XML Database for CD Rom Presentation

Hi Friend
I have got a small query for you, Basically we are making a
Flash Based CD rom presentation which even includes product
catalog. This product catalog has Category=> Sub Category then
the product i know a way how to do this using access as a database
and then query it and work with it.
But i want to know what if i create a similar data structre
in XML will it be reliable and faster then access please help me
with your advice. Coz i read somewhere that flash first loads the
enite xml file and then it works. So in my case i have 60,000
records which means the p[resentation will stop working coz of this
chunk of datya being loaded.
Please Help
Regards

There is one answer to this same post in the Macromedia Data
Integration
forum.
Lon Hosford
www.lonhosford.com
May many happy bits flow your way!
"vixel.technologies" <[email protected]>
wrote in message
news:e2oaeo$4vj$[email protected]..
Hi Friend
I have got a small query for you, Basically we are making a
Flash Based
CD
rom presentation which even includes product catalog. This
product catalog
has
Category=> Sub Category then the product i know a way how
to do this using
access as a database and then query it and work with it.
But i want to know what if i create a similar data structre
in XML will it
be
reliable and faster then access please help me with your
advice. Coz i read
somewhere that flash first loads the enite xml file and then
it works. So in
my
case i have 60,000 records which means the p[resentation will
stop working
coz
of this chunk of datya being loaded.
Please Help
Regards

Similar Messages

  • Mark Logic vs. Oracle XML Database?

    Hi,
    I'm comparing Mark Logic vs Oracle XML database for a new project. All the data is well structured and validated XML data. Any comments, suggestions, personal experiences with either product will be extremely helpful.
    Thanks in advance,
    Dave

    In 5+ years Oracle will still be the #1 database on the planet and people who have it on their resume will be employable.
    In 5+ years Mark Logic will be out of business, a marginal player, or absorbed by either Oracle, IBM, or Microsoft. Unless you find some great romantic attraction to marginal technologies, can I recommend RPG II or ALGOL or Ingres, I would highly recommend Oracle.
    Right now, at dice.com, there are 1,745 jobs listing Oracle and XML: There are 15 listing Mark Logic.
    But heck the world economy is booming so why let that affect your decision. <g>

  • Possible elements in the instanceconfig.xml file for presentation services

    g'day
    Has anyone here come across a list of all the possible elements that can be put in the configuration file for a presentation service, instanceconfig.xml ?<P>
    I have found next to nothing in the documentations, about what can be configured there.<P>
    What I am specifically after is: How can I change the default listening port for the Presentation Service? The default port is 9710 and I want to move to another port.<P>
    Also, how can I move the JavaHost from the default port 9810? I can change the file <i>OracleBI/web/javahost/config/config.xml</i> to reflect the change. Once the JavaHost has been restarted it starts up on the expected port, but the Presentation Service still tries to communicate over RPC to port 9810. How do I configure the presentation service to search for the JavaHost on a non-default port?<P>
    I have boiled it down to my original question: What are the possible values I can configure in the instanceconfig.xml file?<P>
    Any comments here would be great.<P>
    Cheers,<br>
    Borkur

    So, I had a little breakthrough here.
    I found in the OBIEE deployment guide, page 142:
    To change the Presentation Services listener port
    1 Open the instanceconfig.xml file for editing.
    2 Locate the <WebConfig> element.
    3 Within the <WebConfig> tags, create the element <RPC> and assign it the RPC Listener Port
    value for the BI Presentation Services instance, as shown in the following example.
    <WebConfig>
    <ServerInstance>
    <RPC>
    <Listener port="9715" />
    </RPC>
    </ServerInstance>
    </WebConfig>
    NOTE: In the preceding example, the RPC Listener port for the BI Presentation Services instance
    has been changed to port 9715 from the default of 9710.
    4 Save changes to the file.
    This almost works. The RPC element has been deprecated, as was reported in the sawserver.out.log:
    The configuration entry 'RPC/Listener' is deprecated. Please refer to the admin guide for more information.
    What I then did was to just remove the RPC elements and leaving the Listener element straight under there ServerInstance element. This seems to have solved the problem.
    I still have to figure out how to let the Presentation Service know that I have moved the JavaHost to antoher port ...
    Cheers,
    Borkur

