Attach your XSD file to the Confluence page, just as you would attach a screenshot or other file.See the XSD Viewer page on the Atlassian Marketplace. The add-on is also available for free for 30 days. Download the XSD Viewer add-on and install it into Confluence.Download and install Confluence, if you don’t already have it.To make this happen, you need to do the following: I’m running Confluence on my Windows 7 laptop, and I’m using Chrome to view the wiki pages. I’m using Confluence 5.0.1, with version 1.1.1 of the XSD Viewer. If it happens to you too, it’s worth letting the Avisi team know. This screenshot shows the attachments on the above page:Ī couple of times, the XSD Viewer has declined to show any rows in the table. All I had to do to make this work, was to attach all three XSD files to the page. One point of interest here is that the confluence.xsd file references two other schema files: confluence-ri.xsd and confluence-xhtml.xsd. The XSD Viewer is using confluence.xsd, starting with the image element. Hehe, if you put Confluence and XSD in the same blog post, then ‘twould be remiss not to include Graham’s XML schema for the Confluence storage format. I’ve instructed the XSD viewer to start with the purchaseOrder element, and show a depth of 2 levels.Įxample 2: Graham Hannington’s schema for the Confluence storage format I’ve grabbed the sample schema for a purchase order from MSDN. I’ve also chatted with Yanne from Avisi, who says that he and his team would love to have your feedback. I’ve been playing around with the add-on, so I’d love to show you a couple of examples and tell you how to get it working for yourself. The XSD Viewer is a new add-on for Confluence wiki, and the Avisi developers are keen for input from technical writers and others interested in XML schemas. □ Avisi have developed two nifty macros to display an XML schema (XSD) in tabular and graphic format on a Confluence page.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |