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Can anyone see why my xsd restriction is not working?

Update: I tried the exact same xsd as below but in the regex I changed the ( and ) to [ and ].

The version with square brackets works perfectly in the regex testers I tried but produces a schema validation error in the XSD. Yes, oXygen seems to be saying that a regex wrapped in [] is not allowed in an otherwise valid XSD.

So is it XML schema or oXygen that does not support the square-bracketed expression?

Or is it some other reason?

Related (?) question: XSD restriction pattern for accented characters

The aim is to validate only strings conforming to the following 2 content models:

  1. "tokenized":

<xs:simpleType name="Tokenized500Type"> <xs:restriction base="xs:string"> <xs:maxLength value="500"/> <xs:minLength value="1"/> <xs:pattern value="\S+( \S+)*"/> </xs:restriction> </xs:simpleType>

and

  1. (with the tokenization included as the base type) the ASCII character set:

<xs:simpleType name="TransliteratedStringType"> <xs:annotation> <xs:documentation> can only contain non-control characters drawn from the “invariant subset” of ISO 646 (i.e. ASCII). </xs:documentation> </xs:annotation> <xs:restriction base="example:Tokenized500Type"> <xs:pattern value="(!|&quot;|%|&amp;|'|\(|\)|\*|\+|,|-|.|\/|0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9|:|;|&lt;|=|>|\?|A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L| |M|N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z|_|a|b|c|d|e|f|g|h|i|j|k|l|m|n|o|p|q|r|s|t|u|v|w|x|y|z)+" /> </xs:restriction> </xs:simpleType>

I've tested the tokenization separately and it does seem to fit all the use cases it's meant for (removing any unneeded whitespace and restricting string length).

I can't figure out why the ASCII restriction is not working.

I thought perhaps some kind of mapping from characters with diacritics to the equivalent without, but turns out it's allowing other specially characters too, e.g. ß. Is it possible that ß is really mapped to ss? or sz?

Do I need to escape all the characters as unicode code points?

Or is there some kind of error in my use of xs:restriction?

Testing using: - oXygen XML Editor (regex inside XSD) - http://regexr.com/ (regex only)

Test strings:

Dr. Bäcker

Dr. Baecker

...and portions of:

ŦŲƯY̨Ƴąɓçđɗęħįƙłøơşșţțŧųưy̨ƴÁÀÂÄǍĂĀÃÅǺĄÆǼǢƁĆĊĈČÇĎḌĐƊÐÉÈĖÊËĚ ĔĒĘẸƎƏƐĠĜǦĞĢƔáàâäǎăāãåǻąæǽǣɓćċĉčçďḍđɗðéèėêëěĕēęẹǝəɛġĝǧğģɣĤḤĦIÍÌİÎÏǏĬĪĨĮỊIJĴĶƘĹĻŁĽĿʼNŃN̈ŇÑŅŊÓÒÔÖǑŎŌÕŐỌØǾ ƠŒĥḥħıíìiîïǐĭīĩįịijĵķƙĸĺļłľŀʼnńn̈ňñņŋóòôöǒŏōõőọøǿơœŔŘŖŚŜŠŞȘṢẞŤŢṬŦÞÚÙÛÜǓŬŪŨŰŮŲỤƯẂẀŴẄǷÝỲŶŸȲỸƳŹŻŽẒŕřŗſśŝšşșṣßťţṭŧþúùûüǔŭūũűůųụưẃẁŵẅƿýỳŷÿȳỹƴźżžẓ

