specification. The Purpose column of each table defining an information item has a similar role, and is also non-normative. 14 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 3.1 Schema Information Item Each Xaml Schema MUST have one Schema Information Item. The Schema Information Item is the root of a schemas definition, defining which other items belong to this schema. Table 3: Schema Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [target namespace] Namespace Uri The target XML namespace for this schema. [types] Set of XamlType Information Items The object types that instances of this schema may contain. [assignable types] Set of XamlType Information Items Types that are not used directly as values in instances of this schema, but which are used by XamlMember Information Items for assignability purposes. [directives] Set of XamlMember Information Items The directive attributes that may be applied to objects in instances of this schema. [compatible with schemas] Set of Schema Information Items The schemas with which this schema is considered compatible.
3.1.1. Constraints A Xaml Schema Information Sets Schema Information Item MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 3.1.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of a Schema Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 3. 3.1.1.2. Members in [directives] Must Be Directives For each XamlMember Information Item d in [directives], d[is directive] MUST be True. 3.1.1.3. Type Names Must Be Unique For each XamlType Information Item t in [types] the value of t[name] MUST be different from the [name] of any other XamlType Information Item in [types]. 3.1.1.4. Directive Names Must be Unique For each XamlMember Information Item d in [directives] the value of d[name] MUST be different from the [name] of any other XamlMember Information Item in [directives]. 3.1.2. Notes (Non-Normative) The [compatible with schemas] property addresses two scenarios. It is used when new versions of a vocabulary are developed that are compatible with older versions. It is also used to handle cases where multiple distinct namespaces may identify structurally identical schemas. 15 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 The types in [types] can be used for assignability purposes as well as the types in [assignable types]. The significance of [assignable types] is that types in this property do not support the full range of features that types in [types] do. 3.2 XamlType Information Item A XamlType Information Item defines a data type. For example, an Object Node Information Item (4.2) has a [type] property that refers to a XamlType Information Item. Table 4: XamlType Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [name] XamlName The name that represents this type. Case is significant. [types assignable to] Set of XamlType Information Items The types to which instances of this type are considered assignable. [is default constructible] Boolean When True, this type may always be used as the type for an object node. When False, constraints apply, which are described later in this specification. [is nullable] Boolean True if members of this type may have a Null value. [text syntax] Null, or Text Syntax Information Item The text syntax that defines how instances of this type can be represented as text. [members] Set of XamlMember Information Items The members available on this type. [content property] Null, or a XamlMember Information Item The member to which content of an element of this type can be assigned. (Allows XML representations to omit the member element.) [dictionary key property] Null, or a XamlMember Information Item The member that acts as the key if an element of this type is added to a dictionary without a key being specified explicitly. The designated member is effectively an alias for the x:Key directive (5.3.5). [name property] Null, or a XamlMember Information Item The member that, if set, holds the name of an element of this type. The designated member is effectively an alias for the x:Name Directive (5.3.4). [xml lang property] Null, or a XamlMember Information Item The member that holds the value of the xml:lang attribute (when present) the designated member is effectively an alias for the xml:lang Directive (5.3.13). [trim surrounding whitespace] Boolean True if whitespace immediately before and after elements of this type in an XML representation should be removed. 16 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 [is whitespace significant collection] Boolean True if, when a Xaml processor reads an XML representation of an element of this type, whitespace content should not be collapsed. [is list] Boolean True if elements of this type contain an ordered sequence of items. [is dictionary] Boolean True if elements of this type contain a set of items, each identified by a key. [allowed types] Set of XamlType Information Items The types that can be added as items inside a list or dictionary. (Only used if [is list] or [is dictionary] is True.) [allowed key types] Set of XamlType Information Items The types that can be used as keys. (Only used if [is dictionary] is True.) [is xdata] Boolean True if elements of this type contain literal XML data. [is name scope] Boolean Used to determine the scope in which values of the x:Name Directive (5.3.4) must be unique. [constructors] Set of Constructor Information Items The constructors that can be used to create instances of this type. [return value type] Null, or a XamlType Information Item The type of value provided by this type. (Only used for markup extensions see the x:MarkupExtension type (5.2.21).)
The [types assignable to] property contains the complete set of types from this schema to which instances of this type is assignable. If a vocabulary wishes to provide common object-oriented semantics, such as having a type be assignable to all the types to which its base class is assignable, it must make that explicit. However, there is an additional complexity regarding schemas that list other schemas in their [compatible with schemas]. Types do not include types from the schemas with which they are compatible with their [types assignable to]. Instead, this specification presumes that equivalently named types in compatible schemas are compatible. To simplify the validity checks that presume this, the following functions are defined: 1, 2 1[name] = 2[name] (1 [ Schema Information Item) [types] 1 (2 [ Schema Information Item) [types] 2 ((1 = 2)
Informally, a type tFrom is assignable to a type tTo if either tFrom and tTo are compatible, or if tFrom[types assignable to] contains a type which is compatible with tTo; types are compatible with types that have the same name and compatible schemas. 3.2.1. Constraints The XamlType Information Items in a Xaml Schema Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 3.2.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of a XamlType Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 4. 3.2.1.2. Content Member Must Be Available If a types [content property] is not Null, that types [members] MUST contain the member in [content property]. 3.2.1.3. Name Member Must Be Available If a types [name property] is not Null, that types [members] MUST contain the member in [name property]. 3.2.1.4. Content Member Mutually Exclusive with List and Dictionary If [content property] is not Null, [is list] and [is dictionary] MUST both be False. 3.2.1.5. List and Dictionary Mutually Exclusive If [is list] is True, [is dictionary] MUST be False (from which the converse follows: if [is dictionary] is True, [is list] MUST be False.) 3.2.1.6. Allowed Types Only Used on Lists and Dictionaries [allowed types] MUST be empty unless either [is list] or [is dictionary] is True. 3.2.1.7. Allowed Key Types Only Used on Lists and Dictionaries [allowed key types] MUST be empty unless [is dictionary] is True. 3.2.1.8. Return Value Type Required on Markup Extension If [types assignable to] contains the intrinsic x:MarkupExtension type (5.2.21), [return value type] MUST NOT be Null. 18 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 3.2.1.9. Return Value Type Only Used on Markup Extension If [types assignable to] does not contain the intrinsic x:MarkupExtension type (5.2.21), [return value type] MUST be Null. 3.2.1.10. Only Markup Extensions Can Have Constructors If [types assignable to] does not contain the intrinsic x:MarkupExtension type (5.2.21), [constructors] MUST be empty. 3.2.1.11. No Two Constructors May Have the Same Number of Arguments For each Constructor Information Item ctor in [constructors], [constructors] MUST NOT contain any other Constructor Information Items that have the same number of items in their [arguments] as there are in ctor[arguments]. 3.2.2. Notes (Non-Normative) Both [members] and [types assignable to] are comprehensive within a schema, i.e., types do not automatically inherit everything that types in [types assignable to] have. For example suppose type B has member BP, and a type D has a [types assignable to] containing B, if D wishes to make BP available, D[members] must contain BP. The reason for this is not to force Xaml vocabularies to use normal inheritance rules. Vocabularies that wish to offer a typical object-oriented style of inheritance are free to do so, they must simply be explicit. However, type assignability is honored in Xaml Instances. For example, consider [allowed types]. Items in a list or dictionary may also be of types that are assignable to types in [allowed types], as determined by each item types [types assignable to] property. Likewise, for [allowed key types], key values may also be of types that are assignable to types in this list. In short, Xaml Schemas are required to be explicit; validation of Xaml Instances does whatever the schema says. 3.3 XamlMember Information Item A XamlMember Information Item provides information about a member. Members are either defined by a particular XamlType Information Item, or they are directives. Table 5: XamlMember Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [name] XamlName The name of the member. [owner type] Null or XamlType Information Item The type that defines this member, or Null if [is directive] is True. [value type] XamlType Information Item The type that values for this member must be assignable to. [text syntax] Null, or Text Syntax A member-specific text syntax that defines how this 19 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Information Item member can be represented as text. (If present, this takes precedence over [value type][text syntax].) [is read only] Boolean True if the member cannot be set. (Only used for lists and dictionaries.) [is static] Boolean True if the member is associated directly with the defining type, and not with any particular element. [is attachable] Boolean True if this member may be applied to types other than those compatible with the owner type. [target type] Null, or XamlType Information Item The member may be attached to types compatible with this type. (Only used for attachable members.) [allowed location] Allowed Location Indicates how the member may be represented in XML. [is event] Boolean True if this member is used to define a response to some event such as user input. (The interpretation of event members is determined by individual Xaml processors.) [is directive] Boolean True if this is a directive.
3.3.1. Constraints The XamlMember Information Items in a Xaml Schema Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 3.3.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of a XamlMember Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 5. 3.3.1.2. Member names must be unique If [is directive] is False, the value of [name] MUST be different from the [name] of any other XamlMember Information Item in [owner type][members]. 3.3.1.3. Member Kind At most one of [is attachable], [is event], and [is directive] can be True. 3.3.1.4. Must Have Owner Type or be Directive If [is directive] is False, [owner type] MUST NOT be Null. If [is directive] is True, [owner type] MUST be Null. 3.3.1.5. Owner Type Must Own Member If [owner type] is not Null, this XamlMember Information Item MUST be in [owner type][members]. 20 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 3.3.1.6. Only List, Dictionary, or Static Members may be Read-only If neither [value type][is list] nor [value type][is dictionary], nor [is static] is True, [is read only] MUST be False. 3.3.1.7. Properties Required by Attachable Members If [is attachable] is True, [target type] MUST NOT be Null. 3.3.1.8. Properties Unique to Attachable Members If [is attachable] is False, [target type] MUST be Null. 3.3.1.9. Event Type Must Be XamlEvent If [is event] is True, [value type] MUST be the intrinsic x:XamlEvent (5.2.20). 3.3.1.10. Properties Not Supported By Directives If [is directive] is True, [owner type] MUST be Null. 3.3.2. Notes (Non-Normative) A member whose [value type] is a list or dictionary can be read-only, because it is still possible to modify the contents of the list or dictionary, even when the member that holds it cannot be changed. In this case, being read-only merely prevents us from supplying our own list or dictionary. Members for which [is attachable] is True can be applied in a non-attached manner on instances of the type that defines the member, as long as the member target is compatible with the members [target type]. E.g., if a type Canvas defines an attachable Canvas.Left member, that member can be used in a non-attached fashion on a Canvas. Directives are similar to members in the XML representation, they are set on object nodes using the same syntax as a member, and in the Xaml Information Set, directives are represented as member nodes. However, unlike normal members, a directive is not owned by any particular type. Directives are typically associated with special behaviors in the Xaml handling. For example, this specification defines some intrinsic directives in Section 5, Intrinsic Schema Information Items, such as x:Key (5.3.5), which determines how dictionary items are handled. 3.4 Text Syntax Information Item A Text Syntax Information Item describes the way in which the values for a particular type or member can be represented in a Xaml Instance. Table 6: Text Syntax Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [values] Set of Value Syntax Information Items Fixed textual values that are known to be valid. 21 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 [patterns] Set of Pattern Syntax Information Items Pattern-based expression of valid values.
3.4.1. Constraints The Text Syntax Information Items in a Xaml Schema Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 3.4.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of a Text Syntax Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 6. 3.4.2. Notes (Non-Normative) Members and types can have Text Syntax Information Items associated with them. The [values] property contains a list of literal values the member may use. This could be used for a member that corresponded to an enumerated type in a programming system [values] would contain one string for each enumeration member. The [patterns] property is used when the set of valid values is either not closed, or would be too large to enumerate. For example, it would not be practical to describe the valid values for a numeric field by putting every possible number representation into [values]. Instead, [patterns] would capture the valid values. A Text Syntax Information Item is may contain multiple [values] and [patterns]. A text value is considered a match if it matches at least one value or pattern. (All of this is formalized in the Section 4, Xaml Information Set.) 3.5 Value Syntax Information Item A Value Syntax Information Item describes a possible value. All members of the [values] collection in a Text Syntax Information Item are Value Syntax Information Items. Table 7: Value Syntax Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [text] Text String Fixed textual value that is known to be valid. [trim whitespace] Boolean True if whitespace before and after the value can be ignored. [is case sensitive] Boolean True if the value must match exactly, false if the value may be lower case or capitals.