  • Size problem using an external database for the XML driver

    Hi,
    I am getting this error when trying to use an external database for the XML driver, in order to load a large XML file.
    java.sql.SQLException: class org.xml.sax.SAXException
    ORA-01461: can bind a LONG value only for insert into a LONG column
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.v.a(v.java:446)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.v.a(v.java:456)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.v.g(v.java:631)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.v.<init>(v.java:108)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.bw.<init>(bw.java:468)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.bx.b(bx.java:292)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.bx.a(bx.java:270)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.SnpsXmlDriver.connect(SnpsXmlDriver.java:110)
         at com.sunopsis.sql.SnpsConnection.u(SnpsConnection.java)
         at com.sunopsis.sql.SnpsConnection.a(SnpsConnection.java)
         at com.sunopsis.sql.SnpsConnection.testConnection(SnpsConnection.java)
         at com.sunopsis.sql.SnpsConnection.testConnection(SnpsConnection.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.o(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.r(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.g(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.a(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.a(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.iz.actionPerformed(iz.java)
         at javax.swing.AbstractButton.fireActionPerformed(AbstractButton.java:1995)
         at javax.swing.AbstractButton$Handler.actionPerformed(AbstractButton.java:2318)
         at javax.swing.DefaultButtonModel.fireActionPerformed(DefaultButtonModel.java:387)
         at javax.swing.DefaultButtonModel.setPressed(DefaultButtonModel.java:242)
         at javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicButtonListener.mouseReleased(BasicButtonListener.java:236)
         at java.awt.Component.processMouseEvent(Component.java:6263)
         at javax.swing.JComponent.processMouseEvent(JComponent.java:3267)
         at java.awt.Component.processEvent(Component.java:6028)
         at java.awt.Container.processEvent(Container.java:2041)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEventImpl(Component.java:4630)
         at java.awt.Container.dispatchEventImpl(Container.java:2099)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEvent(Component.java:4460)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.retargetMouseEvent(Container.java:4574)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.processMouseEvent(Container.java:4238)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.dispatchEvent(Container.java:4168)
         at java.awt.Container.dispatchEventImpl(Container.java:2085)
         at java.awt.Window.dispatchEventImpl(Window.java:2478)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEvent(Component.java:4460)
         at java.awt.EventQueue.dispatchEvent(EventQueue.java:599)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpOneEventForFilters(EventDispatchThread.java:269)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEventsForFilter(EventDispatchThread.java:184)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEventsForFilter(EventDispatchThread.java:178)
         at java.awt.Dialog$1.run(Dialog.java:1046)
         at java.awt.Dialog$3.run(Dialog.java:1098)
         at java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged(Native Method)
         at java.awt.Dialog.show(Dialog.java:1096)
         at java.awt.Component.show(Component.java:1563)
         at java.awt.Component.setVisible(Component.java:1515)
         at java.awt.Window.setVisible(Window.java:842)
         at java.awt.Dialog.setVisible(Dialog.java:986)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.q(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.<init>(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.frame.b.jh.bx(jh.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.frame.bo.w(bo.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.frame.bo.d(bo.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.frame.w.actionPerformed(w.java)
         at javax.swing.AbstractButton.fireActionPerformed(AbstractButton.java:1995)
         at javax.swing.AbstractButton$Handler.actionPerformed(AbstractButton.java:2318)
         at javax.swing.DefaultButtonModel.fireActionPerformed(DefaultButtonModel.java:387)
         at javax.swing.DefaultButtonModel.setPressed(DefaultButtonModel.java:242)
         at javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicButtonListener.mouseReleased(BasicButtonListener.java:236)
         at java.awt.Component.processMouseEvent(Component.java:6263)
         at javax.swing.JComponent.processMouseEvent(JComponent.java:3267)
         at java.awt.Component.processEvent(Component.java:6028)
         at java.awt.Container.processEvent(Container.java:2041)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEventImpl(Component.java:4630)
         at java.awt.Container.dispatchEventImpl(Container.java:2099)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEvent(Component.java:4460)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.retargetMouseEvent(Container.java:4574)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.processMouseEvent(Container.java:4238)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.dispatchEvent(Container.java:4168)
         at java.awt.Container.dispatchEventImpl(Container.java:2085)
         at java.awt.Window.dispatchEventImpl(Window.java:2478)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEvent(Component.java:4460)
         at java.awt.EventQueue.dispatchEvent(EventQueue.java:599)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpOneEventForFilters(EventDispatchThread.java:269)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEventsForFilter(EventDispatchThread.java:184)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEventsForHierarchy(EventDispatchThread.java:174)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEvents(EventDispatchThread.java:169)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEvents(EventDispatchThread.java:161)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.run(EventDispatchThread.java:122)
    The error comes up when testing the XML Data Server in the Topology Manager
    I pasted a segment of the XML below. Notice that the <QueryAlignmentSequence> value might be a large string, as large as 6000 bytes.
    I also tried setting the varchar_length above 4000 in the external database .properties file that the XML driver reads, but the I get this error (which makes sense):
    java.sql.SQLException: ORA-00910: specified length too long for its datatype
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.bz.execute(bz.java:109)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.ca.execute(ca.java:30)
         at com.sunopsis.xmlfifth.h.u.a(u.java:198)
         at com.sunopsis.xmlfifth.h.bj.a(bj.java:52)
    How can I import this? If I use the default "In Memory" XML connection, I get a Null pointer exception when I try to reverse it, per this other thread I posted
    Unable to Reverse an XML file
    I am dead in the water and getting very disappointed by this tool..
    Please help
    <Query><Name>IOH36464</Name><Header>IOH36464</Header><Length>5076</Length><Targets><Target><Name>NM_033380.1</Name><NcbiGeneId>1287</NcbiGeneId><GeneSymbol>COL4A5</GeneSymbol><TaxonomyId>9606</TaxonomyId><Description>Homo sapiens collagen, type IV, alpha 5 (COL4A5), transcript variant 2, mRNA</Description><Length>6445</Length><TargetAlignments><TargetAlignment><QueryStart>1</QueryStart><QueryEnd>5075</QueryEnd><TargetStart>203</TargetStart><TargetEnd>5277</TargetEnd><BitScore>10060.9</BitScore><PercentIdentity>100</PercentIdentity><Score>5075</Score><QueryAlignmentSequence>ATGAAACTGCGTGGAGTCAGCCTGGCTGCCGGCTTGTTCTTACTGGCCCTGAGTCTTTGGGGGCAGCCTGCAGAGGCTGCGGCTTGCTATGGGTGTTCTCCAGGATCAAAGTGTGACTGCAGTGGCATAAAAGGGGAAAAGGGAGAGAGAGGGTTTCCAGGTTTGGAAGGACACCCAGGATTGCCTGGATTTCCAGGTCCAGAAGGGCCTCCGGGGCCTCGGGGACAAAAGGGTGATGATGGAATTCCAGGGCCACCAGGACCAAAAGGAATCAGAGGTCCTCCTGGACTTCCTGGATTTCCAGGGACACCAGGTCTTCCTGGAATGCCAGGCCACGATGGGGCCCCAGGACCTCAAGGTATTCCCGGATGCAATGGAACCAAGGGAGAACGTGGATTTCCAGGCAGTCCCGGTTTTCCTGGTTTACAGGGTCCTCCAGGACCCCCTGGGATCCCAGGTATGAAGGGTGAACCAGGTAGTATAATTATGTCATCACTGCCAGGACCAAAGGGTAATCCAGGATATCCAGGTCCTCCTGGAATACAAGGCCTACCTGGTCCCACTGGTATACCAGGGCCAATTGGTCCCCCAGGACCACCAGGTTTGATGGGCCCTCCTGGTCCACCAGGACTTCCAGGACCTAAGGGGAATATGGGCTTAAATTTCCAGGGACCCAAAGGTGAAAAAGGTGAGCAAGGTCTTCAGGGCCCACCTGGGCCACCTGGGCAGATCAGTGAACAGAAAAGACCAATTGATGTAGAGTTTCAGAAAGGAGATCAGGGACTTCCTGGTGACCGAGGGCCTCCTGGACCTCCAGGGATACGTGGTCCTCCAGGTCCCCCAGGTGGTGAGAAAGGTGAGAAGGGTGAGCAAGGAGAGCCAGGCAAAAGAGGTAAACCAGGCAAAGATGGAGAAAATGGCCAACCAGGAATTCCTGGTTTGCCTGGTGATCCTGGTTACCCTGGTGAACCCGGAAGGGATGGTGAAAAGGGCCAAAAAGGTGACACTGGCCCACCTGGACCTCCTGGACTTGTAATTCCTAGACCTGGGACTGGTATAACTATAGGAGAAAAAGGAAACATTGGGTTGCCTGGGTTGCCTGGAGAAAAAGGAGAGCGAGGATTTCCTGGAATACAGGGTCCACCTGGCCTTCCTGGACCTCCAGGGGCTGCAGTTATGGGTCCTCCTGGCCCTCCTGGATTTCCTGGAGAAAGGGGTCAGAAAGGTGATGAAGGACCACCTGGAATTTCCATTCCTGGACCTCCTGGACTTGACGGACAGCCTGGGGCTCCTGGGCTTCCAGGGCCTCCTGGCCCTGCTGGCCCTCACATTCCTCCTAGTGATGAGATATGTGAACCAGGCCCTCCAGGCCCCCCAGGATCTCCAGGTGATAAAGGACTCCAAGGAGAACAAGGAGTGAAAGGTGACAAAGGTGACACTTGCTTCAACTGCATTGGAACTGGTATTTCAGGGCCTCCAGGTCAACCTGGTTTGCCAGGTCTCCCAGGTCCTCCAGGATCTCTTGGTTTCCCTGGACAGAAAGGGGAAAAAGGACAAGCTGGTGCAACTGGTCCCAAAGGATTACCAGGCATTCCAGGAGCTCCAGGTGCTCCAGGCTTTCCTGGATCTAAAGGTGAACCTGGTGATATCCTCACTTTTCCAGGAATGAAGGGTGACAAAGGAGAGTTGGGTTCCCCTGGAGCTCCAGGGCTTCCTGGTTTACCTGGCACTCCTGGACAGGATGGATTGCCAGGGCTTCCTGGCCCGAAAGGAGAGCCTGGTGGAATTACTTTTAAGGGTGAAAGAGGTCCCCCTGGGAACCCAGGTTTACCAGGCCTCCCAGGGAATATAGGGCCTATGGGTCCCCCTGGTTTCGGCCCTCCAGGCCCAGTAGGTGAAAAAGGCATACAAGGTGTGGCAGGAAATCCAGGCCAGCCAGGAATACCAGGTCCTAAAGGGGATCCAGGTCAGACTATAACCCAGCCGGGGAAGCCTGGCTTGCCTGGTAACCCAGGCAGAGATGGTGATGTAGGTCTTCCAGGTGACCCTGGACTTCCAGGGCAACCAGGCTTGCCAGGGATACCTGGTAGCAAAGGAGAACCAGGTATCCCTGGAATTGGGCTTCCTGGACCACCTGGTCCCAAAGGCTTTCCTGGAATTCCAGGACCTCCAGGAGCACCTGGGACACCTGGAAGAATTGGTCTAGAAGGCCCTCCTGGGCCACCCGGCTTTCCAGGACCAAAGGGTGAACCAGGATTTGCATTACCTGGGCCACCTGGGCCACCAGGACTTCCAGGTTTCAAAGGAGCACTTGGTCCAAAAGGTGATCGTGGTTTCCCAGGACCTCCGGGTCCTCCAGGACGCACTGGCTTAGATGGGCTCCCTGGACCAAAAGGTGATGTTGGACCAAATGGACAACCTGGACCAATGGGACCTCCTGGGCTGCCAGGAATAGGTGTTCAGGGACCACCAGGACCACCAGGGATTCCTGGGCCAATAGGTCAACCTGGTTTACATGGAATACCAGGAGAGAAGGGGGATCCAGGACCTCCTGGACTTGATGTTCCAGGACCCCCAGGTGAAAGAGGCAGTCCAGGGATCCCCGGAGCACCTGGTCCTATAGGACCTCCAGGATCACCAGGGCTTCCAGGAAAAGCAGGTGCCTCTGGATTTCCAGGTACCAAAGGTGAAATGGGTATGATGGGACCTCCAGGCCCACCAGGACCTTTGGGAATTCCTGGCAGGAGTGGTGTACCTGGTCTTAAAGGTGATGATGGCTTGCAGGGTCAGCCAGGACTTCCTGGCCCTACAGGAGAAAAAGGTAGTAAAGGAGAGCCTGGCCTTCCAGGCCCTCCTGGACCAATGGATCCAAATCTTCTGGGCTCAAAAGGAGAGAAGGGGGAACCTGGCTTACCAGGTATACCTGGAGTTTCAGGGCCAAAAGGTTATCAGGGTTTGCCTGGAGACCCAGGGCAACCTGGACTGAGTGGACAACCTGGATTACCAGGACCACCAGGTCCCAAAGGTAACCCTGGTCTCCCTGGACAGCCAGGTCTTATAGGACCTCCTGGACTTAAAGGAACCATCGGTGATATGGGTTTTCCAGGGCCTCAGGGTGTGGAAGGGCCTCCTGGACCTTCTGGAGTTCCTGGACAACCTGGCTCCCCAGGATTACCTGGACAGAAAGGCGACAAAGGTGATCCTGGTATTTCAAGCATTGGTCTTCCAGGTCTTCCTGGTCCAAAGGGTGAGCCTGGTCTGCCTGGATACCCAGGGAACCCTGGTATCAAAGGTTCTGTGGGAGATCCTGGTTTGCCCGGATTACCAGGAACCCCTGGAGCAAAAGGACAACCAGGCCTTCCTGGATTCCCAGGAACCCCAGGCCCTCCTGGACCAAAAGGTATTAGTGGCCCTCCTGGGAACCCCGGCCTTCCAGGAGAACCTGGTCCTGTAGGTGGTGGAGGTCATCCTGGGCAACCAGGGCCTCCAGGCGAAAAAGGCAAACCCGGTCAAGATGGTATTCCTGGACCAGCTGGACAGAAGGGTGAACCAGGTCAACCAGGCTTTGGAAACCCAGGACCCCCTGGACTTCCAGGACTTTCTGGCCAAAAGGGTGATGGAGGATTACCTGGGATTCCAGGAAATCCTGGCCTTCCAGGTCCAAAGGGCGAACCAGGCTTTCACGGTTTCCCTGGTGTGCAGGGTCCCCCAGGCCCTCCTGGTTCTCCGGGTCCAGCTCTGGAAGGACCTAAAGGCAACCCTGGGCCCCAAGGTCCTCCTGGGAGACCAGGTCCTACAGGTTTTCAAGGTCTACCAGGTCCAGAAGGTCCTCCAGGTCTCCCTGGAAATGGAGGTATTAAAGGAGAGAAGGGAAATCCAGGCCAACCTGGGCTACCTGGCTTGCCTGGTTTGAAAGGAGATCAAGGACCACCAGGACTCCAGGGTAATCCTGGCCGGCCGGGTCTCAATGGAATGAAAGGAGATCCTGGTCTCCCTGGTGTTCCAGGATTCCCAGGCATGAAAGGACCCAGTGGAGTACCTGGATCAGCTGGCCCTGAGGGGGAACCGGGACTTATTGGTCCTCCAGGTCCTCCTGGATTACCTGGTCCTTCAGGACAGAGTATCATAATTAAAGGAGATGCTGGTCCTCCAGGAATCCCTGGCCAGCCTGGGCTAAAGGGTCTACCAGGACCCCAAGGACCTCAAGGCTTACCAGGTCCAACTGGCCCTCCAGGAGATCCTGGACGCAATGGACTCCCTGGCTTTGATGGTGCAGGAGGGCGCAAAGGAGACCCAGGTCTGCCAGGACAGCCAGGTACCCGTGGTTTGGATGGTCCCCCTGGTCCAGATGGATTGCAAGGTCCCCCAGGTCCCCCTGGAACCTCCTCTGTTGCACATGGATTTCTTATTACACGCCACAGCCAGACAACGGATGCACCACAATGCCCACAGGGAACACTTCAGGTCTATGAAGGCTTTTCTCTCCTGTATGTACAAGGAAATAAAAGAGCCCACGGTCAAGACTTGGGGACGGCTGGCAGCTGCCTTCGTCGCTTTAGTACCATGCCTTTCATGTTCTGCAACATCAATAATGTTTGCAACTTTGCTTCAAGAAATGACTATTCTTACTGGCTCTCTACCCCAGAGCCCATGCCAATGAGCATGCAACCCCTAAAGGGCCAGAGCATCCAGCCATTCATTAGTCGATGTGCAGTATGTGAAGCTCCAGCTGTGGTGATCGCAGTTCACAGTCAGACGATCCAGATTCCCCATTGTCCTCAGGGATGGGATTCTCTGTGGATTGGTTATTCCTTCATGATGCATACAAGTGCAGGGGCAGAAGGCTCAGGTCAAGCCCTAGCCTCCCCTGGTTCCTGCTTGGAAGAGTTTCGTTCAGCTCCCTTCATCGAATGTCATGGGAGGGGTACCTGTAACTACTATGCCAACTCCTACAGCTTTTGGCTGGCAACTGTAGATGTGTCAGACATGTTCAGTAAACCTCAGTCAGAAACGCTGAAAGCAGGAGACTTGAGGACACGAATTAGCCGATGTCAAGTGTGCATGAAGAGGACATA</QueryAlignmentSequence><TargetAlignmentSequence>ATGAAACTGCGTGGAGTCAGCCTGGCTGCCGGCTTGTTCTTACTGGCCCTGAGTCTTTGGGGGCAGCCTGCAGAGGCTGCGGCTTGCTATGGGTGTTCTCCAGGATCAAAGTGTGACTGCAGTGGCATAAAAGGGGAAAAGGGAGAGAGAGGGTTTCCAGGTTTGGAAGGACACCCAGGATTGCCTGGATTTCCAGGTCCAGAAGGGCCTCCGGGGCCTCGGGGACAAAAGGGTGATGATGGAATTCCAGGGCCACCAGGACCAAAAGGAATCAGAGGTCCTCCTGGACTTCCTGGATTTCCAGGGACACCAGGTCTTCCTGGAATGCCAGGCCACGATGGGGCCCCAGGACCTCAAGGTATTCCCGGATGCAATGGAACCAAGGGAGAACGTGGATTTCCAGGCAGTCCCGGTTTTCCTGGTTTACAGGGTCCTCCAGGACCCCCTGGGATCCCAGGTATGAAGGGTGAACCAGGTAGTATAATTATGTCATCACTGCCAGGACCAAAGGGTAATCCAGGATATCCAGGTCCTCCTGGAATACAAGGCCTACCTGGTCCCACTGGTATACCAGGGCCAATTGGTCCCCCAGGACCACCAGGTTTGATGGGCCCTCCTGGTCCACCAGGACTTCCAGGACCTAAGGGGAATATGGGCTTAAATTTCCAGGGACCCAAAGGTGAAAAAGGTGAGCAAGGTCTTCAGGGCCCACCTGGGCCACCTGGGCAGATCAGTGAACAGAAAAGACCAATTGATGTAGAGTTTCAGAAAGGAGATCAGGGACTTCCTGGTGACCGAGGGCCTCCTGGACCTCCAGGGATACGTGGTCCTCCAGGTCCCCCAGGTGGTGAGAAAGGTGAGAAGGGTGAGCAAGGAGAGCCAGGCAAAAGAGGTAAACCAGGCAAAGATGGAGAAAATGGCCAACCAGGAATTCCTGGTTTGCCTGGTGATCCTGGTTACCCTGGTGAACCCGGAAGGGATGGTGAAAAGGGCCAAAAAGGTGACACTGGCCCACCTGGACCTCCTGGACTTGTAATTCCTAGACCTGGGACTGGTATAACTATAGGAGAAAAAGGAAACATTGGGTTGCCTGGGTTGCCTGGAGAAAAAGGAGAGCGAGGATTTCCTGGAATACAGGGTCCACCTGGCCTTCCTGGACCTCCAGGGGCTGCAGTTATGGGTCCTCCTGGCCCTCCTGGATTTCCTGGAGAAAGGGGTCAGAAAGGTGATGAAGGACCACCTGGAATTTCCATTCCTGGACCTCCTGGACTTGACGGACAGCCTGGGGCTCCTGGGCTTCCAGGGCCTCCTGGCCCTGCTGGCCCTCACATTCCTCCTAGTGATGAGATATGTGAACCAGGCCCTCCAGGCCCCCCAGGATCTCCAGGTGATAAAGGACTCCAAGGAGAACAAGGAGTGAAAGGTGACAAAGGTGACACTTGCTTCAACTGCATTGGAACTGGTATTTCAGGGCCTCCAGGTCAACCTGGTTTGCCAGGTCTCCCAGGTCCTCCAGGATCTCTTGGTTTCCCTGGACAGAAAGGGGAAAAAGGACAAGCTGGTGCAACTGGTCCCAAAGGATTACCAGGCATTCCAGGAGCTCCAGGTGCTCCAGGCTTTCCTGGATCTAAAGGTGAACCTGGTGATATCCTCACTTTTCCAGGAATGAAGGGTGACAAAGGAGAGTTGGGTTCCCCTGGAGCTCCAGGGCTTCCTGGTTTACCTGGCACTCCTGGACAGGATGGATTGCCAGGGCTTCCTGGCCCGAAAGGAGAGCCTGGTGGAATTACTTTTAAGGGTGAAAGAGGTCCCCCTGGGAACCCAGGTTTACCAGGCCTCCCAGGGAATATAGGGCCTATGGGTCCCCCTGGTTTCGGCCCTCCAGGCCCAGTAGGTGAAAAAGGCATACAAGGTGTGGCAGGAAATCCAGGCCAGCCAGGAATACCAGGTCCTAAAGGGGATCCAGGTCAGACTATAACCCAGCCGGGGAAGCCTGGCTTGCCTGGTAACCCAGGCAGAGATGGTGATGTAGGTCTTCCAGGTGACCCTGGACTTCCAGGGCAACCAGGCTTGCCAGGGATACCTGGTAGCAAAGGAGAACCAGGTATCCCTGGAATTGGGCTTCCTGGACCACCTGGTCCCAAAGGCTTTCCTGGAATTCCAGGACCTCCAGGAGCACCTGGGACACCTGGAAGAATTGGTCTAGAAGGCCCTCCTGGGCCACCCGGCTTTCCAGGACCAAAGGGTGAACCAGGATTTGCATTACCTGGGCCACCTGGGCCACCAGGACTTCCAGGTTTCAAAGGAGCACTTGGTCCAAAAGGTGATCGTGGTTTCCCAGGACCTCCGGGTCCTCCAGGACGCACTGGCTTAGATGGGCTCCCTGGACCAAAAGGTGATGTTGGACCAAATGGACAACCTGGACCAATGGGACCTCCTGGGCTGCCAGGAATAGGTGTTCAGGGACCACCAGGACCACCAGGGATTCCTGGGCCAATAGGTCAACCTGGTTTACATGGAATACCAGGAGAGAAGGGGGATCCAGGACCTCCTGGACTTGATGTTCCAGGACCCCCAGGTGAAAGAGGCAGTCCAGGGATCCCCGGAGCACCTGGTCCTATAGGACCTCCAGGATCACCAGGGCTTCCAGGAAAAGCAGGTGCCTCTGGATTTCCAGGTACCAAAGGTGAAATGGGTATGATGGGACCTCCAGGCCCACCAGGACCTTTGGGAATTCCTGGCAGGAGTGGTGTACCTGGTCTTAAAGGTGATGATGGCTTGCAGGGTCAGCCAGGACTTCCTGGCCCTACAGGAGAAAAAGGTAGTAAAGGAGAGCCTGGCCTTCCAGGCCCTCCTGGACCAATGGATCCAAATCTTCTGGGCTCAAAAGGAGAGAAGGGGGAACCTGGCTTACCAGGTATACCTGGAGTTTCAGGGCCAAAAGGTTATCAGGGTTTGCCTGGAGACCCAGGGCAACCTGGACTGAGTGGACAACCTGGATTACCAGGACCACCAGGTCCCAAAGGTAACCCTGGTCTCCCTGGACAGCCAGGTCTTATAGGACCTCCTGGACTTAAAGGAACCATCGGTGATATGGGTTTTCCAGGGCCTCAGGGTGTGGAAGGGCCTCCTGGACCTTCTGGAGTTCCTGGACAACCTGGCTCCCCAGGATTACCTGGACAGAAAGGCGACAAAGGTGATCCTGGTATTTCAAGCATTGGTCTTCCAGGTCTTCCTGGTCCAAAGGGTGAGCCTGGTCTGCCTGGATACCCAGGGAACCCTGGTATCAAAGGTTCTGTGGGAGATCCTGGTTTGCCCGGATTACCAGGAACCCCTGGAGCAAAAGGACAACCAGGCCTTCCTGGATTCCCAGGAACCCCAGGCCCTCCTGGACCAAAAGGTATTAGTGGCCCTCCTGGGAACCCCGGCCTTCCAGGAGAACCTGGTCCTGTAGGTGGTGGAGGTCATCCTGGGCAACCAGGGCCTCCAGGCGAAAAAGGCAAACCCGGTCAAGATGGTATTCCTGGACCAGCTGGACAGAAGGGTGAACCAGGTCAACCAGGCTTTGGAAACCCAGGACCCCCTGGACTTCCAGGACTTTCTGGCCAAAAGGGTGATGGAGGATTACCTGGGATTCCAGGAAATCCTGGCCTTCCAGGTCCAAAGGGCGAACCAGGCTTTCACGGTTTCCCTGGTGTGCAGGGTCCCCCAGGCCCTCCTGGTTCTCCGGGTCCAGCTCTGGAAGGACCTAAAGGCAACCCTGGGCCCCAAGGTCCTCCTGGGAGACCAGGTCCTACAGGTTTTCAAGGTCTACCAGGTCCAGAAGGTCCTCCAGGTCTCCCTGGAAATGGAGGTATTAAAGGAGAGAAGGGAAATCCAGGCCAACCTGGGCTACCTGGCTTGCCTGGTTTGAAAGGAGATCAAGGACCACCAGGACTCCAGGGTAATCCTGGCCGGCCGGGTCTCAATGGAATGAAAGGAGATCCTGGTCTCCCTGGTGTTCCAGGATTCCCAGGCATGAAAGGACCCAGTGGAGTACCTGGATCAGCTGGCCCTGAGGGGGAACCGGGACTTATTGGTCCTCCAGGTCCTCCTGGATTACCTGGTCCTTCAGGACAGAGTATCATAATTAAAGGAGATGCTGGTCCTCCAGGAATCCCTGGCCAGCCTGGGCTAAAGGGTCTACCAGGACCCCAAGGACCTCAAGGCTTACCAGGTCCAACTGGCCCTCCAGGAGATCCTGGACGCAATGGACTCCCTGGCTTTGATGGTGCAGGAGGGCGCAAAGGAGACCCAGGTCTGCCAGGACAGCCAGGTACCCGTGGTTTGGATGGTCCCCCTGGTCCAGATGGATTGCAAGGTCCCCCAGGTCCCCCTGGAACCTCCTCTGTTGCACATGGATTTCTTATTACACGCCACAGCCAGACAACGGATGCACCACAATGCCCACAGGGAACACTTCAGGTCTATGAAGGCTTTTCTCTCCTGTATGTACAAGGAAATAAAAGAGCCCACGGTCAAGACTTGGGGACGGCTGGCAGCTGCCTTCGTCGCTTTAGTACCATGCCTTTCATGTTCTGCAACATCAATAATGTTTGCAACTTTGCTTCAAGAAATGACTATTCTTACTGGCTCTCTACCCCAGAGCCCATGCCAATGAGCATGCAACCCCTAAAGGGCCAGAGCATCCAGCCATTCATTAGTCGATGTGCAGTATGTGAAGCTCCAGCTGTGGTGATCGCAGTTCACAGTCAGACGATCCAGATTCCCCATTGTCCTCAGGGATGGGATTCTCTGTGGATTGGTTATTCCTTCATGATGCATACAAGTGCAGGGGCAGAAGGCTCAGGTCAAGCCCTAGCCTCCCCTGGTTCCTGCTTGGAAGAGTTTCGTTCAGCTCCCTTCATCGAATGTCATGGGAGGGGTACCTGTAACTACTATGCCAACTCCTACAGCTTTTGGCTGGCAACTGTAGATGTGTCAGACATGTTCAGTAAACCTCAGTCAGAAACGCTGAAAGCAGGAGACTTGAGGACACGAATTAGCCGATGTCAAGTGTGCATGAAGAGGACATA</TargetAlignmentSequence>