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    A couple of observations: The ASCII pattern is missing the space (&#20;) and you should not include a bare > (&gt;). More importantly, it should be possible to represent the printable ASCII as "[&#x20;-&#x7E;]+".
    – Meyer
    Nov 24, 2016 at 15:10
  • I like that range, but please note that a basic issue appears to be [] versus () - see update above!
    – Michael
    Nov 24, 2016 at 15:14
  • Hi @SMeyer - I tried escaping the space with &#x20; (I think you missed an x in your comment above?), but still getting the XSD validation error: InvalidRegex: Pattern value '([!|"|%|&|'|(|)|*|\+|,|-|.|\/|0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9|:|;|<|=|>|\?|A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L| |M|N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z|_|a|b|c|d|e|f|g|h|i|j|k|l|m|n|o|p|q|r|s|t|u|v|w|x|y|z])+' is not a valid regular expression. The reported error was: 'This expression is not supported in the current option setting.'.
    – Michael
    Nov 24, 2016 at 15:20
  • @SMeyer I don't think that spaces need to be escaped in XML, or is that a regex thing? Please see w3.org/TR/xml11/#sec-predefined-ent for XML; the regex testers I've tried accepted the literal space.
    – Michael
    Nov 24, 2016 at 15:27
  • There was a missing x, good catch. Yes, the space does not have to be escaped. Though it shouldn't hurt either. I just wanted to be clear which one I'm talking about.
    – Meyer
    Nov 24, 2016 at 15:31

3 Answers 3

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If you want to restrict a string to the printable ASCII characters, you can simply denote a Unicode range like this:

"[&#x20;-&#x7E;]+"

The range for ISO-646 is a bit more complicated, because it is not a continuous sequence:

"[&#x20;-&#x22;&#x25;-&#x3F;A-Z&#x5F;a-z]+"

In your explicit list of characters, you most likely are using an incorrectly escaped character, which causes the error.

5
  • Thanks! I checked the list of escaped characters in XML, it's covered already in this expression. The unicode range above seems to work so far. Could you link to a reference where I can check that all the ISO 646 characters listed in the original regex (an no more) are covered by the range &#x20;-&#x7E;?
    – Michael
    Nov 24, 2016 at 15:52
  • ...Maybe I left the . unescaped? ...Apparently also the schema validation engine (Saxon) doesn't like escaped /... and this was the XSD validation error
    – Michael
    Nov 24, 2016 at 15:56
  • Sorry, I didn't realize that ISO-646 is different from the printable ASCII set. I added the range for that too.
    – Meyer
    Nov 24, 2016 at 16:13
  • I would still need to point to the documentation to verify the specific code range(s) though - the explicit regex is better because it's self-documenting
    – Michael
    Nov 24, 2016 at 16:14
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    The link is included in the answer, i.e. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_646
    – Meyer
    Nov 24, 2016 at 16:22
1

The error message from Saxon tells you exactly what is wrong:

Schema processing failed: Syntax error at char 31 in regular expression: Escape character '/' not allowed

That is to say, the rules for regular expressions in XSD 1.0 do not allow "/" (because "/" isn't special in regular expressions, it doesn't need to be escaped, and XSD doesn't allow characters to be escaped in these circumstances - this is a way of reserving them for future use).

Now I have some questions for you:

  • Did you get this error message?

  • If not, how were you running the validation?

  • If you did get it, why did you ignore it?

1
  • No, I didn't get the message. I think it got lost probably under some other errors; oXygen does that sometimes. Had I gotten it, I sure wouldn't have ignored it! It's a perfect error message. Thanks!
    – Michael
    Nov 24, 2016 at 16:11
0

I would love to give the answer to the other poster here, but the unescaped . was only half the problem.

The / must not be escaped either, given I'm using an XML editor (as stated) based on Saxon, which throws an error for characters that don't need to be escaped.

Full answer here (off-SE): https://www.oxygenxml.com/forum/topic13779.html#p40565

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    Adrian's answer is correct except that it suggests that disallowing "\/" is a Saxon quirk, which isn't the case - it's defined in the XSD 1.0 specification. Nov 24, 2016 at 16:11
  • Yes, I guess it could read that way. Or it could read "because it's Saxon, you get the exact implementation of the XSD 1.0 spec, which disallows \/".
    – Michael
    Nov 24, 2016 at 16:23

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