22 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 3.5.1. Constraints The Text Syntax Information Items in a Xaml Schema Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 3.5.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of a Text Syntax Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 7. 3.6 Pattern Syntax Information Item Pattern Syntax Information Item Table 8: Pattern Syntax Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [pattern] Text String Pattern-based expression of valid values. [trim whitespace] Boolean True if whitespace before and after the value can be ignored. [is case sensitive] Boolean True if the value must match exactly, false if the value may be lower case or capitals. The string in [pattern] is a regular expression. Xaml Schema Infoset regular expressions use the same formulation as those in XML Schema Definitions. See Appendix F of Part 2 of the XML Schema specification [XML Schema Part 2]. 3.6.1. Constraints The Pattern Syntax Information Items in a Xaml Schema Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 3.6.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of a Pattern Syntax Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 8. 3.7 Constructor Information Item A Constructor Information Item defines a parameter list that can be used to construct a particular type. Table 9: Constructor Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [arguments] Ordered Collection of XamlType Information Items The types of the parameters for this constructor.
23 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 3.7.1. Constraints The Constructor Information Items in a Xaml Schema Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 3.7.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of a Constructor Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 9.
24 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Section 4. Xaml Information Set A Xaml Information Set represents the information contained in a Xaml Instance. A Xaml Information Set can contain four kinds of items. These are listed in Table 10. Table 10: Xaml Information Set Item Kinds Item Kind Purpose (non-normative) Document Information Item Represents a Xaml Instance. Object Node Information Item Describes an object in the Xaml Instance. Member Node Information Item Describes a member that has been set on a particular object in the Xaml Instance. Text Node Information Item Describes textual or whitespace content in the Xaml Instance. The following sections describe the data properties that make up each of the information item types. These sections also define constraints that all Xaml Instances are required to meet, and further constraints that must be met for a Xaml Instance to be considered valid. In some cases, notes are provided to describe the purpose of certain data properties in more detail. This is done in situations where the normative interpretation of these properties is defined in other sections, but where the intended meaning of the properties would be hard to infer. These notes are provided purely as an aid to understanding, and are marked as non-normative to indicate that they do not constitute a formal part of the Xaml infoset specification. The Purpose column of each table defining an information item serves a similar role, and is also non-normative. Note that many of the properties in the Xaml Information Set information items refer to information items from the Xaml Schema Information Set. 4.1 Document Information Item Each Xaml Instance has exactly one Document Information Item. It represents the document, and provides access to the documents root. Table 11: Document Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [document object] Object Node Information Item The root object of the Xaml Instance.
4.1.1. Constraints A well-formed Xaml Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 25 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 4.1.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of a Document Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 11.
4.1.1.2. Xaml Must Have Tree Structure Consider a Xaml Information Set as a directed graph, where Object Node Information Items form nodes, and edges are described by the Member Node Information Items in each Object Node Information Items [member nodes]. This graph MUST NOT contain cycles. Furthermore, any single Object Node Information Item MUST NOT be referred to by more than one Member Node Information Item. 4.2 Object Node Information Item Object nodes are one of the three main forms of information in a Xaml Information Set (the others being member nodes and text nodes). Each object node is represented by an Object Node Information Item. Table 12: Object Node Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [type] XamlType Information Item Schema-defined type of this object. [member nodes] Set of Member Node Information Items The members that have been set on this object. [parent member] Null, or Member Node Information Item The member node for which this object is a value. [is retrieved] Boolean True if this object node does not represent a new object to be created instead, the members in [member nodes] are to be set on an existing object instance [xml namespace mappings] Set of XML Namespace Mappings The XML namespace mappings in effect at this element. Some of the constraints that follow refer to a root node. This is the node in the Document Information Items [document object] property. Although Object Node Information Items do not contain a reference back to their containing Document Information Item, the root node can still be located with the following process: 1. Let current node be the node for which the root is to be found. 2. If the [parent member] of current node is Null, the current node is the root node; if not, continue to the next step. 3. Take the [parent member][parent object] of the current node, make that the new current node, and then repeat from step 2. 26 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 4.2.1. Constraints The Object Node Information Items in a well-formed Xaml Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 4.2.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of an Object Node Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 12. 4.2.1.2. Events Not Allowed Unless Root Has x:Class [member nodes] MUST NOT contain any Member Node Information Items (4.3) whose [is event] is True unless the root nodes [member nodes] contains a Member Node Information Item whose [member] is the x:Class directive XamlMember Information Item (5.3.7). 4.2.1.3. Cannot Have Multiple Member Nodes with Same Member The Member Node Information Items in [member nodes] MUST all have different [member] items. 4.2.1.4. Parent Must Contain This Node This Object Node Information Item MUST be in [parent member][values]. 4.2.2. Validity Constraints The Object Node Information Items in a valid Xaml Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 4.2.2.1. Cannot Set Both x:Name and Name Member If [member nodes] contains a Member Node Information Item whose [member] is the intrinsic x:Name Directive (5.3.4), [member nodes] MUST NOT also contain an item whose [member] is this nodes [type][name property]. 4.2.2.2. Cannot Set Both xml:lang and Language Member If [member nodes] contains an item whose [member] is the intrinsic xml:lang Directive (5.3.13), [member nodes] MUST NOT also contain an item whose [member] is this nodes [type][xml lang property]. 4.2.2.3. Types without Default Constructor Require Constructor Parameters If the nodes [type][is default constructible] is False, the nodes [member nodes] MUST contain an item whose [member] is the intrinsic x:ConstructorArgs (5.3.2). 4.2.2.4. Constructor Parameters Must Match Constructor Info If the nodes [member nodes] contain an item whose [member] is the intrinsic x:ConstructorArgs (5.3.2) call that item constructorArgs. The nodes [type][constructors] MUST contain a Constructor Information Item for which the number of XamlType Information Items in 27 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 constructorInfo[arguments] is the same as the number of items in constructorArgs[values]. Call that item constructorInfo. For each XamlType Information Item argType in constructorInfo[arguments], and for the item argValue at the same offset into the constructorArgs[values] sequence, the following apply: If argValue is a Text Node Information Item, one of the following MUST be true: o argType is the intrinsic x:String (5.2.6). o argType[text syntax] is non-Null. Otherwise, argValue is an Object Node Information Item, and one of the following MUST be true: o isAssignableTo(argValue[type], argType) is True. o argValue[type][types assignable to] contains the x:MarkupExtension (5.2.21) intrinsic type, and isAssignableTo(argValue[type][return value type], argType) is True. 4.2.2.5. Initialization Text Must Match Text Syntax If the nodes [member nodes] contain an item whose [member] is the intrinsic x:InitializationText (5.3.3), that items [values] MUST contain a single Text Node Information Item. Let initializationText be the [text] of that text node. Let textSyntax be a Text Syntax Information Item defined as follows: If [parent member][member][text syntax] is not Null, then that is the value of textSyntax. Otherwise, [type][text syntax] MUST NOT be Null, and that is the value of textSyntax. The text value in initializationText MUST either match one of the entries in textSyntax[values], or match one of the entries in textSyntax[patterns]. The initializationText value is determined to be a match for a Value Syntax Information Item valueSyntax from textSyntax[values] with the following process: Let trimmedInput be a string defined as follows: o If valueSyntax[trim whitespace] is true, trimmedInput is formed by removing any whitespace from the start and end of initializationText o Otherwise trimmedInput is initializationText Let casedSyntaxValue and casedInput be two strings defined as follows o If valueSyntax[is case sensitive] is true, casedSyntaxValue is valueSyntax[text], and casedInput is trimmedInput o Otherwise, caseSyntaxValue is formed by converting any letters in valueSyntax[text] to their uppercase equivalents, and caseInput is formed by converting any letters in trimmedInput to their uppercase equivalents 28 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 initializationText matches valueSyntax if and only if casedSyntaxValue is equal to casedInput The initializationText value is determined to be a match for a Pattern Syntax Information Item patternSyntax from textSyntax[patterns] with the following process: Let trimmedInput be a string defined as follows: o If patternSyntax[trim whitespace] is true, trimmedInput is formed by removing any whitespace from the start and end of initializationText o Otherwise trimmedInput is initializationText Let casedInput be a strings defined as follows o If patternSyntax[is case sensitive] is true, casedInput is trimmedInput o Otherwise, casedInput is formed by converting any letters in trimmedInput to their uppercase equivalents initializationText matches patternSyntax if and only if casedInput is a match for the regular expression in patternSyntax[pattern]; Xaml Schema Infoset regular expressions use the same formulation as those in XML Schema Definitions. See Appendix F of Part 2 of the XML Schema specification [XML Schema Part 2].
4.2.2.6. Cannot Provide Initialization Text and Other Member Values If the nodes [member nodes] contain an item whose [member] is the intrinsic x:InitializationText (5.3.3), [member nodes] MUST NOT contain any other items other than the following two optional items: an item whose [member] is the intrinsic x:Key Directive (5.3.5); an item whose [member] is the intrinsic x:Uid Directive (5.3.6). 4.2.2.7. x:XData Only Valid in XData Members If the nodes [type] is the intrinsic x:XData (5.2.23), [parent member][value type][is xdata] MUST be True. 4.2.2.8. x:TypeExtension Must Have Valid Type If the nodes [type] is the intrinsic x:TypeExtension (5.2.3), [member nodes] MUST contain exactly one Member Node Information Item whose [member] is one of the following: The intrinsic x:ConstructorArgs (5.3.2). The intrinsic TypeExtension.Type (5.3.19). The intrinsic TypeExtension.TypeName (5.3.20). [member nodes] MUST NOT contain more than one of the above. 29 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 4.2.2.9. x:StaticExtension Must Have Valid Member If the nodes [type] is the intrinsic x:StaticExtension (5.2.2), then there MUST exist a Text Node Information Item memberTextNode defined as follows: If the nodes [member nodes] contains a single Member Node Information Item whose [member] is the intrinsic x:ConstructorArgs (5.3.2), and this Member Node Information Item contains a single Text Node Information Item, let memberTextNode be that Text Node Information Item. Otherwise, the nodes [member nodes] MUST include a Member Node Information Item whose [member] is the intrinsic StaticExtension.Member (5.3.18) , and this Member Node Information Item MUST contain a single Text Node Information Item; let memberTextNode be that Text Node Information Item. Let memberText be memberTextNode[text]. MemberText MUST be a DottedXamlName (6.5.1), and the DottedXamlNames typename part MUST be a valid QName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]). Let memberSchema be defined as follows: If the typename part is a PrefixedName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]) then o This nodes [xml namespace mappings] MUST contain an XML Namespace Mapping whose [prefix] matches the typenames Prefix (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]); let nsUri be the [uri] of that XML Namespace Mapping. o A schema MUST be available whose [target namespace] matches nsUri. Let memberSchema be that schema. Otherwise, [xml namespace mappings] MUST contain a mapping whose [prefix] is the empty string, an a schema MUST be available whose [target namespace] matches the [namespace name] of that mapping; let memberSchema be that schema. memberSchema[types] MUST contain a XamlType Information Item whose [name] matches the DottedXamlNames typename parts LocalName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]) in memberText. Call that XamlType Information Item memberType. memberType[members] MUST contain a XamlMember Information Item whose [name] matches the DottedXamlNames membername part in MemberText. Call that XamlMember Information Item memberInfo. isAssignableTo(memberInfo[value type], [parent member][member][value type]) MUST be True. 30 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 4.2.2.10. Array Contents Must Be Of Correct Type If an Object Node Information Items [type] is the intrinsic x:ArrayExtension (5.2.1), and if its [member nodes] contains a member arrayItems whose [member] is the intrinsic ArrayExtension.Items (5.3.16), and if its [member nodes] also contains a member arrayType whose [member] is the intrinsic ArrayExtension.Type (5.3.17), then for each Object Node Information Item item in arrayItems [values], isAssignableTo(item[type], arrayType) MUST be True. 4.2.2.11. Only Retrieved Objects May Use Assignable Types If the nodes [type] is a member of one or more schemas [assignable types] and is not a member of any schemas [types], the nodes [is retrieved] MUST be True. 4.2.3. Note (non-normative) Since Xaml does not need to be represented as XML, it may seem odd to have an [xml namespace mappings] property. The reason for this is to enable Xaml to use XML namespace prefixes as a shorthand for referring to schemas. 4.3 Member Node Information Item A Member Node Information Item represents one of a number of features. Properties, directives, events, or initialization strings are all represented as Member Node Information Items. Table 13: Member Node Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [member] XamlMember Information Item Xaml Schema Infoset information item that defines this member. [parent object] Object Node Information Item The object on which this member has been set. [values] Ordered Collection of information items; each item may be either an Object Node Information Item, or a Text Node Information Item The value or values being set by this member node. [xml namespace mappings] Set of XML Namespace Mappings The XML namespace mappings in effect at this member.