    Hi,
    I am getting this error when trying to use an external database for the XML driver, in order to load a large XML file.
    java.sql.SQLException: class org.xml.sax.SAXException
    ORA-01461: can bind a LONG value only for insert into a LONG column
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.v.a(v.java:446)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.v.a(v.java:456)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.v.g(v.java:631)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.v.<init>(v.java:108)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.bw.<init>(bw.java:468)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.bx.b(bx.java:292)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.bx.a(bx.java:270)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.SnpsXmlDriver.connect(SnpsXmlDriver.java:110)
         at com.sunopsis.sql.SnpsConnection.u(SnpsConnection.java)
         at com.sunopsis.sql.SnpsConnection.a(SnpsConnection.java)
         at com.sunopsis.sql.SnpsConnection.testConnection(SnpsConnection.java)
         at com.sunopsis.sql.SnpsConnection.testConnection(SnpsConnection.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.o(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.r(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.g(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.a(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.a(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.iz.actionPerformed(iz.java)
         at javax.swing.AbstractButton.fireActionPerformed(AbstractButton.java:1995)
         at javax.swing.AbstractButton$Handler.actionPerformed(AbstractButton.java:2318)
         at javax.swing.DefaultButtonModel.fireActionPerformed(DefaultButtonModel.java:387)
         at javax.swing.DefaultButtonModel.setPressed(DefaultButtonModel.java:242)
         at javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicButtonListener.mouseReleased(BasicButtonListener.java:236)
         at java.awt.Component.processMouseEvent(Component.java:6263)
         at javax.swing.JComponent.processMouseEvent(JComponent.java:3267)
         at java.awt.Component.processEvent(Component.java:6028)
         at java.awt.Container.processEvent(Container.java:2041)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEventImpl(Component.java:4630)
         at java.awt.Container.dispatchEventImpl(Container.java:2099)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEvent(Component.java:4460)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.retargetMouseEvent(Container.java:4574)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.processMouseEvent(Container.java:4238)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.dispatchEvent(Container.java:4168)
         at java.awt.Container.dispatchEventImpl(Container.java:2085)
         at java.awt.Window.dispatchEventImpl(Window.java:2478)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEvent(Component.java:4460)
         at java.awt.EventQueue.dispatchEvent(EventQueue.java:599)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpOneEventForFilters(EventDispatchThread.java:269)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEventsForFilter(EventDispatchThread.java:184)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEventsForFilter(EventDispatchThread.java:178)
         at java.awt.Dialog$1.run(Dialog.java:1046)
         at java.awt.Dialog$3.run(Dialog.java:1098)
         at java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged(Native Method)
         at java.awt.Dialog.show(Dialog.java:1096)
         at java.awt.Component.show(Component.java:1563)
         at java.awt.Component.setVisible(Component.java:1515)
         at java.awt.Window.setVisible(Window.java:842)
         at java.awt.Dialog.setVisible(Dialog.java:986)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.q(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.l.pm.<init>(pm.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.frame.b.jh.bx(jh.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.frame.bo.w(bo.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.frame.bo.d(bo.java)
         at com.sunopsis.graphical.frame.w.actionPerformed(w.java)
         at javax.swing.AbstractButton.fireActionPerformed(AbstractButton.java:1995)
         at javax.swing.AbstractButton$Handler.actionPerformed(AbstractButton.java:2318)
         at javax.swing.DefaultButtonModel.fireActionPerformed(DefaultButtonModel.java:387)
         at javax.swing.DefaultButtonModel.setPressed(DefaultButtonModel.java:242)
         at javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicButtonListener.mouseReleased(BasicButtonListener.java:236)
         at java.awt.Component.processMouseEvent(Component.java:6263)
         at javax.swing.JComponent.processMouseEvent(JComponent.java:3267)
         at java.awt.Component.processEvent(Component.java:6028)
         at java.awt.Container.processEvent(Container.java:2041)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEventImpl(Component.java:4630)
         at java.awt.Container.dispatchEventImpl(Container.java:2099)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEvent(Component.java:4460)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.retargetMouseEvent(Container.java:4574)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.processMouseEvent(Container.java:4238)
         at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.dispatchEvent(Container.java:4168)
         at java.awt.Container.dispatchEventImpl(Container.java:2085)
         at java.awt.Window.dispatchEventImpl(Window.java:2478)
         at java.awt.Component.dispatchEvent(Component.java:4460)
         at java.awt.EventQueue.dispatchEvent(EventQueue.java:599)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpOneEventForFilters(EventDispatchThread.java:269)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEventsForFilter(EventDispatchThread.java:184)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEventsForHierarchy(EventDispatchThread.java:174)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEvents(EventDispatchThread.java:169)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.pumpEvents(EventDispatchThread.java:161)
         at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.run(EventDispatchThread.java:122)
    The error comes up when testing the XML Data Server in the Topology Manager
    I pasted a segment of the XML below. Notice that the <QueryAlignmentSequence> value might be a large string, as large as 6000 bytes.
    I also tried setting the varchar_length above 4000 in the external database .properties file that the XML driver reads, but the I get this error (which makes sense):
    java.sql.SQLException: ORA-00910: specified length too long for its datatype
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.bz.execute(bz.java:109)
         at com.sunopsis.jdbc.driver.xml.ca.execute(ca.java:30)
         at com.sunopsis.xmlfifth.h.u.a(u.java:198)
         at com.sunopsis.xmlfifth.h.bj.a(bj.java:52)
    How can I import this? If I use the default "In Memory" XML connection, I get a Null pointer exception when I try to reverse it, per this other thread I posted
    Unable to Reverse an XML file
    I am dead in the water and getting very disappointed by this tool..
    Please help
    <Query><Name>IOH36464</Name><Header>IOH36464</Header><Length>5076</Length><Targets><Target><Name>NM_033380.1</Name><NcbiGeneId>1287</NcbiGeneId><GeneSymbol>COL4A5</GeneSymbol><TaxonomyId>9606</TaxonomyId><Description>Homo sapiens collagen, type IV, alpha 5 (COL4A5), transcript variant 2, mRNA</Description><Length>6445</Length><TargetAlignments><TargetAlignment><QueryStart>1</QueryStart><QueryEnd>5075</QueryEnd><TargetStart>203</TargetStart><TargetEnd>5277</TargetEnd><BitScore>10060.9</BitScore><PercentIdentity>100</PercentIdentity><Score>5075</Score><QueryAlignmentSequence>ATGAAACTGCGTGGAGTCAGCCTGGCTGCCGGCTTGTTCTTACTGGCCCTGAGTCTTTGGGGGCAGCCTGCAGAGGCTGCGGCTTGCTATGGGTGTTCTCCAGGATCAAAGTGTGACTGCAGTGGCATAAAAGGGGAAAAGGGAGAGAGAGGGTTTCCAGGTTTGGAAGGACACCCAGGATTGCCTGGATTTCCAGGTCCAGAAGGGCCTCCGGGGCCTCGGGGACAAAAGGGTGATGATGGAATTCCAGGGCCACCAGGACCAAAAGGAATCAGAGGTCCTCCTGGACTTCCTGGATTTCCAGGGACACCAGGTCTTCCTGGAATGCCAGGCCACGATGGGGCCCCAGGACCTCAAGGTATTCCCGGATGCAATGGAACCAAGGGAGAACGTGGATTTCCAGGCAGTCCCGGTTTTCCTGGTTTACAGGGTCCTCCAGGACCCCCTGGGATCCCAGGTATGAAGGGTGAACCAGGTAGTATAATTATGTCATCACTGCCAGGACCAAAGGGTAATCCAGGATATCCAGGTCCTCCTGGAATACAAGGCCTACCTGGTCCCACTGGTATACCAGGGCCAATTGGTCCCCCAGGACCACCAGGTTTGATGGGCCCTCCTGGTCCACCAGGACTTCCAGGACCTAAGGGGAATATGGGCTTAAATTTCCAGGGACCCAAAGGTGAAAAAGGTGAGCAAGGTCTTCAGGGCCCACCTGGGCCACCTGGGCAGATCAGTGAACAGAAAAGACCAATTGATGTAGAGTTTCAGAAAGGAGATCAGGGACTTCCTGGTGACCGAGGGCCTCCTGGACCTCCAGGGATACGTGGTCCTCCAGGTCCCCCAGGTGGTGAGAAAGGTGAGAAGGGTGAGCAAGGAGAGCCAGGCAAAAGAGGTAAACCAGGCAAAGATGGAGAAAATGGCCAACCAGGAATTCCTGGTTTGCCTGGTGATCCTGGTTACCCTGGTGAACCCGGAAGGGATGGTGAAAAGGGCCAAAAAGGTGACACTGGCCCACCTGGACCTCCTGGACTTGTAATTCCTAGACCTGGGACTGGTATAACTATAGGAGAAAAAGGAAACATTGGGTTGCCTGGGTTGCCTGGAGAAAAAGGAGAGCGAGGATTTCCTGGAATACAGGGTCCACCTGGCCTTCCTGGACCTCCAGGGGCTGCAGTTATGGGTCCTCCTGGCCCTCCTGGATTTCCTGGAGAAAGGGGTCAGAAAGGTGATGAAGGACCACCTGGAATTTCCATTCCTGGACCTCCTGGACTTGACGGACAGCCTGGGGCTCCTGGGCTTCCAGGGCCTCCTGGCCCTGCTGGCCCTCACATTCCTCCTAGTGATGAGATATGTGAACCAGGCCCTCCAGGCCCCCCAGGATCTCCAGGTGATAAAGGACTCCAAGGAGAACAAGGAGTGAAAGGTGACAAAGGTGACACTTGCTTCAACTGCATTGGAACTGGTATTTCAGGGCCTCCAGGTCAACCTGGTTTGCCAGGTCTCCCAGGTCCTCCAGGATCTCTTGGTTTCCCTGGACAGAAAGGGGAAAAAGGACAAGCTGGTGCAACTGGTCCCAAAGGATTACCAGGCATTCCAGGAGCTCCAGGTGCTCCAGGCTTTCCTGGATCTAAAGGTGAACCTGGTGATATCCTCACTTTTCCAGGAATGAAGGGTGACAAAGGAGAGTTGGGTTCCCCTGGAGCTCCAGGGCTTCCTGGTTTACCTGGCACTCCTGGACAGGATGGATTGCCAGGGCTTCCTGGCCCGAAAGGAGAGCCTGGTGGAATTACTTTTAAGGGTGAAAGAGGTCCCCCTGGGAACCCAGGTTTACCAGGCCTCCCAGGGAATATAGGGCCTATGGGTCCCCCTGGTTTCGGCCCTCCAGGCCCAGTAGGTGAAAAAGGCATACAAGGTGTGGCAGGAAATCCAGGCCAGCCAGGAATACCAGGTCCTAAAGGGGATCCAGGTCAGACTATAACCCAGCCGGGGAAGCCTGGCTTGCCTGGTAACCCAGGCAGAGATGGTGATGTAGGTCTTCCAGGTGACCCTGGACTTCCAGGGCAACCAGGCTTGCCAGGGATACCTGGTAGCAAAGGAGAACCAGGTATCCCTGGAATTGGGCTTCCTGGACCACCTGGTCCCAAAGGCTTTCCTGGAATTCCAGGACCTCCAGGAGCACCTGGGACACCTGGAAGAATTGGTCTAGAAGGCCCTCCTGGGCCACCCGGCTTTCCAGGACCAAAGGGTGAACCAGGATTTGCATTACCTGGGCCACCTGGGCCACCAGGACTTCCAGGTTTCAAAGGAGCACTTGGTCCAAAAGGTGATCGTGGTTTCCCAGGACCTCCGGGTCCTCCAGGACGCACTGGCTTAGATGGGCTCCCTGGACCAAAAGGTGATGTTGGACCAAATGGACAACCTGGACCAATGGGACCTCCTGGGCTGCCAGGAATAGGTGTTCAGGGACCACCAGGACCACCAGGGATTCCTGGGCCAATAGGTCAACCTGGTTTACATGGAATACCAGGAGAGAAGGGGGATCCAGGACCTCCTGGACTTGATGTTCCAGGACCCCCAGGTGAAAGAGGCAGTCCAGGGATCCCCGGAGCACCTGGTCCTATAGGACCTCCAGGATCACCAGGGCTTCCAGGAAAAGCAGGTGCCTCTGGATTTCCAGGTACCAAAGGTGAAATGGGTATGATGGGACCTCCAGGCCCACCAGGACCTTTGGGAATTCCTGGCAGGAGTGGTGTACCTGGTCTTAAAGGTGATGATGGCTTGCAGGGTCAGCCAGGACTTCCTGGCCCTACAGGAGAAAAAGGTAGTAAAGGAGAGCCTGGCCTTCCAGGCCCTCCTGGACCAATGGATCCAAATCTTCTGGGCTCAAAAGGAGAGAAGGGGGAACCTGGCTTACCAGGTATACCTGGAGTTTCAGGGCCAAAAGGTTATCAGGGTTTGCCTGGAGACCCAGGGCAACCTGGACTGAGTGGACAACCTGGATTACCAGGACCACCAGGTCCCAAAGGTAACCCTGGTCTCCCTGGACAGCCAGGTCTTATAGGACCTCCTGGACTTAAAGGAACCATCGGTGATATGGGTTTTCCAGGGCCTCAGGGTGTGGAAGGGCCTCCTGGACCTTCTGGAGTTCCTGGACAACCTGGCTCCCCAGGATTACCTGGACAGAAAGGCGACAAAGGTGATCCTGGTATTTCAAGCATTGGTCTTCCAGGTCTTCCTGGTCCAAAGGGTGAGCCTGGTCTGCCTGGATACCCAGGGAACCCTGGTATCAAAGGTTCTGTGGGAGATCCTGGTTTGCCCGGATTACCAGGAACCCCTGGAGCAAAAGGACAACCAGGCCTTCCTGGATTCCCAGGAACCCCAGGCCCTCCTGGACCAAAAGGTATTAGTGGCCCTCCTGGGAACCCCGGCCTTCCAGGAGAACCTGGTCCTGTAGGTGGTGGAGGTCATCCTGGGCAACCAGGGCCTCCAGGCGAAAAAGGCAAACCCGGTCAAGATGGTATTCCTGGACCAGCTGGACAGAAGGGTGAACCAGGTCAACCAGGCTTTGGAAACCCAGGACCCCCTGGACTTCCAGGACTTTCTGGCCAAAAGGGTGATGGAGGATTACCTGGGATTCCAGGAAATCCTGGCCTTCCAGGTCCAAAGGGCGAACCAGGCTTTCACGGTTTCCCTGGTGTGCAGGGTCCCCCAGGCCCTCCTGGTTCTCCGGGTCCAGCTCTGGAAGGACCTAAAGGCAACCCTGGGCCCCAAGGTCCTCCTGGGAGACCAGGTCCTACAGGTTTTCAAGGTCTACCAGGTCCAGAAGGTCCTCCAGGTCTCCCTGGAAATGGAGGTATTAAAGGAGAGAAGGGAAATCCAGGCCAACCTGGGCTACCTGGCTTGCCTGGTTTGAAAGGAGATCAAGGACCACCAGGACTCCAGGGTAATCCTGGCCGGCCGGGTCTCAATGGAATGAAAGGAGATCCTGGTCTCCCTGGTGTTCCAGGATTCCCAGGCATGAAAGGACCCAGTGGAGTACCTGGATCAGCTGGCCCTGAGGGGGAACCGGGACTTATTGGTCCTCCAGGTCCTCCTGGATTACCTGGTCCTTCAGGACAGAGTATCATAATTAAAGGAGATGCTGGTCCTCCAGGAATCCCTGGCCAGCCTGGGCTAAAGGGTCTACCAGGACCCCAAGGACCTCAAGGCTTACCAGGTCCAACTGGCCCTCCAGGAGATCCTGGACGCAATGGACTCCCTGGCTTTGATGGTGCAGGAGGGCGCAAAGGAGACCCAGGTCTGCCAGGACAGCCAGGTACCCGTGGTTTGGATGGTCCCCCTGGTCCAGATGGATTGCAAGGTCCCCCAGGTCCCCCTGGAACCTCCTCTGTTGCACATGGATTTCTTATTACACGCCACAGCCAGACAACGGATGCACCACAATGCCCACAGGGAACACTTCAGGTCTATGAAGGCTTTTCTCTCCTGTATGTACAAGGAAATAAAAGAGCCCACGGTCAAGACTTGGGGACGGCTGGCAGCTGCCTTCGTCGCTTTAGTACCATGCCTTTCATGTTCTGCAACATCAATAATGTTTGCAACTTTGCTTCAAGAAATGACTATTCTTACTGGCTCTCTACCCCAGAGCCCATGCCAATGAGCATGCAACCCCTAAAGGGCCAGAGCATCCAGCCATTCATTAGTCGATGTGCAGTATGTGAAGCTCCAGCTGTGGTGATCGCAGTTCACAGTCAGACGATCCAGATTCCCCATTGTCCTCAGGGATGGGATTCTCTGTGGATTGGTTATTCCTTCATGATGCATACAAGTGCAGGGGCAGAAGGCTCAGGTCAAGCCCTAGCCTCCCCTGGTTCCTGCTTGGAAGAGTTTCGTTCAGCTCCCTTCATCGAATGTCATGGGAGGGGTACCTGTAACTACTATGCCAACTCCTACAGCTTTTGGCTGGCAACTGTAGATGTGTCAGACATGTTCAGTAAACCTCAGTCAGAAACGCTGAAAGCAGGAGACTTGAGGACACGAATTAGCCGATGTCAAGTGTGCATGAAGAGGACATA</QueryAlignmentSequence><TargetAlignmentSequence>ATGAAACTGCGTGGAGTCAGCCTGGCTGCCGGCTTGTTCTTACTGGCCCTGAGTCTTTGGGGGCAGCCTGCAGAGGCTGCGGCTTGCTATGGGTGTTCTCCAGGATCAAAGTGTGACTGCAGTGGCATAAAAGGGGAAAAGGGAGAGAGAGGGTTTCCAGGTTTGGAAGGACACCCAGGATTGCCTGGATTTCCAGGTCCAGAAGGGCCTCCGGGGCCTCGGGGACAAAAGGGTGATGATGGAATTCCAGGGCCACCAGGACCAAAAGGAATCAGAGGTCCTCCTGGACTTCCTGGATTTCCAGGGACACCAGGTCTTCCTGGAATGCCAGGCCACGATGGGGCCCCAGGACCTCAAGGTATTCCCGGATGCAATGGAACCAAGGGAGAACGTGGATTTCCAGGCAGTCCCGGTTTTCCTGGTTTACAGGGTCCTCCAGGACCCCCTGGGATCCCAGGTATGAAGGGTGAACCAGGTAGTATAATTATGTCATCACTGCCAGGACCAAAGGGTAATCCAGGATATCCAGGTCCTCCTGGAATACAAGGCCTACCTGGTCCCACTGGTATACCAGGGCCAATTGGTCCCCCAGGACCACCAGGTTTGATGGGCCCTCCTGGTCCACCAGGACTTCCAGGACCTAAGGGGAATATGGGCTTAAATTTCCAGGGACCCAAAGGTGAAAAAGGTGAGCAAGGTCTTCAGGGCCCACCTGGGCCACCTGGGCAGATCAGTGAACAGAAAAGACCAATTGATGTAGAGTTTCAGAAAGGAGATCAGGGACTTCCTGGTGACCGAGGGCCTCCTGGACCTCCAGGGATACGTGGTCCTCCAGGTCCCCCAGGTGGTGAGAAAGGTGAGAAGGGTGAGCAAGGAGAGCCAGGCAAAAGAGGTAAACCAGGCAAAGATGGAGAAAATGGCCAACCAGGAATTCCTGGTTTGCCTGGTGATCCTGGTTACCCTGGTGAACCCGGAAGGGATGGTGAAAAGGGCCAAAAAGGTGACACTGGCCCACCTGGACCTCCTGGACTTGTAATTCCTAGACCTGGGACTGGTATAACTATAGGAGAAAAAGGAAACATTGGGTTGCCTGGGTTGCCTGGAGAAAAAGGAGAGCGAGGATTTCCTGGAATACAGGGTCCACCTGGCCTTCCTGGACCTCCAGGGGCTGCAGTTATGGGTCCTCCTGGCCCTCCTGGATTTCCTGGAGAAAGGGGTCAGAAAGGTGATGAAGGACCACCTGGAATTTCCATTCCTGGACCTCCTGGACTTGACGGACAGCCTGGGGCTCCTGGGCTTCCAGGGCCTCCTGGCCCTGCTGGCCCTCACATTCCTCCTAGTGATGAGATATGTGAACCAGGCCCTCCAGGCCCCCCAGGATCTCCAGGTGATAAAGGACTCCAAGGAGAACAAGGAGTGAAAGGTGACAAAGGTGACACTTGCTTCAACTGCATTGGAACTGGTATTTCAGGGCCTCCAGGTCAACCTGGTTTGCCAGGTCTCCCAGGTCCTCCAGGATCTCTTGGTTTCCCTGGACAGAAAGGGGAAAAAGGACAAGCTGGTGCAACTGGTCCCAAAGGATTACCAGGCATTCCAGGAGCTCCAGGTGCTCCAGGCTTTCCTGGATCTAAAGGTGAACCTGGTGATATCCTCACTTTTCCAGGAATGAAGGGTGACAAAGGAGAGTTGGGTTCCCCTGGAGCTCCAGGGCTTCCTGGTTTACCTGGCACTCCTGGACAGGATGGATTGCCAGGGCTTCCTGGCCCGAAAGGAGAGCCTGGTGGAATTACTTTTAAGGGTGAAAGAGGTCCCCCTGGGAACCCAGGTTTACCAGGCCTCCCAGGGAATATAGGGCCTATGGGTCCCCCTGGTTTCGGCCCTCCAGGCCCAGTAGGTGAAAAAGGCATACAAGGTGTGGCAGGAAATCCAGGCCAGCCAGGAATACCAGGTCCTAAAGGGGATCCAGGTCAGACTATAACCCAGCCGGGGAAGCCTGGCTTGCCTGGTAACCCAGGCAGAGATGGTGATGTAGGTCTTCCAGGTGACCCTGGACTTCCAGGGCAACCAGGCTTGCCAGGGATACCTGGTAGCAAAGGAGAACCAGGTATCCCTGGAATTGGGCTTCCTGGACCACCTGGTCCCAAAGGCTTTCCTGGAATTCCAGGACCTCCAGGAGCACCTGGGACACCTGGAAGAATTGGTCTAGAAGGCCCTCCTGGGCCACCCGGCTTTCCAGGACCAAAGGGTGAACCAGGATTTGCATTACCTGGGCCACCTGGGCCACCAGGACTTCCAGGTTTCAAAGGAGCACTTGGTCCAAAAGGTGATCGTGGTTTCCCAGGACCTCCGGGTCCTCCAGGACGCACTGGCTTAGATGGGCTCCCTGGACCAAAAGGTGATGTTGGACCAAATGGACAACCTGGACCAATGGGACCTCCTGGGCTGCCAGGAATAGGTGTTCAGGGACCACCAGGACCACCAGGGATTCCTGGGCCAATAGGTCAACCTGGTTTACATGGAATACCAGGAGAGAAGGGGGATCCAGGACCTCCTGGACTTGATGTTCCAGGACCCCCAGGTGAAAGAGGCAGTCCAGGGATCCCCGGAGCACCTGGTCCTATAGGACCTCCAGGATCACCAGGGCTTCCAGGAAAAGCAGGTGCCTCTGGATTTCCAGGTACCAAAGGTGAAATGGGTATGATGGGACCTCCAGGCCCACCAGGACCTTTGGGAATTCCTGGCAGGAGTGGTGTACCTGGTCTTAAAGGTGATGATGGCTTGCAGGGTCAGCCAGGACTTCCTGGCCCTACAGGAGAAAAAGGTAGTAAAGGAGAGCCTGGCCTTCCAGGCCCTCCTGGACCAATGGATCCAAATCTTCTGGGCTCAAAAGGAGAGAAGGGGGAACCTGGCTTACCAGGTATACCTGGAGTTTCAGGGCCAAAAGGTTATCAGGGTTTGCCTGGAGACCCAGGGCAACCTGGACTGAGTGGACAACCTGGATTACCAGGACCACCAGGTCCCAAAGGTAACCCTGGTCTCCCTGGACAGCCAGGTCTTATAGGACCTCCTGGACTTAAAGGAACCATCGGTGATATGGGTTTTCCAGGGCCTCAGGGTGTGGAAGGGCCTCCTGGACCTTCTGGAGTTCCTGGACAACCTGGCTCCCCAGGATTACCTGGACAGAAAGGCGACAAAGGTGATCCTGGTATTTCAAGCATTGGTCTTCCAGGTCTTCCTGGTCCAAAGGGTGAGCCTGGTCTGCCTGGATACCCAGGGAACCCTGGTATCAAAGGTTCTGTGGGAGATCCTGGTTTGCCCGGATTACCAGGAACCCCTGGAGCAAAAGGACAACCAGGCCTTCCTGGATTCCCAGGAACCCCAGGCCCTCCTGGACCAAAAGGTATTAGTGGCCCTCCTGGGAACCCCGGCCTTCCAGGAGAACCTGGTCCTGTAGGTGGTGGAGGTCATCCTGGGCAACCAGGGCCTCCAGGCGAAAAAGGCAAACCCGGTCAAGATGGTATTCCTGGACCAGCTGGACAGAAGGGTGAACCAGGTCAACCAGGCTTTGGAAACCCAGGACCCCCTGGACTTCCAGGACTTTCTGGCCAAAAGGGTGATGGAGGATTACCTGGGATTCCAGGAAATCCTGGCCTTCCAGGTCCAAAGGGCGAACCAGGCTTTCACGGTTTCCCTGGTGTGCAGGGTCCCCCAGGCCCTCCTGGTTCTCCGGGTCCAGCTCTGGAAGGACCTAAAGGCAACCCTGGGCCCCAAGGTCCTCCTGGGAGACCAGGTCCTACAGGTTTTCAAGGTCTACCAGGTCCAGAAGGTCCTCCAGGTCTCCCTGGAAATGGAGGTATTAAAGGAGAGAAGGGAAATCCAGGCCAACCTGGGCTACCTGGCTTGCCTGGTTTGAAAGGAGATCAAGGACCACCAGGACTCCAGGGTAATCCTGGCCGGCCGGGTCTCAATGGAATGAAAGGAGATCCTGGTCTCCCTGGTGTTCCAGGATTCCCAGGCATGAAAGGACCCAGTGGAGTACCTGGATCAGCTGGCCCTGAGGGGGAACCGGGACTTATTGGTCCTCCAGGTCCTCCTGGATTACCTGGTCCTTCAGGACAGAGTATCATAATTAAAGGAGATGCTGGTCCTCCAGGAATCCCTGGCCAGCCTGGGCTAAAGGGTCTACCAGGACCCCAAGGACCTCAAGGCTTACCAGGTCCAACTGGCCCTCCAGGAGATCCTGGACGCAATGGACTCCCTGGCTTTGATGGTGCAGGAGGGCGCAAAGGAGACCCAGGTCTGCCAGGACAGCCAGGTACCCGTGGTTTGGATGGTCCCCCTGGTCCAGATGGATTGCAAGGTCCCCCAGGTCCCCCTGGAACCTCCTCTGTTGCACATGGATTTCTTATTACACGCCACAGCCAGACAACGGATGCACCACAATGCCCACAGGGAACACTTCAGGTCTATGAAGGCTTTTCTCTCCTGTATGTACAAGGAAATAAAAGAGCCCACGGTCAAGACTTGGGGACGGCTGGCAGCTGCCTTCGTCGCTTTAGTACCATGCCTTTCATGTTCTGCAACATCAATAATGTTTGCAACTTTGCTTCAAGAAATGACTATTCTTACTGGCTCTCTACCCCAGAGCCCATGCCAATGAGCATGCAACCCCTAAAGGGCCAGAGCATCCAGCCATTCATTAGTCGATGTGCAGTATGTGAAGCTCCAGCTGTGGTGATCGCAGTTCACAGTCAGACGATCCAGATTCCCCATTGTCCTCAGGGATGGGATTCTCTGTGGATTGGTTATTCCTTCATGATGCATACAAGTGCAGGGGCAGAAGGCTCAGGTCAAGCCCTAGCCTCCCCTGGTTCCTGCTTGGAAGAGTTTCGTTCAGCTCCCTTCATCGAATGTCATGGGAGGGGTACCTGTAACTACTATGCCAACTCCTACAGCTTTTGGCTGGCAACTGTAGATGTGTCAGACATGTTCAGTAAACCTCAGTCAGAAACGCTGAAAGCAGGAGACTTGAGGACACGAATTAGCCGATGTCAAGTGTGCATGAAGAGGACATA</TargetAlignmentSequence>

