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Using Annotated XSD Schemas in Queries (SQLXML 4.0)

Applies to: SQL Server Azure SQL Database

You can specify queries against an annotated schema to retrieve data from the database by specifying XPath queries in a template against the XSD schema.

The <sql:xpath-query> element allows you to specify an XPath query against the XML view that is defined by the annotated schema. The annotated schema against which the XPath query is to be executed is identified by using the mapping-schema attribute of the <sql:xpath-query> element.

Templates are valid XML documents that contain one or more queries. The FOR XML and XPath queries return a document fragment. Templates act as containers for the document fragments; templates thus provide a way to specify a single, top-level element.

The examples in this topic use templates to specify an XPath query against an annotated schema to retrieve data from the database.

For example, consider this annotated schema:

<xsd:schema xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"   
            xmlns:sql="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:mapping-schema">  
  <xsd:element name="Person.Contact" >  
     <xsd:complexType>  
       <xsd:attribute name="ContactID" type="xsd:string" />   
       <xsd:attribute name="FirstName" type="xsd:string" />   
       <xsd:attribute name="LastName"  type="xsd:string" />   
     </xsd:complexType>  
  </xsd:element>  
</xsd:schema>  

For the purpose of illustration, this XSD schema is stored in file named Schema2.xml. You could then have an XPath query against the annotated schema specified in the following template file (Schema2T.xml):

<sql:xpath-query   
     xmlns:sql="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xmlsql"  
     >  
          Person.Contact[@ContactID="1"]  
</sql:xpath-query>  

You can then create and use the SQLXML 4.0 Test Script (Sqlxml4test.vbs) to execute the query as part of a template file. For more information, see Annotated XDR Schemas (Deprecated in SQLXML 4.0).

Using Inline Mapping Schemas

An annotated schema can be included directly in a template, and then an XPath query can be specified in the template against the inline schema. The template can also be an updategram.

A template can include multiple inline schemas. To use an inline schema that is included in a template, specify the id attribute with a unique value on the <xsd:schema> element, and then use #idvalue to reference the inline schema. The id attribute is identical in behavior to the sql:id ({urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-sql}id) used in XDR schemas.

For example, the following template specifies two inline-annotated schemas:

<ROOT xmlns:sql='urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-sql'>  
<xsd:schema xmlns:xsd='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'  
        xmlns:ms='urn:schemas-microsoft-com:mapping-schema'  
        id='InLineSchema1' sql:is-mapping-schema='1'>  
  <xsd:element name='Employees' ms:relation='HumanResources.Employee'>  
    <xsd:complexType>  
      <xsd:attribute name='LoginID'   
                     type='xsd:string'/>  
      <xsd:attribute name='Title'   
                     type='xsd:string'/>  
    </xsd:complexType>  
  </xsd:element>  
</xsd:schema>  
  
<xsd:schema xmlns:xsd='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'  
        xmlns:ms='urn:schemas-microsoft-com:mapping-schema'  
        id='InLineSchema2' sql:is-mapping-schema='1'>  
  <xsd:element name='Contacts' ms:relation='Person.Contact'>  
    <xsd:complexType>  
  
      <xsd:attribute name='ContactID'   
                     type='xsd:string' />  
      <xsd:attribute name='FirstName'   
                     type='xsd:string' />  
      <xsd:attribute name='LastName'   
                     type='xsd:string' />  
    </xsd:complexType>  
  </xsd:element>  
</xsd:schema>  
  
<sql:xpath-query xmlns:sql='urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-sql'   
        mapping-schema='#InLineSchema1'>  
    /Employees[@LoginID='adventure-works\guy1']  
</sql:xpath-query>  
  
<sql:xpath-query xmlns:sql='urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-sql'   
        mapping-schema='#InLineSchema2'>  
    /Contacts[@ContactID='1']  
</sql:xpath-query>  
</ROOT>  

The template also specifies two XPath queries. Each of the <xpath-query> elements uniquely identifies the mapping schema by specifying the mapping-schema attribute.

When you specify an inline schema in the template, the sql:is-mapping-schema annotation must also be specified on the <xsd:schema> element. The sql:is-mapping-schema takes a Boolean value (0=false, 1=true). An inline schema with sql:is-mapping-schema="1" is treated as inline annotated schema and is not returned in the XML document.

The sql:is-mapping-schema annotation belongs to the template namespace urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xml-sql.

To test this example, save the template (InlineSchemaTemplate.xml) in a local directory and then 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.

In addition to specifying the mapping-schema attribute on the <sql:xpath-query> element in a template (when there is an XPath query), or on <updg:sync> element in an updategram, you can do the following:

  • Specify the mapping-schema attribute on the <ROOT> element (global declaration) in the template. This mapping schema then becomes the default schema that will be used by all XPath and updategram nodes that have no explicit mapping-schema annotation.

  • Specify the mapping schema attribute by using the ADO Command object.

The mapping-schema attribute that is specified on the <xpath-query> or <updg:sync> element has the highest precedence; the ADO Command object has the lowest precedence.

Note that if you specify an XPath query in a template and do not specify a mapping schema against which the XPath query is executed, the XPath query is treated as a dbobject type query. For example, consider this template:

<sql:xpath-query   
     xmlns:sql="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:xmlsql">  
          Production.ProductPhoto[@ProductPhotoID='100']/@LargePhoto  
</sql:xpath-query>  

The template specifies an XPath query but it does not specify a mapping schema. Therefore, this query is treated as a dbobject type query in which Production.ProductPhoto is the table name and @ProductPhotoID='100' is a predicate that finds a product photo with the ID value of 100. @LargePhoto is the column from which to retrieve the value.