4.3.1. Constraints The Member Node Information Items in a well-formed Xaml Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 31 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 4.3.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of a Member Node Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 13. 4.3.1.2. Multiple Values Only Allowed in List Content, Dictionary Content, or Constructor Arguments If [member] is not one of the x:Items (5.3.1), x:DirectiveChildren (5.3.12), or x:ConstructorArgs (5.3.2) intrinsic items, then [values] MUST contain exactly one item. (Otherwise, it can contain 0 or more such items.) Note: all members may contain any number of objects of intrinsic type x:Code (5.2.22). 4.3.1.3. Intrinsic x:Items Member Only Allowed in List or Dictionary If [member] is the intrinsic x:Items (5.3.1) member type, then either [parent object][type][is dictionary] or [parent object][type][is list] MUST be True. 4.3.1.4. Dictionary Content Rules If ([parent object][type][is dictionary] and [member] is the instrinsic x:Items (5.3.1)), the following rules apply: [values] MUST NOT contain any Text Node items. Each Object Node Information Item dictItem in [values] MUST match at least one of the following (and let the first of these rules that matches define keyMemberNode for that dictItem): o dictItem[member nodes] contains a Member Node Information Item that is the x:Key directive (defined in 5.3.5). o dictItem[member nodes] contains a Member Node Information Item whose [member] is dictItem[type][dictionary key property]. For each Object Node Information Item dictItem in [values], the corresponding keyMemberNode identified in the previous step MUST have a [values] that contains exactly one item. That item, referred to here as keyValue, MUST be assignable to [parent object][type][allowed key types], i.e., one of the following MUST be true: o keyValue is a Text Node Information Item and [parent object][type][allowed key types] contains either the x:String XamlType Information Item (5.2.6), or the x:Object XamlType Information Item (5.2.5), or there is exactly one XamlMember Information Item in [parent object][type][allowed key types] with a non-Null [text syntax]. o keyValue is an Object Node Information Item, and [parent object][type][allowed key types] contains a keyType for which isAssignableTo(keyValue[type], keyType) is True 32 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Each keyValue identified in the previous step MUST be unique within the scope of the containing dictionary. 4.3.1.5. XML Data Rules If [member][value type][is xdata] = True then If [values] contains more than 0 items then: o [values] MUST NOT contain more than one item. o the one item in [values] MUST be a text node. o The value of the text node MUST be well-formed XML, and any namespace prefixes used within the XML MUST either be declared within the nested XML text, or be in the [xml namespace mappings] of the containing Member Node Information Item. 4.3.1.6. x:Class Directive Rules If [member] is the x:Class Directive (5.3.7), [parent object][parent member] MUST be Null (i.e., this attribute may only be applied to the root node). 4.3.1.7. x:Subclass Directive Rules If [member] is the x:Subclass Directive (5.3.8), [parent object][member nodes] MUST contain a Member Node Information Item whose [member] is the x:Class Directive (5.3.7). 4.3.1.8. x:ClassModifier Directive Rules If [member] is the x:ClassModifier Directive (5.3.9), [parent object][member nodes] MUST contain a Member Node Information Item whose [member] is the x:Class Directive (5.3.7). 4.3.1.9. x:TypeArguments Directive Rules If [member] is the x:TypeArguments Directive (5.3.11), [parent object][member nodes] MUST contain a Member Node Information Item whose [member] is the x:Class Directive (5.3.7). 4.3.1.10. x:FieldModifier Directive Rules If [member] is the x:FieldModifier Directive (5.3.10), the root nodes [member nodes] MUST contain a Member Node Information Item whose [member] is the x:Class Directive (5.3.7). 4.3.2. Validity Constraints A Member Node Information Item in a Xaml Information Set cannot be valid with respect to some set of schemas unless it meets rules defined in this section. 4.3.2.1. Values Must Be of the Appropriate Type For each item val in [values], one of the following MUST apply. val is a Text Node Information Item and 33 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 o Either [member] is x:Items (5.3.1) and [parent object][type][allowed types] contains either the x:String (5.2.6), or the x:Object (5.2.5) XamlType Information Items o or [member][value type] is either the x:String (5.2.6), or the x:Object (5.2.5) XamlType Information Item o or [member][text syntax] is not Null o or [member][value type][text syntax] is not Null. val is an Object Node Information Item and [member] is x:Items (5.3.1) and [member][value type][allowed types] contains an allowedType for which isAssignableTo(val[type], allowedType) is True. val is an Object Node Information Item where val[type][types assignable to] contains the intrinsic x:MarkupExtension (5.2.21), and [member] is x:Items (5.3.1) and [member][value type][allowed types] contains an allowedType for which isAssignableTo(val[type][return value type], allowedType) is True. val is an Object Node Information Item and isAssignableTo(val[type], [member][value type]) is True. val is an Object Node Information Item where val[type][types assignable to] contains the intrinsic x:MarkupExtension (5.2.21), and isAssignableTo(val[type][return value type], [member][value type]) is True. 4.3.2.2. If Member Non-Attached, Non-Directive, Element Type Must Have Member If [member][is attachable] and [member][is directive] are both False, [parent object][type][members] MUST contain [member]. 4.3.2.3. Attached Member Target Type Must Match If [member][is attachable] is True, and [parent object][type][members] does not contain [member], isAssignableTo([parent object][type], [member][target type]) MUST be True. 4.3.2.4. Text Value of Non-Text Member Must Match Text Syntax If [member][text syntax] is not Null, let textSyntax be [member][text syntax]; otherwise let textSyntax be [member][value type][text syntax]. If [values] contains a single Text Node Information Item, and textSyntax is not Null, the [text] value in the Text Node Information Item MUST either match one of the entries in textSyntax[values], or match one of the entries in textSyntax[patterns]. The rules for determining a match are defined in section 4.2.2.5 (Initialization Text Must Match Text Syntax). 4.3.2.5. Read-only Members If [member][is read only] is True, [values] MUST contain just a single object node where [is retrieved] is True. 34 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 4.3.2.6. Names MUST Be Unique Within a Namespace Scope Let nameMember of any Object Node Information Item be determined as follows: If that Object Node Information Items [member nodes] contains an item whose [member] is the intrinsic x:Name Directive (5.3.4), nameMember is that item. If that Object Node Information Items [member nodes] contains an item whose [member] is the Object Node Information Items [parent object][type][name property], nameMember is that item. If an Object Node Information Item has a nameMember, it is a named object, and its name is the single value in nameMember[values] If an Object Node Information Item is a named object, its name MUST be different from the name of any other named object that shares the same namespace scope. A Xaml processor MUST determine whether two Object Node Information Items share the same namespace scope by walking up the tree by starting at [parent object] and then following [parent object][parent member] until reaching either the root node, or an Object Node Information Item whose [type][is name scope] is True. If this process ends at the same node for two different nodes, those two nodes share a namespace scope. 4.3.2.7. x:Key Directive Rules If [member] is the x:Key Directive (5.3.5), [parent object][parent member][parent object][type][is dictionary] MUST be True. 4.3.2.8. x:FieldModifier Directive Rules If [member] is the x:FieldModifier Directive (5.3.10), [parent object][member nodes] MUST contain either a Member Node Information Item whose [member] is the x:Name Directive (5.3.4), or a Member Node Information Item whose [member] is the same as this members [parent object][type][name property]. 4.3.2.9. Members of Type x:XamlType and Type Names Must Refer to Valid Type If [member][value type] is the intrinsic x:XamlType (5.2.19), or if [member] is the intrinsic TypeExtension.TypeName (5.3.20), or ([member] is the intrinsic x:ConstructorArgs (5.3.2) AND [parent object][type] is the intrinsic x:TypeExtension (5.2.3)) then [values] MUST contain just a single text node. Let typeText be that text nodes [text]. Let typeSchema be defined as follows: If typeText is a PrefixedName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]) then 35 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 o This nodes [xml namespace mappings] MUST contain an XML Namespace Mapping whose [prefix] matches the typeTexts Prefix (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]); let nsUri be the [uri] of that XML Namespace Mapping. o A schema whose [target namespace] matches nsUri MUST be available. Let memberSchema be the schema. Otherwise, [parent object][xml namespace mappings] MUST contain a mapping whose [prefix] is the empty string, and a schema MUST be available whose [target namespace] matches the [namespace name] of that mapping. let memberSchema be that schema. memberSchema[types] MUST contain a XamlType Information Item whose [name] matches typeTexts LocalName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]) in MemberText. Let targetType be that XamlType Information Item. 4.3.3. Notes (Non-Normative) Validation rule 4.3.2.5 (Read-only Members) deals with the fact that this is meaningful: <MyElement> <MyElement.DictionaryMember> <AnotherElement x:Key="myKey" /> </MyElement.DictionaryMember> </MyElement> As is this: <MyElement> <MyElement.DictionaryMember> <DictionaryElement> <AnotherElement x:Key="myKey" /> </DictionaryElement> </MyElement.DictionaryMember> </MyElement> But this is not: <MyElement> <MyElement.DictionaryMember> <DictionaryElement> <AnotherElement x:Key="myKey" /> </DictionaryElement> <AnotherElement x:Key="bar" /> </MyElement.DictionaryMember> </MyElement> In summary, either you can bring your own dictionary, or you can add items directly to the member element as children to have them added to the dictionary, but you cant do both. 36 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 4.4 Text Node Information Item A Text Node Information Item represents a value in a member nodes [values] that contains text or an XML literal. Table 14: Text Node Information Item Properties Name Type Purpose (non-normative) [text] Text String The text value. [parent member] Member Node Information Item The member of which this text is a value.
4.4.1. Constraints The Text Node Information Items in a well-formed Xaml Information Set MUST conform to the rules defined in this section. 4.4.1.1. Information Set Properties Must Be of Correct Type Each property of a Text Node Information Item MUST have a value of the type specified for that property in Table 14. 4.4.2. Notes (Non-Normative) Whitespace is represented as a text node. There are special processing rules for handling whitespace, because it is significant in some contexts, and ignorable in others. The Xaml information set is the output of the process described in Section 6, Creating a Xaml Information Set from XML, and all the rules for deciding whether to ignore white space are executed during that process. Consequently, there is no need to represent whitespace differently in the Xaml infoset where whitespace is preserved, it simply ends up inside text nodes. XML literals (xData) are also represented as text nodes. It is possible to determine whether a particular text node represents text or an XML literal by examining the text nodes [parent member][member][value type][is xdata] member. Note that XML literals are not self-contained XML documents: the literal can use the namespaces prefixes described in [parent member][xml namespace mappings], and they also inherit xml:space and xml:lang attributes where present. Note that the set of characters that may be used in [text] is not restricted to the subset defined for the Char production defined in Section 2.2 of the XML specification ([XML]). However, the use of characters outside the range acceptable in XML is discouraged.