  • Any practical help about XML API for databases

    HI friends,
    I have a problem, i want to connect to my Database using JSP but by using XML api for database. I want to MAP my database tables, rows columns as xml elements to make it more flexible. Anyone who had practicaly worked on it, please help me out.
    I am waiting for a quick response.
    Thanks for any help in advance,
    Yours Truly,
    Khawaja Salman Sarfraz

    Some databases have a feature that allows you to output the result of a query as XML. But that's not standard SQL, and it probably varies from one DB to the next. Look up the documentation for your DB for more information.

  • AIR to use for DVD-ROM application - a question

    For a customer (a sound-enginering in film) I am looking for a solution to produce a DVD-ROM (like the 'old' CD-ROM application) for the presentation (a sort of portfolio) of +/- 400 soundfiles (not music, but real sound).
    In the past the production of CD-ROM application was done using "Macromedia Director".
    Now for the past two weeks I have discovered and studied a little about the "desktop" possibilities of AIR-technology. This has greatly impressed me.
    I would like to use AIR (build with Flex) to produce the whole interface for the DVD: displaying the soudfiles in different way: categories, maybe treemapping, searchable database with SQL-lite etc...
    My question is: has someone experience with the use of AIR for DVD-ROM? Can he/she recommends something? The pros/contras?
    Thank you in advance,
    konrad

    As ab1301 says, you can bundle the AIR runtime on the disc if you sign up for a redistribution license agreement:
    See  http://www.adobe.com/products/air/runtime_distribution1.html.
    However, I believe that still won't get you what you're looking for.
    I assume you want the menu to run directly from the DVD. However, AIR applications must be installed to run -- you can't run them directly from a portable storage like DVD-ROM, USB memory stick, etc.
    So, if you want to have the installer for your AIR application be on a DVD, and have it install the application on the user's computer, you can do that (but you'll probably need the redistribution license and you'll probably also need to write your own custom installer). This thread doesn't provide a complete answer but it does offer some relevent advice:
    http://forums.adobe.com/message/1025293#1025293

  • XML database query through Java

    Hi all.
    I am collecting information about a little application i am trying to build:
    I have an XML database with records divided in a lot of subdirectory (with three or four .xml files);
    directories' names are defined by date in format "yyyymmdd",
    the file within are "date_something.xml":
    what is the best way to access it by a web app or a java class to search all the dirs adn print results in a readable way (aka not in cmd) ? I need first to define a period of time to search and then some attribute or node to print referred to some element.
    I was guessing to use xpath, anyway I ve tryed JSP but it is too difficult and the query i have to do are really simple to build a full servlet.
    I am learning xalan through servlet and I think in future this will be my choice but now i need to collect the data by queries without any automation, just to have results for researching and paper writing.
    The main problem I found is to search a full series of directory, with transformations i can find out stuff from a single file, but how to do it for a system of directories?
    Any suggestion or link to resource would be good also.

    lm00 wrote:
    ProjectMoon wrote:
    By XML database do you mean an actual XML native database, or just a bunch of XML files in a directory structure? If it is an actual XML native database, you should probably use the XML:DB API. If they are just flat files you will need to probably make something that is able to navigate through your directory structure to the documents you want. Once you have that, you can then use XQuery or XPath to get information from those documents.The data is a bunch of directories named by date in format "yyyymmdd", inside each of these there are three or four files .xml
    All files have data definitions and schemas but i dont think they are a 'database'. What do u mean "something to navigate through"? A class? Suppose I would like to do it as a webapp what should i have to do?
    Yes, I basically meant a class. Before querying the XML file you need something that will retrieve its location. If it's by date you could probably concoct something that takes a Date object and returns a set of File objects. Internally it would traverse the directory trees and find the proper XML file(s).
    >>
    If you have a LOT of XML documents I honestly recommend something like the eXist XML Native Database, or another XND. I have been playing with them lately and they are very useful.in this case what i have to do? Take the data and put it into a database by this tool? And then I should acces it by a JSP? There is a program using Xpath instead?Well, yes. You would put the files in the XND. Although I don't know if that's useful or not in your situation. It all depends. I also think you're a bit confused as to what JSPs and XPath are...
    JSPs are just Java Server Pages, which get dynamically compiled into servlets. If you are following the MVC pattern for servlets/JSP (which you should), JSPs represent your views while servlets are the controllers. The model would be your XML data in this case. XPath is a way to get at that data. If it was in an XND, you could just throw an XQuery/XPath expression at the database and it would give you back XML documents/fragments representing the results of your query. You don't have to make your own system to find the XML documents. Of course, you do have to learn how to use an XND.
    Perhaps you should separate what you are trying to do. You have two problems: 1) how to get the XML data you need. 2) How to present it. You should separate those two completely and learn how to do both before attempting to put it together.
    Edited by: ProjectMoon on Oct 21, 2009 12:05 PM

