XSD Empty Elements

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XSD Empty Elements



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An empty complex element cannot have contents, only attributes.



Complex Empty Elements


An empty XML element:





<product prodid="1345" />



The "product" element above has no content at all. To define a type
with no content, we must define a type that allows elements in its content,
but we do not actually declare any elements, like this:





<xs:element name="product">

 
<xs:complexType>

   
<xs:complexContent>

     
<xs:restriction base="xs:integer">

       
<xs:attribute name="prodid" type="xs:positiveInteger"/>

     
</xs:restriction>

   
</xs:complexContent>

 
</xs:complexType>

</xs:element>



In the example above, we define a complex type with a complex content. The complexContent element signals that we intend to restrict or
extend the content model of a complex type, and the restriction of integer declares one attribute but does not introduce any element content.


However, it is possible to declare the "product" element more compactly, like this:





<xs:element name="product">

 
<xs:complexType>

   
<xs:attribute name="prodid" type="xs:positiveInteger"/>

 
</xs:complexType>

</xs:element>



Or you can give the complexType element a name, and let the "product" element
have a type attribute that refers to the name of the complexType (if you use
this method, several elements can refer to the same complex type):





<xs:element name="product" type="prodtype"/>


<xs:complexType name="prodtype">

 
<xs:attribute name="prodid" type="xs:positiveInteger"/>

</xs:complexType>




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