37 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008
38 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Section 5. Intrinsic Schema Information Items This section defines an intrinsic set of schema information items that are implicitly available to all Xaml Schema Information Sets and Xaml Information Sets. 5.1 Intrinsic Schema Information Items The following Schema Information Items are available when processing any XML document as Xaml. 5.1.1. The x: Schema The x: schema is so-called because its XML namespace is conventionally associated with the x: prefix. It contains directives and types available across all Xaml vocabularies. Table 15: Schema Information Item Property Values for x: Schema Property Value [target namespace] http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml [types] The following XamlType Information Items: x:ArrayExtension (5.2.1), x:StaticExtension (5.2.2), x:TypeExtension (5.2.3), x:NullExtension (5.2.4), x:Object (5.2.5), x:String (5.2.6), x:Double (5.2.9), x:Boolean (5.2.17), x:Array (5.2.18), x:XamlType (5.2.19), x:XamlEvent (5.2.20), x:MarkupExtension (5.2.21), x:Code (5.2.22), and x:XData (5.2.23) [directives] The following XamlMember Information Items: x:Items (5.3.1), x:ConstructorArgs (5.3.2), x:InitializationText (5.3.3), x:Name Directive (5.3.4), x:Key Directive (5.3.5), x:Uid Directive (5.3.6), x:Class Directive (5.3.7), x:Subclass Directive (5.3.8), x:ClassModifier Directive (5.3.9), x:FieldModifier Directive (5.3.10), and x:TypeArguments Directive (5.3.11) [compatible with schemas] Empty
5.1.2. The XML Namespace Schema The XML Namespace Schema contains directives corresponding to the xml:lang, xml:space, and xml:base attributes. Table 16: Schema Information Item Property Values for x: Schema Property Value [target namespace] http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace [types] Empty [directives] The following XamlMember Information Items: xml:lang Directive (5.3.13), xml:space Directive (5.3.14), and xml:base Directive (5.3.15) [compatible with schemas] Empty
39 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 5.2 Intrinsic XamlType Information Items The following sections define special types used for processing Xaml Instances. Many of the XamlType Information Item properties are somewhat specialized the majority of types use the same values for most of the properties. To make it easy to see the distinguishing features of each type, only the properties that differ from the norm are listed. Table 17 shows the values that properties have in the case where their type definition does not specify a value. Table 17: Default XamlType Information Item Property Values Property Value [types assignable to] x:Object (5.2.5) [is default constructible] True [is nullable] True [text syntax] Null [content property] Null [dictionary key property] Null [name property] Null [xml lang property] Null [trim surrounding whitespace] False [is whitespace significant collection] False [is list] False [is dictionary] False [allowed types] Empty [allowed key types] Empty [is xdata] False [is name scope] False [constructors] Empty [return value type] Null
5.2.1. x:ArrayExtension This XamlType Information Item signifies that a list of items is to be treated as an array, where the target programming system recognizes such a concept. Table 18: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:ArrayExtension Property Value [name] ArrayExtension [members] ArrayExtension.Items (5.3.16); ArrayExtension.Type (5.3.17) [content property] ArrayExtension.Items (5.3.16) 40 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Note: the distinction between this and x:Array (5.2.18) is that x:ArrayExtension is concerned with how to represent arrays in Xaml, whereas x:Array is the type of an array itself. 5.2.2. x:StaticExtension This XamlType Information Item represents a markup extension type indicating that a static member belonging to some particular type should be read. Table 19: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:StaticExtension Property Value [name] StaticExtension [types assignable to] x:MarkupExtension (5.2.21); x:Object (5.2.5) [members] StaticExtension.Member (5.3.18) [constructors] Static Extension String Constructor (5.5.1) [return value type] x:Object (5.2.5)
5.2.3. x:TypeExtension This XamlType Information Item represents a markup extension type that evaluates to a x:XamlType (5.2.19) object representing a particular type. Table 20: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:TypeExtension Property Value [name] TypeExtension [types assignable to] x:MarkupExtension (5.2.21); x:Object (5.2.5) [members] TypeExtension.Type (5.3.19); TypeExtension.TypeName (5.3.20) [constructors] Type Extension String Constructor (5.5.2) [return value type] x:XamlType (5.2.19)
5.2.4. x:NullExtension This XamlType Information Item represents a markup extension type that evaluates to a Null value. Table 21: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:NullExtension Property Value [name] NullExtension [types assignable to] x:MarkupExtension (5.2.21); x:Object (5.2.5) [members] Empty [return value type] x:Object (5.2.5)
41 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 5.2.5. x:Object Xaml vocabularies that wish to be able to define members that can accept values of any type can use x:Object as the [value type] of those members. Note that this specification does not assign any intrinsic meaning to x:Object it only provides it as a common type for vocabularies that require this idea. Since Xaml does not require vocabularies to support a root type or universal base class idea, those that want this concept must opt in: a type will only be assignable to x:Object if the vocabulary explicitly includes x:Object in that types [types assignable to]. Table 22: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Object Property Value [name] Object [types assignable to] Empty [is default constructible] False [members] Empty
5.2.6. x:String Type used to represent text strings. Table 23: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:String Property Value [name] String [members] Empty
5.2.7. x:Char Type used to represent a single text character. Table 24: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Char Property Value [name] Char [is nullable] False [text syntax] x:Char Text Syntax (5.4.1) [members] Empty
5.2.8. x:Single Type representing a single-precision floating point numeric value. This type is not used within this specification. It is provided because this type is widely used by providing this one definition, Xaml vocabularies do not each need to define their own. 42 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Table 25: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Single Property Value [name] Single [is nullable] False [text syntax] x:Single Text Syntax (5.4.2) [members] Empty
5.2.9. x:Double Type representing a double-precision floating point numeric value. This type is not used within this specification. It is provided because this type is widely used by providing this one definition, Xaml vocabularies do not each need to define their own. Table 26: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Double Property Value [name] Double [is nullable] False [text syntax] x:Double Text Syntax (5.4.3) [members] Empty
5.2.10. x:Byte Type representing an unsigned 8-bit byte. This type is not used within this specification. It is provided because this type is widely used by providing this one definition, Xaml vocabularies do not each need to define their own. Table 27: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Byte Property Value [name] Byte [is nullable] False [text syntax] x:Byte Text Syntax (5.4.4) [members] Empty
5.2.11. x:Int16 Type representing a signed 16-bit number. This type is not used within this specification. It is provided because this type is widely used by providing this one definition, Xaml vocabularies do not each need to define their own. 43 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Table 28: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Int16 Property Value [name] Int16 [is nullable] False [text syntax] x:Int16 Text Syntax (5.4.5) [members] Empty
5.2.12. x:Int32 Type representing a signed 32-bit number. This type is not used within this specification. It is provided because this type is widely used by providing this one definition, Xaml vocabularies do not each need to define their own. Table 29: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Int32 Property Value [name] Int32 [is nullable] False [text syntax] x:Int32 Text Syntax (5.4.6) [members] Empty
5.2.13. x:Int64 Type representing a signed 64-bit number. This type is not used within this specification. It is provided because this type is widely used by providing this one definition, Xaml vocabularies do not each need to define their own. Table 30: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Int64 Property Value [name] Int64 [is nullable] False [text syntax] x:Int64 Text Syntax (5.4.7) [members] Empty
5.2.14. x:Decimal Type representing a decimal number. This type is not used within this specification. It is provided because this type is widely used by providing this one definition, Xaml vocabularies do not each need to define their own. 44 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Table 31: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Decimal Property Value [name] Decimal [is nullable] False [text syntax] x:Decimal Text Syntax (5.4.8) [members] Empty
5.2.15. x:Uri Type representing a URI. This type is not used within this specification. It is provided because this type is widely used by providing this one definition, Xaml vocabularies do not each need to define their own. Table 32: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Uri Property Value [name] Uri [is nullable] False [text syntax] x:Uri Text Syntax (5.4.9) [members] Empty
5.2.16. x:Timespan Type representing a time span. This type is not used within this specification. It is provided because this type is widely used by providing this one definition, Xaml vocabularies do not each need to define their own. Table 33: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Timespan Property Value [name] Timespan [is nullable] False [text syntax] x:Timespan Text Syntax (5.4.10) [members] Empty
5.2.17. x:Boolean Type representing a Boolean value a value which may be either true or false. Table 34: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Boolean Property Value [name] Boolean [is nullable] False 45 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 [text syntax] x:Boolean Text Syntax (5.4.11) [members] Empty
5.2.18. x:Array Type representing base class of arrays. Table 35: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Array Property Value [name] Array [is default constructible] False [members] Empty [is list] True [allowed types] x:Object (5.2.5)
5.2.19. x:XamlType Type for objects that represent types. Table 36: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:XamlType Property Value [name] XamlType [is default constructible] False [text syntax] x:XamlType Text Syntax (5.4.12) [members] Empty [return value type] Null
5.2.20. x:XamlEvent Type for objects that represent event handlers. Table 37: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:XamlEvent Property Value [name] XamlEvent [is default constructible] False [text syntax] x:XamlEvent Text Syntax (5.4.14) [members] Empty
46 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 5.2.21. x:MarkupExtension Well-known base type that indicates a type is a markup extension. Types indicate that they are markup extensions by including this in their [types assignable to]. Table 38: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:MarkupExtension Property Value [name] MarkupExtension [is default constructible] False [members] Empty
5.2.22. x:Code Type of object nodes representing source code embedded in Xaml. (The meaning of this code is determined by the Xaml processor. This specification simply defines the mechanism by which plain text can be embedded in a Xaml Instance.) Table 39: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:Code Property Value [name] Code [is default constructible] False [is nullable] False [members] Empty
5.2.23. x:XData Type representing XML data islands. Table 40: XamlType Information Item Property Values for x:XData Property Value [name] XData [is default constructible] False [members] Empty
5.3 Intrinsic XamlMember Information Items This section defines the intrinsic members defined in the x: Schema and the XML Namespace Schema. Many of the XamlMember Information Item properties are somewhat specialized the majority of members use the same values for some properties. To make it easy to see the distinguishing 47 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 features of each member, only properties that differ from the norm are listed. Table 41 shows the values that properties have in the case where their type definition does not specify a value. Table 41: Default XamlMember Information Item Property Values Property Value [text syntax] Null [is read only] False [is static] False [is attachable] False [target type] Null [allowed location] Any [is event] False [is directive] False 5.3.1. x:Items Pseudo member used when an object node contains multiple values. Table 42: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:Items Property Value [name] Items [owner type] Null [value type] x:Object (5.2.5) [allowed location] None [is directive] True 5.3.2. x:ConstructorArgs Pseudo member used to represent the constructor argument list for a markup extension. The markup extensions object nodes [member nodes] will contain a member for each named parameter, and may also contain a member to represent the unnamed, ordered parameters. A member node serving that purpose is identified by having its [member] refer to this x:ConstructorArgs (5.3.2) intrinsic member. Table 43: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:ConstructorArgs Property Value [name] ConstructorArgs [owner type] Null [value type] x:Object (5.2.5) [allowed location] None [is directive] True 5.3.3. x:InitializationText Pseudo member used to hold the text string used when an object is initialized using text. 48 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Table 44: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:InitializationText Property Value [name] InitializationText [owner type] Null [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [allowed location] None [is directive] True 5.3.4. x:Name Directive Directive used to set the name of an element. The meaning of a name is up to individual Xaml processors to describe this specification simply provides a mechanism for associating a name with an object node, and a mechanism by which a schema can indicate that a particular member is equivalent to the x:Name directive. Table 45: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:Name Directive Property Value [name] Name [owner type] Null [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [is directive] True
5.3.5. x:Key Directive Directive used to indicate the key of an object added to a dictionary. Table 46: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:Key Directive Property Value [name] Key [owner type] Null [value type] x:Object (5.2.5) [is directive] True 5.3.6. x:Uid Directive Directive used to provide a unique identifier for localization purposes. Table 47: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:Uid Directive Property Value [name] Uid [owner type] Null [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [is directive] True 49 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 5.3.7. x:Class Directive Directive used to indicate the name of a class associated with a Xaml file. It is up to individual Xaml processors to define the interpretation of this directive. Table 48: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:Class Directive Property Value [name] Class [owner type] Null [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [is directive] True 5.3.8. x:Subclass Directive Directive used to indicate the name of a subclass associated with a Xaml file. It is up to individual Xaml processors to define the interpretation of this directive. Table 49: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:Subclass Directive Property Value [name] Subclass [owner type] Null [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [is directive] True 5.3.9. x:ClassModifier Directive Directive used to indicate the modifier of the class associated with a Xaml file. It is up to individual Xaml processors to define the interpretation of this directive. Table 50: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:ClassModifier Directive Property Value [name] ClassModifier [owner type] Null [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [is directive] True 5.3.10. x:FieldModifier Directive Directive used to indicate the modifier of the field associated with a named Xaml element. It is up to individual Xaml processors to define the interpretation of this directive. Table 51: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:FieldModifier Directive Property Value [name] FieldModifier [owner type] Null 50 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [is directive] True 5.3.11. x:TypeArguments Directive Directive used to indicate the type arguments for the class associated with a Xaml file. It is up to individual Xaml processors to define the interpretation of this directive. Table 52: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:TypeArguments Directive Property Value [name] TypeArguments [owner type] Null [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [is directive] True 5.3.12. x:DirectiveChildren Pseudo member used to hold x:Code items. Table 53: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for x:Items Property Value [name] DirectiveChildren [owner type] Null [value type] x:Code (5.2.22) [allowed location] None [is directive] True 5.3.13. xml:lang Directive Directive used to represent the standard xml:lang attribute in a Xaml file. Table 54: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for xml:lang Directive Property Value [name] TypeArguments [owner type] Null [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [allowed location] AttributeOnly [is directive] True 5.3.14. xml:space Directive Directive used to represent the standard xml:space attribute in a Xaml file. Table 55: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for xml:space Directive Property Value [name] space 51 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 [owner type] Null [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [text syntax] xml:space Text Syntax (5.4.13) [allowed location] AttributeOnly [is directive] True 5.3.15. xml:base Directive Directive used to represent the standard xml:base attribute in a Xaml file. Table 56: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for xml:base Directive Property Value [name] base [owner type] Null [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [allowed location] AttributeOnly [is directive] True
5.3.16. ArrayExtension.Items Content member for the x:ArrayExtension (5.2.1) type. Table 57: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for ArrayExtension.Items Property Value [name] Items [owner type] x:ArrayExtension (5.2.1) [value type] x:Array (5.2.18) [is read only] True 5.3.17. ArrayExtension.Type Member of x:ArrayExtension (5.2.1) that indicates what type of elements the array contains. Table 58: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for ArrayExtension.Type Property Value [name] Type [owner type] x:ArrayExtension (5.2.1) [value type] x:XamlType (5.2.19) 5.3.18. StaticExtension.Member Identifies the static member whose value this extension returns. Table 59: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for StaticExtension.Member Property Value 52 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 [name] Member [owner type] x:StaticExtension (5.2.2) [value type] x:String (5.2.6) 5.3.19. TypeExtension.Type The XamlType this extension returns. Table 60: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for TypeExtension.Type Property Value [name] Type [owner type] x:TypeExtension (5.2.3) [value type] x:XamlType (5.2.19) 5.3.20. TypeExtension.TypeName The name of the XamlType this extension returns. Table 61: XamlMember Information Item Property Values for TypeExtension.TypeName Property Value [name] TypeName [owner type] x:TypeExtension (5.2.3) [value type] x:String (5.2.6) [text syntax] x:XamlType Text Syntax (5.4.12)
5.4 Intrinsic Text Syntax Information Items This section defines the intrinsic Text Syntax Information Items. This section uses a notational convention for representing the Value Syntax Information Items and Pattern Syntax Information Items that make up a Text Syntax Information Item. They are listed as a semicolon delimited sequence, or the word Empty to indicate that the relevant set contains no items. Each entry in the sequence for the [values] of a Text Syntax Information Item represents a Value Syntax Information Item. The entry includes a string in double quotes representing the [text] member of the Value Syntax Information Item. The string may optionally be followed by [is case sensitive]=True, and/or [trim whitespace]=False. Where these values are not specified explicitly, [is case sensitive] is False, and [trim whitespace] is True. Each entry in the sequence for the [patterns] of a Text Syntax Information Item represents a Pattern Syntax Information Item. The entry includes a string in double quotes representing the [pattern] member of the Pattern Syntax Information Item. This string may optionall be followed by [is case 53 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 sensitive]=False, and/or [trim whitespace]=False. Where these values are not specified explicitly, [is case sensitive] is True, and [trim whitespace] is True. 5.4.1. x:Char Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Char (5.2.7). Table 62: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Char Text Syntax Property Value [values] Empty [patterns] .