  • How to select XML value for a namespace when multiple namespaces

    Hi,
    I'm a beginner with this, but I'm doing well with your help from this forum in a recent post selecting out all the detail from my xml
    out into my oracle relational tables. Stumped, though, on how to select a value for xml tag value referenced by a defined namespace.
    Version, XML, what I want to select, and attempted sql is below. Thanks in advance!
    select * from V$VERSION
    BANNER
    Oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition Release 11.2.0.2.0 - 64bit Production
    PL/SQL Release 11.2.0.2.0 - Production
    CORE 11.2.0.2.0 Production
    TNS for Solaris: Version 11.2.0.2.0 - Production
    NLSRTL Version 11.2.0.2.0 - Production
    drop table TRANSCRIPT;
    create table TRANSCRIPT (
    CONTENT xmltype
    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
    <arb:AcademicRecordBatch xmlns:arb="urn:org:pesc:message:AcademicRecordBatch:v1.0.0">
      <hst:HighSchoolTranscript xmlns:hst="urn:org:pesc:message:HighSchoolTranscript:v1.0.0" xmlns:ct="http://ct.transcriptcenter.com">
       <TransmissionData>
          <DocumentID>2013-01-02T09:06:15|D123456789</DocumentID>
       </TransmissionData>
       <Student>
                <Person>
                    <Name>
                        <FirstName>John</FirstName>
                        <LastName>Doe</LastName>                   
                    </Name>
                </Person>
                <AcademicRecord> 
                    <AcademicSession>
                        <Course>
                            <CourseTitle>KEYBOARD 101</CourseTitle>
                            <UserDefinedExtensions>
                              <ct:TranscriptExtensions>
                                 <NCESCode>01001E010456</NCESCode>
                                 <CourseRigor>1</CourseRigor>
                              </ct:TranscriptExtensions>
                          </UserDefinedExtensions>
                        </Course>
                        <Course>
                            <CourseTitle>SCIENCE 101</CourseTitle>
                            <UserDefinedExtensions>
                              <ct:TranscriptExtensions>
                                 <NCESCode>01001E010457</NCESCode>
                                 <CourseRigor>2</CourseRigor>
                              </ct:TranscriptExtensions>
                          </UserDefinedExtensions>                       
                        </Course>
                    </AcademicSession>
                    <AcademicSession>
                        <Course>
                            <CourseTitle>MATH 201</CourseTitle>
                            <UserDefinedExtensions>
                              <ct:TranscriptExtensions>
                                 <NCESCode>01001E010458</NCESCode>
                                 <CourseRigor>2</CourseRigor>
                              </ct:TranscriptExtensions>
                          </UserDefinedExtensions>                                 
                        </Course>
                    </AcademicSession>
             </AcademicRecord>
       </Student>
      </hst:HighSchoolTranscript>
    </arb:AcademicRecordBatch>I want to be able to select the NESCODE associated to each coursetitle (01001E010456, 01001E010457, 01001E010458), with NESCode defined by namespace, but getting out NULL.
    DOCUMENTID     LASTNAME     COURSETITLE     NCESCODE
    2013-01-02T09:06:15|D123456789     Doe     KEYBOARD 101     
    2013-01-02T09:06:15|D123456789     Doe     SCIENCE 101     
    2013-01-02T09:06:15|D123456789     Doe     MATH 201     
    My SQL is below. You'll see where I commented out a couple failed alternatives too. Thanks again in advance for any guidance.
       select x0.DocumentID
             ,x1.LastName
             , x3.CourseTitle
             ,x3.NCESCode
      from TRANSCRIPT t
         , xmltable(                                                                                   
             xmlnamespaces(
               'urn:org:pesc:message:AcademicRecordBatch:v1.0.0' as "ns0"
             , 'urn:org:pesc:message:HighSchoolTranscript:v1.0.0' as "ns1"
            --, 'http://ct.transcriptcenter.com'                               as "ns1b" 
          , '/ns0:AcademicRecordBatch/ns1:HighSchoolTranscript' 
            passing t.content
            columns DocumentID       varchar2(40) path 'TransmissionData/DocumentID'
                       , Student xmltype      path 'Student'     
          ) x0
       , xmltable(
            '/Student'
            passing x0.Student
            columns LastName varchar2(20) path 'Person/Name/LastName'                       
                        ,AcademicRecord   xmltype      path 'AcademicRecord' 
          ) x1          
       , xmltable(
            '/AcademicRecord/AcademicSession' 
            passing x1.AcademicRecord
            columns GradeLevel varchar2(20) path 'StudentLevel/StudentLevelCode'
                  , Courses      xmltype      path 'Course'
          ) x2
              , xmltable(
              xmlnamespaces('http://ct.transcriptcenter.com'  as "ns2b")
              , '/Course'
            passing x2.Courses
            columns CourseTitle varchar2(40) path 'CourseTitle'
                         ,NCESCode  varchar2(20) path 'UserDefinedExtensions/ns2b:ct/NCESCode'
                         --,NCESCode  varchar2(20) path 'UserDefinedExtensions/ns2b:ct/TranscriptExtensions/NCESCode'                     
          ) x3
               

    <<I'm assuming there is more to your XML than you showed, since
    StudentLevel/StudentLevelCode
    is not in the XML, but is in your query. >>
    Yes, to simplify, I left out some of the additional XML data, which is typically present, sorry for any confusion. I should have removed those references to that data in my example which was failing to retrieve the NCESCode data which was denoted by that namespace.
    Thank you very much! Your correction worked. I was not understanding until your correction how to properly reference in the XPATH for that namespace value. I'm a newbie at this, and this is my second post. But I've been able to populate quite a few relational tables and that was the first of several namespace tags I will have to deal with next, and with that help, I should be good with that syntax now.
    Thanks again for your help on this.

  • How to make a RTF-Template for the Bill Presentment Architecture (BPA)

    Hallo,
    I search a way to make an external RTF-template for the Oracle Receivables Balance Forward - Detail report in the Bill Presentment Architecture (BPA).
    I've never done that.
    I don't know how to get a XML-file of this request to use for the creation of the RTF-file.
    And so I don't know how to specify in the RTF the LOOPs for the Lines and other If-conditions and so on.
    Can anybody help me?
    Thanks.
    Edited by: user2609890 on 23.06.2009 01:25

    HI,
    Can you please help me in finding XML output for Invoice Print BPA Child Program. I have tried changing the output format to XML but no luck. If you can send me any suggestion to my email address [email protected] would be very helpful.
    Also, Did you try adding any conditional formatting (eg. <?if:column_name='value'?>) in RTF template? is it working?
    Any help is appreciated.
    Thanks
    Deepak

  • Xml data into non-xml database.. solution anyone?

    Hi,
    My current project requires me to store the client's data on our servers. We're using Oracle9i. Daily, I will download the client's data for that day and load it into our database. My problem is that the data file is not a flat file so I can't use sql*loader to load the data. Instead, the data file is an xml file. What is the best way to load xml data into a non-xml database? Are there any tools similar to sql*Loader that will load xml data into non-xml database? Is it the best solution for the client to give me an XML dump of their data to load into our database, or should I request a flat file? My last resort would be to write some sort of a script to parse the xml data into a flat file, and then run it through sql*loader. Is this the best solution? One thing to note is that these files could be very large.
    Thanks in advance.
    -PV

    I assume that just putting the XML file into an
    extremely large VARCHAR field is not what you want.
    Instead, you want to extract data elements from the
    XML and write them to columns in a table in your
    database. Right?Yes. Your assumption is correct.
    It sounds like you already have a script that loads a
    flat file into your database. In that case I would
    write an XSL transformation that converts the client's
    XML into a correctly-formatted flat file.Thank you. I'll look into that. Other suggestions are welcome.

  • RMAN duplicate target database for standby from active fails to create newname for system tablespace/datafile

    When executing 'duplicate target database for standby from active'  the system tablespace/datafile (datafile 1)  is not cloned.  All other datafiles clone successfully.  The RMAN process aborts with the following errors while attempting to clone the system tablespace/datafile.
    ORA-19558: error de-allocating device
    ORA-19557: device error, device type: DISK, device name:
    ORA-17627: ORA-01041: internal error. hostdef extension doesn't exist
    ORA-17627: ORA-01041: internal error. hostdef extension doesn't exist
    ORA-03135: connection lost contact
    Here are the details:
    Primary is 11.2.0.2 RAC database  on an Exadata platform
    Standby is 11.2.0.2 Single Instance database (same patch level as primary) on a Red Hat Linux box
    This is an ASM to ASM duplication.
    This is not unique to this database.  We tried another database and go the same behavior - all datafiles clone successfully with the exception of the system tablespace/datafile.
    We have traced the RMAN execution and it seems to fail when it is trying to assign a NEWNAME to the system tablespace/datafile.
    We even issued an explicit SET NEWNAME command but RMAN ignored it.
    We also shutdown the primary and started is up in mount mode thinking that something had ahold of the System Tablespace/datafile.
    We also opened up the network firewall to allow permit any,any traffic.
    We increased the max_server_processes
    and added TCP.NODELAY=yes to the sqlnet.ora file.
    There seems to be some artifact present in our Primary System tablespace/data file that is preventing it form being cloned.
    checked all alert files grid, asm,  and dbhome - no abnormal messages.
    We are in the process of restoring the database from a backup but we would prefer to get this working using the 'Active Database' methodology

    I successfully created the standby database using RMAN backup and recovery.
    I started the managed recovery.  Archive logs are being sent from the primary to the standby ( I can see them in ASM), but the standby is not applying them.
    I get the following messages in the standby alert log...
    Fetching gap sequence in thread 2, gap sequence 154158-154257
    Tue Nov 26 16:19:58 2013
    Using STANDBY_ARCHIVE_DEST parameter default value as USE_DB_RECOVERY_FILE_DEST
    Using STANDBY_ARCHIVE_DEST parameter default value as USE_DB_RECOVERY_FILE_DEST
    Tue Nov 26 16:20:01 2013
    Fetching gap sequence in thread 2, gap sequence 154158-154257
    Tue Nov 26 16:20:11 2013
    Fetching gap sequence in thread 2, gap sequence 154158-154257
    Tue Nov 26 16:20:22 2013
    Fetching gap sequence in thread 2, gap sequence 154158-154257
    Tue Nov 26 16:20:32 2013
    Fetching gap sequence in thread 2, gap sequence 154158-154257
    I don't see any MRP processes:
    select process,
    status,
        thread#,
        sequence#,
       block#,
      blocks
      7     from v$managed_standby;
    PROCESS   STATUS          THREAD#  SEQUENCE#     BLOCK#     BLOCKS
    ARCH      CLOSING               2     154363          1        132
    ARCH      CONNECTED             0          0          0          0
    ARCH      CONNECTED             0          0          0          0
    ARCH      CONNECTED             0          0          0          0
    ARCH      CONNECTED             0          0          0          0
    ARCH      CONNECTED             0          0          0          0
    ARCH      CONNECTED             0          0          0          0
    ARCH      CONNECTED             0          0          0          0
    RFS       IDLE                  0          0          0          0
    RFS       IDLE                  1     145418        121          1
    RFS       IDLE                  0          0          0          0
    PROCESS   STATUS          THREAD#  SEQUENCE#     BLOCK#     BLOCKS
    RFS       IDLE                  0          0          0          0
    12 rows selected.
    SQL>  SELECT THREAD#, SEQUENCE#, APPLIED FROM V$ARCHIVED_LOG;
       THREAD#  SEQUENCE# APPLIED
             2     154356 NO
             2     154357 NO
             1     145411 NO
             2     154358 NO
             2     154360 NO
             2     154361 NO
             1     145414 NO
             1     145415 NO
             2     154362 NO
             2     154363 NO
             1     145416 NO
    11 rows selected.
    I do have the archive logs that cover sequences 154158-154257
    Crosschecked 38 objects
    Crosschecked 62 objects
    Finished implicit crosscheck backup at 26-NOV-13
    Starting implicit crosscheck copy at 26-NOV-13
    using channel ORA_DISK_1
    using channel ORA_DISK_2
    Crosschecked 2 objects
    archived log file name=+RECO_XORA/nmuasb00/archivelog/2013_11_26/thread_2_seq_154377.344.832521989 RECID=29 STAMP=832521990
    validation succeeded for archived log
    archived log file name=+RECO_XORA/nmuasb00/archivelog/2013_11_26/thread_2_seq_154378.346.832521991 RECID=31 STAMP=832521993
    Crosschecked 31 objects

  • Help with structuring SQL databases for multiple photo galleries..help!?!

