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Specify a target namespace using the targetNamespace attribute (SQLXML 4.0)

Applies to: SQL Server Azure SQL Database

In writing XSD schemas, you can use the XSD targetNamespace attribute to specify a target namespace. This article describes how the XSD targetNamespace, elementFormDefault, and attributeFormDefault attributes work, how they affect the XML instance that is generated, and how XPath queries are specified with namespaces.

You can use the xsd:targetNamespace attribute to place elements and attributes from the default namespace into a different namespace. You can also specify whether the locally declared elements and attributes of the schema should appear qualified by a namespace, either explicitly by using a prefix or implicitly by default. You can use the elementFormDefault and attributeFormDefault attributes on the <xsd:schema> element to globally specify the qualification of local elements and attributes, or you can use the form attribute to specify individual elements and attributes separately.

Examples

To create working samples using the following examples, you must meet certain requirements. For more information, see Requirements for Running SQLXML Examples.

A. Specify a target namespace

The following XSD schema specifies a target namespace by using the xsd:targetNamespace attribute. The schema also sets the elementFormDefault and attributeFormDefault attribute values to "unqualified" (the default value for these attributes). This is a global declaration and affects all the local elements (<Order> in the schema) and attributes (CustomerID, ContactName, and OrderID in the schema).

<xsd:schema xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
    xmlns:sql="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:mapping-schema"
    xmlns:CO="urn:MyNamespace"
    targetNamespace="urn:MyNamespace">
    <xsd:annotation>
        <xsd:appinfo>
            <sql:relationship name="CustOrders"
                parent="Sales.Customer"
                parent-key="CustomerID"
                child="Sales.SalesOrderHeader"
                child-key="CustomerID" />
        </xsd:appinfo>
    </xsd:annotation>

    <xsd:element name="Customer"
        sql:relation="Sales.Customer"
        type="CO:CustomerType" />

    <xsd:complexType name="CustomerType">
        <xsd:sequence>
            <xsd:element name="Order"
                sql:relation="Sales.SalesOrderHeader"
                sql:relationship="CustOrders"
                type="CO:OrderType" />
        </xsd:sequence>
        <xsd:attribute name="CustomerID" type="xsd:string" />
        <xsd:attribute name="SalesPersonID" type="xsd:string" />
    </xsd:complexType>
    <xsd:complexType name="OrderType">
        <xsd:attribute name="SalesOrderID" type="xsd:integer" />
        <xsd:attribute name="CustomerID" type="xsd:string" />
    </xsd:complexType>
</xsd:schema>

In the schema:

  • The CustomerType and OrderType type declarations are global and, therefore, are included in the schema's target namespace. As a result, when these types are referenced in the declaration of <Customer> element and its <Order> child element, a prefix is specified that is associated with the target namespace.

  • The <Customer> element is also included in the target namespace of the schema because it's a global element in the schema.

Execute the following XPath query against the schema:

(/CO:Customer[@CustomerID=1)

The XPath query generates this instance document (only a few of the orders are shown):

<ROOT xmlns:sql="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-sql">
  <y0:Customer xmlns:y0="urn:MyNamespace"
      CustomerID="ALFKI" ContactName="Maria Anders">
        <Order CustomerID="ALFKI" OrderID="10643" />
        <Order CustomerID="ALFKI" OrderID="10692" />
        ...
  </y0:Customer>
  </ROOT>

This instance document defines the urn:MyNamespace namespace and associates a prefix (y0) to it. The prefix is applied only to the <Customer> global element. (The element is global because it is declared as a child of <xsd:schema> element in the schema.)

The prefix isn't applied to the local elements and attributes because the value of elementFormDefault and attributeFormDefault attributes is set to "unqualified" in the schema. The <Order> element is local because its declaration appears as a child of the <complexType> element that defines the <CustomerType> element. Similarly, the attributes (CustomerID, OrderID, and ContactName) are local, not global.

Create a working sample of this schema

  1. Copy the previous schema code and paste it into a text file. Save the file as targetNamespace.xml.

  2. Copy the following template and paste it into a text file. Save the file as targetNameSpaceT.xml in the same directory where you saved targetNamespace.xml.

    <ROOT xmlns:sql="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-sql">
        <sql:xpath-query mapping-schema="targetNamespace.xml"
            xmlns:CO="urn:MyNamespace">
            /CO:Customer[@CustomerID=1]
        </sql:xpath-query>
    </ROOT>
    

    The XPath query in the template returns the <Customer> element for the customer with a CustomerID of 1. The XPath query specifies the namespace prefix for the element in the query and not for the attribute. (Local attributes aren't qualified, as specified in the schema.)

    The directory path specified for the mapping schema (targetNamespace.xml) is relative to the directory where the template is saved. An absolute path also can be specified, for example:

    mapping-schema="C:\MyDir\targetNamepsace.xml"
    
  3. Create and use the SQLXML 4.0 Test Script (Sqlxml4test.vbs) to execute the template.

    For more information, see Using ADO to Execute SQLXML 4.0 Queries.

If the schema specifies elementFormDefault and attributeFormDefault attributes with value "qualified", the instance document has all of the local elements and attributes qualified. You can change the previous schema to include these attributes in the <xsd:schema> element and execute the template again. Because the attributes are now also qualified in the instance, the XPath query changes to include the namespace prefix.

This is the revised XPath query:

/CO:Customer[@CO:CustomerID=1]

This is the XML document that is returned:

<ROOT xmlns:sql="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-sql">
   <y0:Customer xmlns:y0="urn:MyNamespace" CustomerID="1" SalesPersonID="280">
      <Order SalesOrderID="43860" CustomerID="1" />
      <Order SalesOrderID="44501" CustomerID="1" />
      <Order SalesOrderID="45283" CustomerID="1" />
      <Order SalesOrderID="46042" CustomerID="1" />
   </y0:Customer>
</ROOT>