5.4.2. x:Single Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Single (5.2.8). Table 63: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Single Text Syntax Property Value [values] Infinity [is case sensitive]=True; -Infinity [is case sensitive]=True; NaN [is case sensitive]=True [patterns] [+-]?(([\d,]+(\.\d*)?)|([\d,]*\.\d+))([eE][+-]?\d+)? Informally, the [patterns] allows optional leading whitespace followed by an optional + or sign, followed by a decimal number that takes one of two forms, optionally followed by an exponent. The first acceptable form for the decimal number is a sequence of one or more decimal digits, optionally followed by a decimal point which is followed by a sequence of zero or more decimal digits. (E.g. 1 or 1.01.) The second acceptable form for the decimal number is a sequence of zero or more decimal digits, followed by a decimal point which is followed by a sequence of one or more decimal digits. (E.g. .1 or 1.01.) The optional exponent must start with either e or E, it optionally followed by a + or - sign, and then followed by a sequence of one or more decimal digits. Finally, the number value may be followed by white space.
5.4.3. x:Double Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Double (5.2.9). Table 64: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Double Text Syntax Property Value [values] Infinity [is case sensitive]=True; -Infinity [is case sensitive]=True; NaN [is case sensitive]=True 54 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 [patterns] [+-]?(([\d,]+(\.\d*)?)|([\d,]*\.\d+))([eE][+-]?\d+)? Informally, the [patterns] allows optional leading whitespace followed by an optional + or sign, followed by a decimal number that takes one of two forms, optionally followed by an exponent. The first acceptable form for the decimal number is a sequence of one or more decimal digits, optionally followed by a decimal point which is followed by a sequence of zero or more decimal digits. (E.g. 1 or 1.01.) The second acceptable form for the decimal number is a sequence of zero or more decimal digits, followed by a decimal point which is followed by a sequence of one or more decimal digits. (E.g. .1 or 1.01.) The optional exponent must start with either e or E, it optionally followed by a + or - sign, and then followed by a sequence of one or more decimal digits. Finally, the number value may be followed by white space. 5.4.4. x:Byte Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Byte (5.2.10). Table 65: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Byte Text Syntax Property Value [values] Empty [patterns] \d+
5.4.5. x:Int16 Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Int16 (5.2.11). Table 66: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Int16 Text Syntax Property Value [values] Empty [patterns] *+-]?\d+
5.4.6. x:Int32 Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Int32 (5.2.12). Table 67: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Int32 Text Syntax Property Value [values] Empty [patterns] *+-]?\d+
5.4.7. x:Int64 Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Int64 (5.2.13). 55 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Table 68: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Int64 Text Syntax Property Value [values] Empty [patterns] *+-]?\d+
5.4.8. x:Decimal Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Decimal (5.2.14). Table 69: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Decimal Text Syntax Property Value [values] Empty [patterns] *+-]?\d+
5.4.9. x:Uri Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Uri (x:Uri). Table 70: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Uri Text Syntax Property Value [values] Empty [patterns] *
5.4.10. x:Timespan Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Timespan (x:Timespan). Table 71: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Timespan Text Syntax Property Value [values] Empty [patterns] -?(\d*\.)?\d\d?:\d\d?:((\d\d?)|(\d?\d?\.\d*)); -?\d+
5.4.11. x:Boolean Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:Boolean (5.2.17). Table 72: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:Boolean Text Syntax Property Value [values] True; False 56 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 [patterns] Empty Informally, the [patterns] allows either the string true or false (with any mixture of upper or lower case characters), optionally surrounded by whitespace. 5.4.12. x:XamlType Text Syntax This text syntax defines the acceptable representations of values of type x:XamlType (5.2.19). Table 73: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:XamlType Text Syntax Property Value [values] Empty [patterns] (*_\p{L}][\.- _\p{L}\p{Nd}\p{Mc}]*:)?[_\p{Lu}\p{Ll}\p{Lo}\p{Lt}\p{Nl}\p{Lm}][_\p{Lu}\p{Ll}\p{ Lo}\p{Lt}\p{Nl}\p{Lm}\p{Nd}\p{Mn}\p,Mc-+* [trim whitespace]=False Informally, the [patterns] allows an optional namespace prefix which, if present, must be followed by a colon, followed by a XamlName. 5.4.13. xml:space Text Syntax This text syntax describes the acceptable representations of values of the xml:space Directive (5.3.14). Table 74: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for xml:space Text Syntax Property Value [values] default [is case sensitive]=True [trim whitespace]=False; preserve [is case sensitive]=True [trim whitespace]=False [patterns] Empty 5.4.14. x:XamlEvent Text Syntax This text syntax describes the acceptable representations of event members. Table 75: Text Syntax Information Item Property Values for x:XamlEvent Text Syntax Property Value [values] Empty [patterns] *_\p{Lu}\p{Ll}\p{Lo}\p{Lt}\p{Nl}\p{Lm}][_\p{Lu}\p{Ll}\p{Lo}\p{Lt}\p{Nl}\p{Lm}\p {Nd}\p{Mn}\p,Mc-+* [trim whitespace]=False Informally, the [patterns] allows any XamlName. 5.5 Intrinsic Constructor Information Items This section defines the Constructor Information Item used by the XamlType Information Items defined in section 5.2, Intrinsic XamlType Information Items. 57 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 5.5.1. Static Extension String Constructor This is the only Constructor Information Item for the x:StaticExtension type (5.2.2). It takes a single parameter, a string, which is logically equivalent to the StaticExtension.Member (5.3.18) member. Table 76: Constructor Information Item Property Values for Static Extension String Constructor Property Value [arguments] [ x:String (5.2.6) ]
5.5.2. Type Extension String Constructor This is the only Constructor Information Item for the x:TypeExtension type (5.2.3). It takes a single parameter, a string, which is logically equivalent to the TypeExtension.TypeName (5.3.20) member. Table 77: Constructor Information Item Property Values for x:TypeExtension Property Value [arguments] [ x:String (5.2.6) ]
58 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Section 6. Creating a Xaml Information Set from XML An XML document is a Xaml Document if a well-formed Xaml Information Set can be created from the XML documents XML Infoset. The conversion process is performed with reference to a set of schemas that includes those defined in Section 5, Intrinsic Schema Information Items. Additional vocabulary-specific schemas may (and usually will) also be used as part of the conversion process. In order to construct a Xaml Information set from an XML document, that documents XML Infoset is processed with the rules defined in section 6.6. If the rules in section 6.6 are successfully executed without error, the resulting Xaml Information Set must conform to the constraints in Section 4 in order for the XML document to be said to be a Xaml Document. 6.1 Unavailability of Xaml Schemas XML documents may contain features for which schema information items are not available. This makes it impossible to determine that the document is valid. Implementations MAY choose to process documents despite the absence of schemas, producing a well-formed but potentially invalid Xaml Information Set. Implementations that choose to handle Xaml in the absence of schema MUST generate placeholder Xaml Schema Information Set items to stand in for the missing schema. For example, a Member Node Information Item has a [member] property that refers to a XamlMember Information Item. Without this, there would be no way to know the members name. Section 6.6 includes rules for generating suitable information items. 6.2 Processing Errors Not all XML documents can be successfully converted to a Xaml Information Set. However, it may be useful for Xaml processors to continue processing in the face of an error. This specification does not define what Xaml processors should do in the face of an error Xaml processors MAY terminate processing in the face of an error or they MAY attempt to continue processing. Where the rules in this section identify an error, they incorporate a description. For example, a particular scenario might be described as an Unknown namespace error. The error text is informative, and Xaml processors are not required to do anything with that text. 6.3 Markup Compatibility XML documents containing Xaml may use the Markup Compatibility and Extensibility conventions defined in Part 5 of ECMA-376 [MarkupCompat]. Implementations that convert XML into a Xaml Information Set can process documents in two modes with respect to markup compatibility: raw, and preprocessed. Xaml processors that support XML MUST support at least one of these modes. 59 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 6.3.1. Raw Mode In raw mode, elements and attributes in the XML document from the markup compatibility namespace are processed in exactly the same way as any other elements and attributes, forming object, member, and text nodes as normal. Raw mode is suitable for applications that need to preserve as much of the original documents structure as possible. A Xaml editor might use this mode. 6.3.2. Preprocessed Mode In preprocessed mode, the input XML infoset is transformed by processing the content according to the rules defined in the ECMA Markup Compatibility Specification [MarkupCompat] content is ignored or substituted where appropriate. The markup compatibility elements and attributes are then removed. The resulting XML infoset becomes the input to the conversion process described in this section. 6.3.3. Subsumption Behavior Section 10.2 of the Markup Compatibility specification requires markup consumers to declare which subsumption behavior is used when processing an element from an older namespace that carries a prefixed attribute from a newer, subsuming namespace. In a Xaml Document, if the attribute name contains a . then the expanded name refers to the new namespace, if not, it refers to no namespace. 6.4 XML Information Set References The XML processing rules take an XML Information Set [XML Infoset] as input. To indicate that a particular item is an XML Information Set information item, it is referred to as XML:type, where type is one of the XML Information Set information item types: Table 78: XML Information Set Reference Names Name in This Specification Full Name in XML Information Set XML:document Document Information Item XML:element Element Information Item XML:attribute Attribute Information Item XML:namespace Namespace Information Item XML:character Character Information Item
6.5 Definitions The following definitions are used in the conversion process. 60 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 6.5.1. DottedXamlName A DottedXamlName is a string that conforms to the following grammar (using the syntax defined in RFC4234 [ABNF]): DottedXamlName = XamlName "." XamlName The XamlName production was defined in section 2.2. The first XamlName in a DottedXamlName is referred to as the typename. The second XamlName is referred to as the membername. 6.5.2. Collapsible Whitespace Characters The characters subject to whitespace collapsing are the following three Unicode code points: Table 79: Collapsible Whitespace Characters Unicode Code Point Character 0020 Space 000A LineFeed 0009 Tab Note that it is intentional that this is not a complete list of all whitespace Unicode code points. There are other Unicode codepoints that represent forms of whitespace, but those do not get collapsed. 6.5.3. Linefeed Collapsing Characters The Unicode code points and surrogates in Table 80 and Table 81 are identified as Linefeed Collapsing characters, and are subject to special rules for whitespace collapsing: Table 80: Linefeed Collapsing Code Points Code Point Range (Inclusive) Characters 1100 11FF Hangul 2E80 2FD5 CJK and KangXi Radicals 2FF0 2FFB Ideographic Description 3040 309F Hiragana 30A0 30FF Katakana 3100 312F Bopomofo 3130 318F Hangul Compatibility Jamo 3190 319F Kanbun 31F0 31FF Katakana Phonetic Extensions 3400 4DFF CJK Unified Ideographs Extension A 4E00 9FFF CJK Unified Ideographs A000 A4CF Yi AC00 D7A3 Hangul Syllables F900 FAFF CJK Compatibility FF00 FFEF Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms 61 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008