    Hello all,
    As a new PHP/SQL developer I have found great technical assistance from both this forum and from David Powers and his wonderful books. I am at a crucial point in my web development and although I believe I know which direction I need to go, I am still uncertain and so I appeal to you all for your help, especially David Powers.
    The website I am building is one which will house many photo galleries. I was able to successfully modify the code provided in David Powers’ book ‘php Solutions’ so that I got the photo galleries constructed and working in the manner I desired.
    That being said, a person browsing my website will be presented with a link to see the photo galleries. There will be five (5) categories in which the photos will be separated, all based on specific styles. Now that I have the galleries working, I need to know how to structure things so that I can create a page, like a TOC (table o’ contents) that shows all photo galleries by displaying a thumbnail image or two along with the description. Perhaps I’ll limit the TOC page to only show the latest 25 galleries, arranged with the most current always on top.
    The way I have my galleries set up, I have a separate database for each one, containing the photo filenames and other relevant data. To build my TOC structure, should I have an overall database that contains each gallery database filename along with category? This is where I have no idea what I’m doing so if my question sounds vague, please understand I have no other idea how to ask.
    The site will grow to the point of having hundreds, if not thousands of photo galleries. I simply want to know how to (organize them) or otherwise allow me to build a method to display them in a TOC page or pages.
    I know this is a bit dodgy, but with some info and questions back from you, I feel confident that I should be able to get my point across.
    Lastly, I am still developing this site locally, so I have no links to provide (though I feel that shouldn’t be necessary right now).
    Many sincere thanks to you all in advance,
    wordman

    bregent,
    I'm chewing this over in my head, reading up on DB's in 'phpSolutions' and I think that things are slowly materializing.
    Here is the structure of the website that I have planned:
    MAIN PAGE
    User is presented with a link on the main page to select photo galleries (other links are also present). Clicking the link takes them to the Category Page.
    CATEGORY PAGE
    On this page, the User will then have 5 choices based on categories (photo style). CLicking any of these 5 links will take them to respective TOC pages.
    TOC PAGE
    On this page, the user is greeted with a vertical list of galleries or photosets; one to three thumbs on the left, a small block of descriptive text on the right (ideally containing date/time info to show how recent the gallery is). Newest galleries appear at the top. Eventually, when there are tens or hundreds of galleries in any given catrgory, I'll need to adopt a method for breaking up the qualntity in groups (we can pick 20 for example) that can be scrolled through using a small navbar. This will keep the TOC Pages from getting endlessly long and avoid endless scrolling. User selects a gallery on this page to view.
    THUMBNAIL PAGE
    On choosing a gallery, a thumbnail page is generated (I have this working already)
    IMAGE PAGE
    On selecting any thumbnail in the grid, the user is taken to the full-sized photo with a navbar and photo counter at the top. Navlinks allow forward and back, a link to the first image, a link to the last image and one link back to the thumbnail page. (I have this working already).
    I provide this info in an effort to help understand the basic structure of my site. The description above is as close to a step-by-step illustration as possible.
    Thank you!
    Sincerely,
    wordman

  • Which program for basic business presentations?

    Forgive me but I need to ask for advice on what program to use for video editing for basic business presentations. I think Premiere Pro is way beyond my needs, mainly in terms of learning curve (as well as the cost).
    For what it's worth, I'm an avid Adobe user, and have been for years, for other programs: I currently use InDesign, Photoshop Elements, Dreamweaver, Audition, and Acrobat Standard (and also subscribe to the Acrobat Connect service). So, I don't feel too bad asking this forum to recommend "different" software for video editing. (Maybe Premiere Elements is best for me, but maybe not.)
    I do not have any experience in video editing, and I do not have any time for a significant learning curve. I also don't need to do anything fancy.
    I bought a MiniDV camcorder (Panasonic PV-GS300). I'm using a PC (3.6G, 1G RAM, half the 160G HD available, though I'll have to add a Firewire PCI card shortly) and Windows XP Pro. I'll get tripod lights and a good headworn mic. I use Nero Burning ROM 6 to burn DVDs (I've used its simple wizard to convert files and burn DVDs).
    My purpose is to create about a dozen or so 6- to 12-minute clips consisting mainly just of me standing and giving a verbal speech and with some still images created from the computer (PDF, GIF, or whatever) stuck in between the video (I'll probably want some of the speech from the video taping, or else some speech I create in Audition, to play through the showing of the still images).
    I'm not concerned with fancy video effects! I don't need it and I can't justify the learning curve (or cost) for it! Fades in and out are probably as advanced as I will get, though I really don't even need that.
    I'll want to create the videos in file formats for Windows and for Mac, and to put them on our web site for streaming video as well as burn DVDs.
    I'm sure I'll want to be able to adjust the image sizes and file sizes by choosing the tradeoff level with quality, though I hope there will be a set of standard defaults. I also really need good user forum support (I have no idea if Premiere Elements is enough for me but I sure have come to rely on the users on the Adobe forums).
    I need to ask whether I should get Premiere Elements or... yes, I know it's blasphemy but I swear I'm a loyal member of the clan in all other ways... whether there is another video editing program that's light-weight enough to be pretty quick in getting through the learning curve for the basics I want, and that's relatively inexpensive. (I've been told on one forum... blasphemy again, I know... that I should look into Vegas 7, but the price and sophistication seem way beyond my needs based on an initial glance on the web -- but maybe I should just spring for it and go. It also seems Vegas 7 is more practical for my needs than Premiere Pro -- but I'm really hoping I'll be pointed at much lower-end programs.)
    I really appreciate any advice I can get. I run a small business with big growth ahead (I have a tiger by the tail) and need to jump on this and to do it myself for now, and I just do not have a lot of time for learning.
    Thanks so much!
    Jay

    OK, fair questions.
    In my opinion, the learning curve for the most commonly used 95% of the programs is exactly the same between Premiere Pro and Premiere Elements. It really is. Capture video, figure out what you want on the timeline, put it on the timeline, add transitions, add music, export to something a DVD program can use, all of that. It is darn near identical.
    However... then you decide you want to do something interesting. You come online and we tell you that is it very simple. Just use Premiere Pro to do... oh, wait, you don't have Pro? Just Elements? Too bad.
    OK. Then you say "How do they make those great motion titles?". We say "It's easy, just use one of the text animation presets in After Effects". What? No After Effects? Too bad.
    So let's say you like using After Effects for titles and you decide you want to expand your knowledge. Simple. Get some projects from Dean Velez and modify them to suit you. Do you need to learn it all at one time? No. Just what you need when you need it.
    This is one reason that if you buy the Production Premium, one of the choices for extra goodies is a one month subscription to Lynda.com to watch their tutorials.
    Spend the time watching the tutorials. If something catches you eye, write down where you saw it so you can go back and really learn it.
    Just because you own a hammer and a saw and other hand tools doesn't mean you need to learn to be a carpenter. It just means that when your wife asks you to do something, you will have the required tools so you can go on the web and learn how to do that task, without having to run to Home Depot - which may be closed at the time you need it.
    I originally bought Premiere 6.0 and when I went to an Adobe demo at DVExpo in NYC back in 2002 I saw an After Effects demo. I called from the Adobe booth to order After Effects. Why? When I saw that the learning curve was only hard if you tried to tackle the whole thing, and I realized I could just use the part I needed, my whole opinion changed.
    If you only used After Effects for text in motion and for Stills in motion (Ken Burns and much more), you would get your money out of it. And that stuff can be learned in 15 minutes. Add in the real need for you, the chroma key, and the time savings is HUGE. You really need to know less to use Keylight than you do to use Premiere Pro to attempt the same thing.
    Having the full version of Photoshop is nothing more than you have now. Until you need more. Then you have it.
    The ability to use all of the Adobe products together outweighs any Vegas or Avid (consumer) advantages.
    Besides, we are much more helpful on this forum than those other guys! ;)

  • Bug Database for Sun ONE Studio 8

    Is there an online bug database for the Sun ONE Studio 8 Compiler Collection, like there is for all of the Java related tools? I know we have product support, but I don't want to go through the overhead of 4 or 5 layers of people to report a minor problem I have found.
    The minor problem is that the er_src utility will open files in the current working directory in preference to an absolute pathname specified on the command line. I used it from my home directory, giving it an executable name and source file name each about 5 levels deep in directories below my home -- with absolute paths. I was shocked to see the source from a six year old version of the file in the output. The 'truss' utility revealed that the source was being opened from my current directory -- ignoring the absolute path. This version of the file is one I have kept for reference, being the initial port of the program from a different language.
    It appears that er_src attempts the unqualified file name first, then the absolute path if it fails to find the unqualified name.

    The er_src man page does say the .er.rc files are processed, which implies that the setpath/addpath handling is done, at least to me. So the behavior reported is what I would have expected, but the manpage could, and should be more explicit.
    The er_print man page is more specific, and does say that the compiled-in path is used only if the file is not found searching the current path mappings, which do contain "."
    Can you tell me exactly what you'd like us to do? We did it this way because users complained about using the compiled in path, rather than finding the file in . or the experiments, where we explicitly tell people to copy files for archival purposes.
    If you want us to change the behavior, please tell us EXACTLY what the desired behavior is. We could define a special symbol, like $EXPTS, to refer to the compiled-in path, $COMPPATH, perhaps, and then it could be put before or after . or $EXPTS.
    Another issue is which name to use when. er_src has two referents for a path, one for "object", the thing whose source is being dumped, and a second for "item", specifying which item contained in the object should be dumped. For item, I believe we always only use the
    base name, even if an absolute name is given. It is used to match against the names contained in object's symbol tables. All of this is complicated by NFS -- the present functionality is intended to behave gracefully when a file is examined on a machine other than the one on which
    it was compiled.

  • About this XML database

    Today I have found these definitions:
    1.Native XML Database (NXD):
    a) Defines a (logical) model for an XML document -- as opposed to the data in that document -- and stores and retrieves documents according to that model. At a minimum, the model must include elements, attributes, PCDATA, and document order. Examples of such models are the XPath data model, the XML Infoset, and the models implied by the DOM and the events in SAX 1.0.
    b) Has an XML document as its fundamental unit of (logical) storage, just as a relational database has a row in a table as its fundamental unit of (logical) storage.
    c) Is not required to have any particular underlying physical storage model. For example, it can be built on a relational, hierarchical, or object-oriented database, or use a proprietary storage format such as indexed, compressed files.
    2.XML Enabled Database (XEDB) - A database that has an added XML mapping layer provided either by the database vendor or a third party. This mapping layer manages the storage and retrieval of XML data. Data that is mapped into the database is mapped into application specific formats and the original XML meta-data and structure may be lost. Data retrieved as XML is NOT guaranteed to have originated in XML form. Data manipulation may occur via either XML specific technologies(e.g. XPath, XSL-T, DOM or SAX) or other database technologies(e.g. SQL). The fundamental unit of storage in an XEDB is implementation dependent. The XML solutions from Oracle and Microsoft as well as many third party tools fall into this category.
    3.Hybrid XML Database (HXD) - A database that can be treated as either a Native XML Database or as an XML Enabled Database depending on the requirements of the application. An example of this would be Ozone.
    Which of them would you put XML DB in?

    If we consider the duality of the XMLType (store XML documents in CLOB's and structured storage with XML Schemas), could we say that it is an hybrid XML database?
    Native->CLOB's
    Enabled->structured storage
    I suppose this cuestion is a bit subjective, but I would like to know your opinions.
    Thanks in advance!

Maybe you are looking for