Table 81: Linefeed Collapsing Surrogates Surrogate Range (Inclusive) Characters 20000 2A6D6 CJK Unified Ext. B 2F800 2FA1D CJK Compatibility Supplement The special rules for these characters are defined later in this specification. 6.5.4. Authoritative Schema For an XML:element e, if a Xaml Schema is available whose [target namespace] matches e[namespace name], that schema is the authoritative schema. For an XML:attribute attr, the authoritative schema is determined as follows: If attr[namespace name] has a value, one of the following two rules applies: if a schema is available whose [target namespace] matches the attributes namespace, that schema is the authoritative schema. if no schema is available whose [target namespace] matches the attributes namespace, this is an Unknown namespace error. If attr[namespace name] does not have a value, one of the following rules applies: if the attr[local name] matches the XamlName production, the authoritative schema is the authoritative schema of the element to which the attribute has been applied. if the attr[local name] matches the DottedXamlName production: o if a schema is available whose [target namespace] matches the default namespace in scope, that is the authoritative schema. o If no schema is available whose [target namespace] matches the default namespace in scope, this is an Unknown namespace error. Otherwise, there is no authoritative schema. The rules in 6.6 use the syntax schema(node) where node is either an XML:element or an XML:attribute. This is shorthand meaning the authoritative schema for either an element or an attribute node. 6.6 Document Processing Rules This section defines rules for processing an XML Infoset to generate a Xaml Information Set. Each rule takes inputs that determine the context in which the rule is executed. Each rule has a single output. Most rules return a Xaml Information Set item, except for a few utility rules used to avoid duplication of logic. (E.g., some rules return a Xaml Schema Information Set item.) 62 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Many of the rules involve several steps. These rules define variables to hold the intermediate results. For clarity, rule inputs and variables are shown with distinctive formatting, as shown in Table 82. Example Meaning myInput An input to a rule myVariable A variable whose value is the intermediate result of a step of a rule Table 82: Rule input and variable formatting Rules often define some steps in terms of other rules. The following formatting convention is used to denote an invocation of a rule: Let resultVar = Invoke Member Node Creation from Content (containingMember ::= contentMember, memberType ::= memberType, childNodes ::= npChildren, preserveXmlSpace ::= space) This signifies that a rule variable called resultVar should be given the value returned by invoking the rule named Member Node Creation from Content, passing various rule variables in as the inputs to the rule. Processing MUST begin by passing the XML:document information item of the information set of the XML document to be processed as the xmlDocument input to the XML:document Processing rule defined in 6.6.1. 6.6.1. XML:document Processing This rule has the following input: Name Type Purpose (non-normative) xmlDocument XML:document The XML document to be processed. The output of this rule is a Xaml Information Set Document Information Item. If xmlDocument[children] contains a document type definition (DTD), it is a Xaml documents must not contain DTDs error. If the document contains entity references other than lt, gt, amp, apos, or quot, it is a Xaml documents must not contain entity references other than lt, gt, amp, apos, or quot error. This rule also implies that xmlDocument[notations] and xmlDocument[unparsed entities] must be empty. A Xaml Document processor MUST support the following encodings in Xaml Documents: UTF-8 and UTF-16. (These encodings are defined in section 3.9 of The Unicode Standard [Unicode], in definitions D92 and D91 respectively.) 63 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Let xamlRoot = Invoke Object Node Creation from an XML:element (xmlObjectElement ::= xmlDocument[document element], parentPreservesXmlSpace ::= False) Comments and processing instructions in xmlDocument[children] MUST be ignored. Let result be a Document Information Item initialized as follows: result[document object] = xamlRoot This rule MUST return result. 6.6.2. Object Node Creation from an XML:element This rule has the following input: Name Type Purpose (non-normative) xmlObjectElement XML:element An XML element representing an object. parentPreservesXmlSpace Boolean Indicates whether xml:space="preserve" is in effect for this nodes parent. The output of this rule is a Xaml Information Set Object Node Information Item. Let objectType be a XamlType Information Item determined as follows: If schema(xmlObjectElement)[types] contains a type t where t[name] matches xmlObjectElement[local name], let objectType be that t. Otherwise, if schema(xmlObjectElement)[types] contains a type t where t[name] matches the concatenation of xmlObjectElement*local name+ and Extension and t[types assignable to] contains the x:MarkupExtension type (5.2.21), let objectType be that t. Otherwise, it is an unknown element type error. Let preserveChildXmlSpace be a Boolean value determined as follows: If xmlObjectElement[attributes] contains an XML:attribute corresponding to the standard xml:space attribute, let preserveChildXmlSpace be True if the attributes *normalized value+ is preserve, and let it be False otherwise. Otherwise, let preserveChildXmlSpace be parentPreservesXmlSpace. Let childXmlNodes be xmlObjectElement[children] If objectType is either of the intrinsic types x:Code (5.2.22) or x:XData (5.2.23), then: 64 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Let literalResult be an Object Node Information Item initialized as follows: literalResult[type] = objectType literalResult[member nodes] is set to a single text node, whose value is a string representation of xmlObjectElement[children] literalResult[parent member] is not determined by the rules in this section it is set by the rule from which this rule was invoked, or in the case of the root element, it is Null. literalResult[is retrieved] is False literalResult[xml namespace mappings] is generated as follows: Invoke Xml Namespace Mapping Conversion (xmlNamespaces ::= xmlObjectElement[in-scope namespaces]) The output of this rule is literalResult. Otherwise, proceed with the remaining steps in this rule. The nodes in childXmlNodes are processed in phases to produce a sequence of information items. The following list shows a summary of the phases, which are described in detail below. 1. Conversion: childXmlNodes is converted into a sequence of items, where each item is either an object node, a member node, or a text node. 2. Whitespace removal: text nodes between member nodes, or before the first member node, or after the last member node, are stripped out. 3. Content wrapping: text or object nodes are wrapped in implicit member nodes; the sequence now contains only member nodes. Conversion Conversion builds an intermediate result, convertedChildNodes, which is an ordered sequence that may contain Object Node Information Items, Member Node Information Items, or Text Node Information Items. It is generated by applying the first of the following steps that matches to each xmlChild in childXmlNodes in document order. If xmlChild is an XML:element: o If xmlChild[local name] is a XamlName: Let convertedObject = Invoke Object Node Creation from an XML:element (xmlObjectElement ::= xmlChild, parentPreservesXmlSpace ::= preserveChildXmlSpace) 65 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 then append convertedObject to convertedChildNodes. o Otherwise, if xmlChild[local name] is a DottedXamlName: Let convertedMember = Invoke Member Node Creation from an XML:element (xmlObjectElement ::= xmlChild) then append convertedMember to convertedChildNodes. o Otherwise, it is an Invalid element name syntax error. If xmlChild is an XML:character: o If convertedChildNodes ends in a Text Node Information Item, append the Unicode character identified by xmlChild[character code] to that nodes [text]. o Otherwise, append to convertedChildNodes a new Text Node Information Item with a [text] value containing the Unicode character identified by xmlChild[character code]. (The [parent member] will be set later.) An XML node of any other type is ignored, and will not cause an item to be added to convertedChildNodes. If convertedChildNodes contains any Object Node Information Item with a [type] of the intrinsic x:Code (5.2.22), remove these from convertedChildNodes. If convertedChildNodes contains an Member Node Information Items whose [values] contain any Object Node Information Items with a [type] of the intrinsic x:Code (5.2.22), remove these from that [values]. Let codeItems be the Object Node Information Items removed by the steps in the previous paragraph. If codeItems is not empty, add a new Member Node Information Item called directiveChildren initialized as follows: directiveChildren[member] is the intrinsic x:DirectiveChildren (5.3.12) XamlMember Information Item directiveChildren[values] contains the Object Node Information Items in codeItems, with the [parent member] of each item set to directiveChildren directiveChildren[parent object] is set later on in this section. directiveChildren[xml namespace mappings] is generated as follows: Invoke Xml Namespace Mapping Conversion (xmlNamespaces ::= xmlObjectElement[in-scope namespaces])
66 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Whitespace Removal Whitespace removal takes convertedChildNodes and strips out whitespace between member nodes to form a new intermediate result, strippedChildNodes. For the purposes of this section, whitespace characters are those listed in section 6.5.2, Collapsible Whitespace Characters. Removal proceeds as follows: For each node convertedChild in convertedChildNodes: If convertedChild is a Text Node Information Item, and if its [text] contains only whitespace, then ignore the node if any of the following is true: o convertedChild is the first item in convertedChildNodes, and is followed immediately by a member node. o convertedChild immediately follows a member node and is followed immediately by a member node. o convertedChild immediately follows a member node and is the last item in convertedChildNodes, and either strippedChildNodes already contains one or more text nodes, or convertedChildNodes contains a member node whose [member] is objectType[content property]. Otherwise, append convertedChild to strippedChildNodes. Content Wrapping Content wrapping proceeds as follows. Define contentMember and contentMemberType with the first of the following to match: If objectType[content property] is not Null, let contentMember be objectType[content property], and let contentMemberType be contentMember[value type]. Otherwise, let contentMember be the intrinsic x:Items (5.3.1), and let contentMemberType be objectType. Let attributeMembers be the set of Member Node Information Items generated by applying the following invocation for each xmlAttribute in xmlObjectElement[attributes]: Invoke Member Node Creation from an XML:attribute (xmlAttribute ::= xmlAttribute, objectType ::= objectType, namespacesInScope ::= xmlObjectElement[in-scope namespaces]) Let members be a set of Member Node Information Items. If all of the following are True: 67 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 strippedChildNodes contains exactly one Text Node Information Item and strippedChildNodes either contains no other items, or contains only a Member Node Information Items whose [member] is the intrinsic x:DirectiveChildren (5.3.12). attributeMembers is either empty, or contains only Member Node Information Items whose [member] is either the x:Key Directive (5.3.5) or the x:Uid Directive (5.3.6). either contentMember[text syntax] is not Null or objectType[text syntax] is not Null. then let members contain just a single Member Node Information Item initTextMember initialized as follows: initTextMember[member] is the intrinsic x:InitializationText (5.3.3) member initTextMember[parent object] is set later in this rule initTextMember[values] contains the single text node in strippedChildNodes Otherwise, let members be the union of the following three sets: attributeMembers. The set of Member Node Information Items generated by applying the following invocation for each consecutive sequence npChildren of non-member-node items in strippedChildNodes: Invoke Member Node Creation from Content (containingMember ::= contentMember, memberType ::= contentMemberType, childNodes ::= npChildren, preserveXmlSpace ::= preserveChildXmlSpace) The set of items in strippedChildNodes that are Member Node Information Items. Let result be an Object Node Information Item initialized as follows: result[type] = objectType result[member nodes] is set to members, with [parent object] of each Member Node Information Item set to result result[parent member] is not determined by the rules in this section it is set by the rule from which this rule was invoked, or in the case of the root element, it is Null. result[is retrieved] is False result[xml namespace mappings] is generated as follows: Invoke Xml Namespace Mapping Conversion (xmlNamespaces ::= xmlObjectElement[in-scope namespaces]) 68 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 This rule MUST return result. 6.6.2.1. Notes (non-normative) The content wrapping process can end up producing more than one content member. For example, consider the following XML: <MyObject> Some content <MyObject.Prop>BarValue</MyObject.Prop> More content </MyObject> If <MyObject> represents an object node, its [member nodes] will contain two content nodes, one representing each piece of text. The well-formedness rules in Section 4 require that Xaml processors identify this as an error a Xaml Information Set is not well formed if an object node contains two member nodes with the same XamlMember Information Item. (See 4.2.1.3.) However, for some applications (e.g. Xaml editors) it may be useful to carry on document processing even when a document is known not to be valid. The example XML shown above is conceptually equivalent to this: <MyObject> <MyObject.Content> Some content </MyObject.Content> <MyObject.Prop>BarValue</MyObject.Prop> <MyObject.Content> More content </MyObject.Content> </MyObject > Where Content is MyObjects content member. This makes it more obvious why this is not considered well-formed Xaml. The error is the same in both cases the same member appearing twice in one element. The only difference in the first example is that the content member has not been spelled out as a member element. 6.6.3. Member Node Creation from an XML:attribute This rule has the following inputs: Name Type Purpose (non-normative) xmlAttribute XML:attribute An XML attribute present on an element representing an object. objectType XamlType Information Item The type of object that the attributes containing element represents. 69 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 namespacesInScope Set of XML:namespaces Namespaces in scope for the element that contains this attribute The output of this rule is a Xaml Information Set Member Node Information Item. Let member be a XamlMember Information Item determined by the following: If xmlAttribute[local name] is a XamlName o If schema(xmlAttribute)[types] contains objectType schema(xmlAttribute)[compatible with schemas] contains a schema whose [types] contains objectType or a schema is available whose [types] contains objectType and whose [compatible with schemas] contains schema(xmlAttribute) Define memberInfo as follows: Let memberInfo = Invoke Member Lookup (definingType ::= objectType, memberName ::= xmlAttribute[local name]) If memberInfo is not Null, let member be memberInfo o If the previous step does not determine a value for member, if there exists a XamlMember Information Item in schema(xmlAttribute)[directives] for which the [name] property matches xmlAttribute[local name], let member be that XamlMember Information Item. o If neither of the previous steps determines a value for member, it is an unknown member error. If xmlAttribute[local name] is a DottedXamlName o Let typeName be the DottedXamlNames typename. o Let memberName be the DottedXamlNames membername. o Let definingType be a XamlType Information Item determined as follows If schema(xmlAttribute)[types] contains objectType and objectType[types assignable to] contains a XamlType Information Item where [name] matches typeName, let definingType be objectType. Otherwise, if schema(xmlAttribute)[types] contains a XamlType Information Item xt where xt[name] matches typeName, let definingType be xt. Otherwise, it is an unknown type error. o Define memberInfo as follows: Let memberInfo = Invoke Member Lookup (definingType ::= definingType, memberName ::= memberName) 70 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 o If memberInfo is not Null, let member be memberInfo. o Otherwise it is an unknown member error. Otherwise, it is an invalid attribute syntax error. If member[allowed location] is None, it is an unknown member error. Let attributeText be the string xmlAttribute[normalized value]. The member will contain a single value, attributeValue, which is calculated as follows: Let attributeValue = Invoke Value Creation from Attribute Text (valueText ::= attributeText, attributeMemberType ::= member[value type], namespacesInScope ::= namespacesInScope) If attributeValue is an Object Node Information Item, its [parent member] is set to result. If attributeValue is a Text Node Information Item, its [parent member] is set to result. Let result be a Member Node Information Item initialized as follows: result[member] = member result[parent object] is not set by this rule it is set by the invoker of this rule result[values] = a collection containing a single item, attributeValue This rule MUST return result. 6.6.3.1. Notes (non-normative) The rules in this section consider attributes that match the XamlName production, and that are not qualified with a namespace prefix to be equivalent to attributes explicitly placed in the same namespace as their containing element. For example, this <q:MyObject Prop="42" /> Is equivalent to this: <q:MyObject q:Prop="42" /> In particular, note that this means an unqualified attribute is not necessarily considered to be in the default namespace. That will only be the case if the element happens to be in the default namespace in scope. So if d: is a prefix for the namespace that is also the default namespace in scope, the following are all equivalent: <AnotherObject AnotherProp="99" /> 71 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 <d:AnotherObject AnotherProp="99" /> <AnotherObject d:AnotherProp="99" /> <d:AnotherObject d:AnotherProp="99" /> Attributes representing attached properties are handled differently. If they are not qualified with a namespace prefix, they are considered to be equivalent to attributes explicitly placed in the default namespace. 6.6.4. Value Creation from Attribute Text This rule has the following inputs: Name Type Purpose (non-normative) valueText Text String The text value to represent as a value. (Either an attribute value, or a string nested inside a markup extension attribute value.) attributeMemberType XamlType Information Item Type of value this text represents namespacesInScope Set of XML:namespaces The set of namespaces in scope on the element in which this text value appears. The output of this rule will either be an Object Node Information Item or a Text Node Information Item. Let result be defined as follows: If valueText begins with , and does not begin with ,-, the value is an Object Node Information Item determined as follows: Let result = Invoke Object Node Creation from a Markup Extension in an Attribute (attributeText ::= valueText, namespacesInScope ::= namespacesInScope)
Otherwise, let unescapedValue be a Text String defined as follows: o if valueText begins with ,-, unescapedValue is valueText with the leading ,- removed. o Otherwise, unescapedValue is valueText. Let result be a new Text Node Information Item whose [text] is unescapedValue and whose [parent member] is set by the invoker of this rule. This rule MUST return result. 72 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 6.6.5. Member Node Creation from an XML:element This rule has the following inputs: Name Type Purpose (non-normative) xmlMemberElement XML:element An XML element representing a member. containingType XamlType Information Item The type of the object node to which this member will belong. parentPreservesXmlSpace Boolean Indicates whether xml:space="preserve" is in effect for this nodes parent. The output of this rule is a member node. This does not set the [parent object] property the invoker of this rule must provide the value for that property. If xmlMemberElement[attributes] is not empty, it may only contain a single attribute, whose [local name] MUST be Uid, and whose *namespace name+ MUST be the [target namespace] of the x: Schema (http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml). If xmlMemberElement[attributes] contains anything other than this, it is a member elements cannot contain attributes error. Xaml processors MAY choose to continue processing by ignoring any attributes. (Note that in the case where the x:Uid (5.3.6) attribute is present, it is ignored no Xaml Information Set elements are created to represent the attribute. The only difference between this and any other attribute is that the x:Uids presence is not deemed to be an error.) This rule is only invoked when xmlMemberElement[local name] is a DottedXamlName. Let elementTypeName and elementMemberName be the typename and membername respectively of this DottedXamlName. Let ownerType be a XamlType Information Item determined as follows: If schema(xmlMemberElement)[types] contains a type t where t[name] matches elementTypeName, then: o If containingType[types assignable to] contains t, let ownerType be containingType. o Otherwise, let ownerType be t. Otherwise, it is an unknown element type error. Let resolvedMember be a XamlMember Information Item determined as follows: Define memberInfo as follows: Let memberInfo = Invoke Member Lookup (definingType ::= ownerType, memberName ::= elementMemberName) 73 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 If memberInfo is not Null, let resolvedMember be memberInfo. Otherwise, it is a member not found error. If memberInfo [allowed location] is not Any, it is a member not found error. Let convertedChildNodes be an ordered sequence that may contain Object Node Information Items or Text Node Information Items. (Note: the following part is similar to the conversion process in the Object Node Creation from an XML:element rule. The difference is that here, member elements are not permitted as children, since these elements are already inside a member element.) It is generated by applying the first of the following steps that matches to each xmlChild in childXmlNodes in document order. If xmlChild is an XML:element: o If xmlChild[local name] is a XamlName: Let convertedObject = Invoke Object Node Creation from an XML:element (xmlObjectElement ::= xmlChild, parentPreservesXmlSpace ::= parentPreservesXmlSpace) then append convertedObject to convertedChildNodes. o Otherwise, if xmlChild[local name] is a DottedXamlName, it is a Member elements may not be nested directly inside of another member element error. o Otherwise, it is an Invalid element name syntax error. If xmlChild is an XML:character: o If convertedChildNodes ends in a Text Node Information Item, append the Unicode character identified by xmlChild[character code] to that nodes [text]. o Otherwise, append to convertedChildNodes a new Text Node Information Item with a [text] value containing the Unicode character identified by xmlChild[character code]. (The [parent member] will be set later.) An XML node of any other type is ignored, and will not cause an item to be added to convertedChildNodes.
Let result = Invoke Member Node Creation from Content (containingMember ::= resolvedMember, memberType ::= resolvedMember[value type], childNodes ::= convertedChildNodes, preserveXmlSpace ::= parentPreservesXmlSpace)
74 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 This rule MUST return result. 6.6.6. Member Node Creation from Content This rule has the following inputs: Name Type Purpose (non-normative) containingMember XamlMember Information Item The kind of member to create memberType XamlType Information Item The type of the member. (This is not always the same as containingMember[value type]. If this rule is invoked for the implicit content of a list-like object node, containingMember will be the intrinsic x:Items (5.3.1) member, while memberType will be the containing objects type.) childNodes Ordered Collection of items, where each item is either an Object Node Information Item or a Text Node Information Item The text and object nodes to be processed and wrapped preserveXmlSpace Boolean
Indicates whether XML space preservation is on for the elements to be processed. namespacesInScope Set of XML:namespaces Namespaces in scope for the element that contains this content. The output of this rule is a Member Node Information Item. For the purposes of this section, whitespace characters are those listed in section 6.5.2, Collapsible Whitespace Characters. If preserveXmlSpace is False, apply the following steps: For each Text Node Information Item in childNodes, any linefeed character (LF Unicode Code Point 000A) both preceded and followed by characters in the ranges defined in section 6.5.3, Linefeed Collapsing Characters is removed. For each Text Node Information Item in childNodes, replace any sequence of whitespace characters with a single space. If childNodes contains at least one Text Node Information Item, trim any leading whitespace from the first Text Node Information Item; if this leaves the nodes [text] empty, remove the node from childNodes. If childNodes contains at least one Text Node Information Item, trim any trailing whitespace from the last text node; if this leaves the nodes [text] empty, remove the node from childNodes. For each object node obn in childNodes, if obn[type][trim surrounding whitespace] is True apply the following rules: 75 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 o If childNodes contains a text node as the item before obn, trim any trailing whitespace from that text node; if this leaves the text node empty, remove it from childNodes. o If childNodes contains a text node as the item after obn, trim any leading whitespace from that text node; if this leaves the text node empty, remove it from childNodes. If memberType[is whitespace significant collection] is False, then for each text node tn in childNodes, trim leading and trailing whitespace; if this leaves the text node empty, remove it from childNodes. Let outputValues be an ordered collection of information items, where items are either Object Node Information Items, or Text Node Information Items, determined as follows: If either memberType[is list] or memberType[is dictionary] are True, and childNodes does not contain a single Object Node Information Item obj where [type][types assignable to] contains memberType then let retrievedContentMember be a new Member Node Information Item where retrievedContentMember[member] is the intrinsic x:Items (5.3.1) XamlMember Information Item retrievedContentMember[values] is childNodes retrievedContentMember[parent object] the retrievedMemberValue defined next let retrievedValue be a new Object Node Information Item where retrievedValue[type] is memberType retrievedValue[member nodes] contains just retrievedContentMember retrievedValue[parent member] is set below retrievedValue[is retrieved] is True retrievedValue[xml namespace mappings] is is generated as follows: Invoke Xml Namespace Mapping Conversion (xmlNamespaces ::= namespacesInScope)
and let outputValues contain just retrievedValue. Otherwise let outputValues be childNodes. Let result be a new Member Node Information Item prop, initialized as follows: result [member] is containingMember result [parent object] is supplied by the invoker of this rule 76 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 result [values] outputValues, where for each text node tn in values set tn[parent member] to prop; for each object node on in value set on[parent member] to prop This rule MUST return result. 6.6.7. Object Node Creation from a Markup Extension in an Attribute This rule has the following inputs: Name Type Purpose (non-normative) attributeText Text String The text value of the attribute to be handled as a markup extension. containingElementSchema Schema Information Item The schema of the element that contains this attribute namespacesInScope Set of XML:namespaces Namespaces in scope for the element that contains this attribute The output of this rule is an object node. Handling of Markup Extension attribute values is performed in two steps. First, the value MUST be parsed. Then the resulting parse tree MUST be converted into Xaml Information Set nodes. 6.6.7.1. Markup Extension Parsing The attributeText input MUST match the MarkupExtension production in the following grammar (using the syntax defined in RFC4234 [ABNF]): MarkupExtension = "{" TYPENAME 0*1Arguments "}" Arguments = (NamedArgs / (PositionalArgs 0*1("," NamedArgs)) NamedArgs = NamedArg *("," NamedArg) NamedArg = MEMBERNAME "=" STRING PositionalArgs = NamedArg / (STRING 0*1( "," PositionArgs))
TYPENAME, MEMBERNAME and STRING above are special they are not defined in the grammar because they are terminals as far as this ABNF grammar is concerned. This is because Markup Extensions have slightly unusual tokenization rules. With normal ABNF, the input to the grammar is a sequence of characters. But with Markup Extensions, a more complex tokenization process is performed, which presents attributeText as a sequence consisting of the tokens shown in Table 83. Table 83: Markup Extension tokens Token Name Description "{" Opening brace "}" Closing brace "=" Equals sign "," Comma 77 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 TYPENAME String representing the name of a type. Follows a "{" token, space delimited. MEMBERNAME String representing the name of a type. Precedes an "=" token. Delimited by any of "{" "}" "," or "=" tokens. STRING String representing the value of a member. Delimited by any of {},= tokens.
The tokenizer treats as whitespace the characters identified in section 6.5.2, Collapsible Whitespace Characters (i.e. the Unicode code points 0009, 000A, and 0020). The tokenizer consumes characters in attributeText and generates tokens as follows: The tokenizer starts by consuming the initial "{" (Unicode code point 007B) and generating a "{" token. The tokenizer consumes any whitespace characters that immediately follow the "{" character, and does not produce a token to represent these whitespace characters. Next, the tokenizer generates a TYPENAME token to represent the sequence of non-whitespace characters that immediately follows the "{" character. The tokenizer consumes all the characters up to, but not including the first character that is either whitespace or a "}" (Unicode code point 007D) character, and those consumed characters are the TYPENAMEs value. Next, the tokenizer consumes all characters up to but not including the first non-whitespace character, does not produce a token to represent these whitespace characters. The tokenizer proceeds by executing the following rules until all the characters in attributeText have been consumed: If the next character is a "}" (Unicode code point 007D) consume the character and generate a "}" token. If the next character is an "=" (Unicode code point 003D) consume the character and generate an "=" token. If the next character is a "," (Unicode code point 002C) consume the character and generate a "," token. If the next character is not one of ,-=,then it is the start of either a MEMBERNAME or a STRING, To determine which kind of token to produce, the tokenizer MUST first read a text value (see below), and then examine (but not consume) the character immediately following this text value. If the character is =, the token is a MEMBERNAME. Otherwise it is a STRING. If the token is a MEMBERNAME, any leading and trailing whitespace is removed from the text value. 78 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 The text value of either a MEMBERNAME or STRING is read as follows. Leading whitespace characters are consumed without being represented in the generated token. If the first non- whitespace character is a quote (either Unicode code point 0022, Quotation Mark, or 0027, Apostrophe), the tokenizer proceeds as follows: The first quote is consumed and is not represented in the tokens value. The text value becomes the characters up to but not including the next matching quote (i.e. a character of the same code point as the opening quote) that is not preceded by a \ character. All these characters and also the closing quote are consumed. Any \ characters in the resulting text value are removed. Whitespace characters following the closing quote are consumed, and are not represented in the token. But if the first non-whitespace character of the text value is not a quote, then instead, the text value is formed as follows. Initialize the running brace total to 0, then repeat the following rules until they determine that the process is complete: If the next character is a "\" (Unicode code point 005C), consume that "\" without adding it to the text value, then consume the following character and append that to the value. If the next character is a "{" add one to the running brace total, and consume the character, appending it to the value. If the next character is a "}", then the behaviour depends on the running brace total: o If the running brace total is zero, do not consume the "}", do not append any more to the text value; the text value reading process is now complete. o If the running brace total is non-zero, consume the "}", append it to the value, subtract one from the running brace total, and continue the text value reading process. If the next character is a "," or and "=", do not consume that character; the text reading process is now complete. Otherwise, consume the character and append it to the value. The resulting sequence of characters then has leading and trailing whitespace characters removed. The result is the value text. 6.6.7.2. Converting Parsed MarkupExtension to Xaml Information Set Nodes The parsing procedure described in the previous will result in a parse tree with a MarkupExtension production at its root. This is converted into Xaml Information Set nodes as follows. Let extensionType be a XamlType Information Item determined as follows: 79 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Let typeName be the text value of the TYPENAME production of the root MarkupExtension production. If typeName is not a QName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]), it is a bad type extension name error. Let extensionSchema be a Schema Information Item: o If typeName is an UnprefixedName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]), let extensionSchema be containingElementSchema. o If typeName is a PrefixedName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]); perform the following steps: Let typeNamespaceUri be the [uri] of the XML Namespace Mapping in namespacesInScope whose [prefix] matches the typeNames Prefix (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]); if no such XML Namespace Mapping exists, it is a unrecognized namespace prefix error. Let extensionSchema be the schema whose [target namespace] matches typeNamespaceUri. If no such schema is available, this is an Unknown namespace error. Let typeLocalName be the typeNames LocalPart (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]). Let extensionType be the XamlType Information Item in extensionSchema[types] whose [name] matches the concatenation of typeLocalName and the string Extension; if no such XamlType Information Item exists or if extensionType[types assignable to] does not include the intrinsic x:MarkupExtension (5.2.21), let extensionType be the XamlType Information Item in extensionSchema[types] whose [name] matches typeLocalName; if extensionType[types assignable to] does not include the intrinsic x:MarkupExtension (5.2.21), or if no such XamlType Information Item exists it is a unknown markup extension error. Let namedArgs be the set of NamedArg productions in the parse tree. Let namedMembers be a set of Member Node Information Items generated as follows. For each namedArg in namedArgs perform the following steps: Let memberName be the MEMBERNAME production in namedArg If memberName is not a QName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]), it is a bad member name error; if it is a QName, let memberLocalName be the LocalPart of the QName Let memberSchema be defined as follows: o If memberName is a UnprefixedName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]), let memberSchema be extensionSchema. 80 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 o Otherwise, memberName is a PrefixedName (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]); perform the following steps: let memberNamespaceUri be the [uri] of the XML Namespace Mapping in namespacesInScope whose [prefix] matches the memberNames Prefix (as defined in section 4 of [XML Namespaces]) if no such XML Namespace Mapping exists, it is a unrecognized namespace prefix error. Let memberSchema be the schema whose [target namespace] matches memberNamespaceUri. If no such schema is available, this is an Unknown namespace error. Let member be the Member Node Information Item this named argument represents, determined as follows: o If memberLocalName is a XamlName: If memberSchema[types] does not contain extensionType, then it is a markup extension named members MUST either be in the same schema as the extension, or be attached members error. Define memberInfo as follows: Let memberInfo = Invoke Member Lookup (definingType ::= extensionType, memberName ::= memberLocalName) If memberInfo is not Null, let member be memberInfo. Otherwise, it is an unknown member error. o Otherwise, If memberLocalName is a DottedXamlName: Let typeName be the DottedXamlNames typename. Let memberName be the DottedXamlNames membername. Let definingType be a XamlType Information Item determined as follows If memberSchema[types] contains a XamlType Information Item where [name] matches typeName, let definingType be that type. Otherwise, it is an unknown type error. Define memberInfo as follows: Let memberInfo = Invoke Member Lookup (definingType ::= definingType, memberName ::= memberName) If memberInfo is not Null, let member be memberInfo Otherwise it is an unknown member error. Let memberValueText be the STRING production in namedArg. Define memberValue as follows: 81 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Let memberValue = Invoke Value Creation from Attribute Text (valueText ::= memberValueText, attributeMemberType ::= member[value type], namespacesInScope ::= namespacesInScope)
Defined namedMember node as a new Member Node Information Item initialized as follows: namedMember[member]is member namedMember[values] contains just memberValue namedMember[parent object] is set later in this rule Add resulting node to namedMembers. Let positionalArgs be the set of STRING productions that are descendants of the PositionalArgs production in the Arguments production in MarkupExtension production, ordered by increasing depth in the parse tree. Let positionalArgValues be an ordered sequence of Object Node Information Items and Text Node Information Items generated as follows. Let constructorInfo be the Constructor Information Item for the type whose [arguments] contains as many items as there are in positionalArgs. For each positionalArg in positionalArgs perform the following steps: Let argumentType be the Nth item in constructorInfo[arguments] where N is the characterised thus: the current positionalArg is the Nth item in positionalArgs. Calculate argValue, the value of the argument, thus: Let argValue = Invoke Value Creation from Attribute Text (valueText ::= argValueText, attributeMemberType ::= argumentType, namespacesInScope ::= namespacesInScope) Append argValue to positionalArgValues. If positionalArgValues is non-empty, let positionalArgsMember be a new member node where: positionalArgsMember[member] is the intrinsic x:ConstructorArgs (5.3.2) positionalArgsMember[values] is positionalArgValues, where each Object Node Information Item has its [parent member] set to positionalArgsMember and each Text Node Information Item has its [parent member] set to positionalArgsMember positionalArgsMember[parent object] is set below. Otherwise, positionalArgValues is empty, in which case let positionalArgsMember be Null. 82 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Let allArgs be a set of Member Node Information Items that contains all the items in namedMembers, and, if positionalArgsMember is non-Null it also contains positionalArgsMember. Let result be a new Object node: result[type] is extensionType result[member nodes] is allArgs, where the [parent object] property of each item is set to result result[parent member] is result[is retrieved] is False result[xml namespace mappings] is namespacesInScope This rule MUST return result. 6.6.8. Member Lookup This rule has the following inputs: Name Type Purpose (non-normative) definingType XamlType Information Item The type on which to look up the member. memberName Text String The name of the member to find The rules output is a XamlMember Information Item. If definingType[members] contains a member prop where prop[name] matches memberName, this rule MUST return prop. Otherwise, this rule MUST return Null. 6.6.9. Xml Namespace Mapping Conversion This rule has the following inputs: Name Type Purpose (non-normative) xmlNamespaces Set of XML:namespace A set of XML namespace mappings from an XML Infoset The rules output is a set of XML Namespace Mappings, generated as follows: For each XML:namespace xmlNsMapping in xmlNamespaces create an XML Namespace Mapping, setting [uri] to xmlNsMapping[namespace name] and [prefix] to xmlNsMapping[prefix]. This rule MUST return all of the XML Namespace Mappings thus generated.
83 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008
84 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Appendix A: References
RFC 2119 Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels, ed. S. Bradner. March 1997. http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt XML Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fourth Edition), W3C, eds. Tim Bray, Jean Paoli, C.M. Sperberg-McQueen, Eve Maler, Franois Yergeau. 29 September 2006. http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml XML Infoset XML Information Set (Second Edition), W3C, eds. John Cowan, Richard Tobin. 4 February 2004. http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-infoset/ XML Namespaces Namespaces in XML 1.0 (Second Edition), W3C, eds. Tim Bray, Dave Hollander, Andrew Layman, Richard Tobin. 16 August 2006. http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/ XML Schema Part 2 XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition, W3C, eds Paul V. Biron, Kaiser Permanente, Ashok Malhotra. 28 August 2004. http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/ The Unicode Standard The Unicode Consortium. The Unicode Standard, Version 5.0.0, defined by: The Unicode Standard, Version 5.0, (Boston, MA, Addison-Wedley, 2007. ISBN 0-321-48091-0). http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode5.0.0/ 85 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 URI RFC 3986: Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax, T. Berners-Lee, R. Fielding, and L. Masinter, eds. IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force), January 2005. http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3986.txt ABNF RFC 4234: Augmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNF, M D. Crocker, Ed. and P. Overell, IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force), October 2005. http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4234.txt Markup Compatibility and Extensibility Part 5: Markup Compatibility and Extensibility (ECMA-376), ECMA, December 2006. http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-376.htm
86 [MS-XAML] v1.0 Xaml Object Mapping Specification 2006 Copyright 2008 Microsoft Corporation. Release: June 2008 Appendix B: Microsoft .NET Framework Behavior The information in this specification is applicable to the following versions of the Microsoft product: .NET Framework 3.0 .NET Framework 3.5 Exceptions, if any, are noted below. Unless otherwise specified, any statement of optional behavior in this specification prescribed using the terms SHOULD or SHOULD NOT implies .NET Framework behavior in accordance with the SHOULD or SHOULD NOT prescription. Unless otherwise specified, the term MAY implies that .Net Framework does not follow the prescription.