Where can I find the XSD for the XML file that Nunit uses ?
For the results file? See Results.xsd (note that it didn't display properly for me, in Chrome; you may have to view source, or download, to see it properly).
A transform file, and a sample results file, are in the parent directory. The files are also in the documentation package on the NUnit download page.
Related
I have xml file that contains remote xsl stylesheet link. I need to convert that xml to pdf? I have tried Prince but it is not adding desired style. Is there any other package that i can use for this purpose?
You can try with package (https://www.npmjs.com/package/xml-pdf) in this you can set your custom template also for design purpose. I have committed a GitHub repo for you. https://github.com/vivek9716/convert_pdf please check if this is helpful.
I have a folder with a large amount of .doc and .docx files, I would like to develop a python script to edit the tags of each file so I can find a file in the folder using the tags - thus making my life a little easier.
I am unsure of how to even start and was hoping someone could point me to a library or provide some sample code to help me get started.
I am not sure if the file extenstion matters because this seems to be a windows property (right-click file > Properties > Details > Tags > type in tags) but if the extension matters I do can change all the files to be .docx
The python-docx package provides methods to access most of the metatdata in a word file. The class docx.opc.coreprops.CoreProperties in specific allows you to modify author, category, etc. I didn't see tags mentioned but if you do some more research i'm sure you can find it.
docx.opc.coreprops.CoreProperties.keywords can be used to update doc file tags.
First of all, this is not a duplicate question. This question is inspired by the comment on this post.
I know how to do Javadoc comments in Android Studio. And I am able to link java files using #link like this:
{#link FileName#methodName()} some text to display
but I am not able to figure out a way to link build.gradle file in the comments. The reason why I need this that we are storing buildConfigField in the Gradle file like this:
buildTypes.each {
it.buildConfigField('int', 'LANGUAGE_VERSION', "3")
}
I was commenting on the file that makes sure to upgrade this version number every time whenever there is something changed in the file. And while writing down java comments on the file I faced this situation. Is there a way to link the file?
You can Try giving the absolute path to your build.gradle in your javadoc comments by using HTML link tag
/**
* Link
*/
What Oracle Description says about including files in Javadoc:
Miscellaneous Unprocessed Files
You can also include in your source any miscellaneous files that you want the Javadoc tool to copy to the destination directory. These typically includes graphic files, example Java source (.java) and class (.class) files, and self-standing HTML files whose content would overwhelm the documentation comment of a normal Java source file.
To include unprocessed files, put them in a directory called doc-files which can be a subdirectory of any package directory that contains source files. You can have one such subdirectory for each package. You might include images, example code, source files, .class files, applets and HTML files. For example, if you want to include the image of a button button.gif in the java.awt.Button class documentation, you place that file in the /home/user/src/java/awt/doc-files/ directory. Notice the doc-files directory should not be located at /home/user/src/java/doc-files because java is not a package -- that is, it does not directly contain any source files.
All links to these unprocessed files must be hard-coded, because the Javadoc tool does not look at the files -- it simply copies the directory and all its contents to the destination. For example, the link in the Button.java doc comment might look like:
/**
* This button looks like this:
* <img src="doc-files/Button.gif">
*/
Is there a way to generate an XSD document automatically from the binding.xml used by JIBx? This is mainly to allow offline validation of the XML documents will be unmarshalled eventually.
I checked the JIBx homepage, it mentioned a tool called Schema Generator:
http://jibx.sourceforge.net/jibxtools/schema-example.html
but looks like the jibx-genschema.jar file is no longer part of the package anymore, as such I was wondering if there is any alternative
Thanks!
Here is the link to the original package.
http://mirrors.ibiblio.org/pub/mirrors/maven2/org/codehaus/xfire/jibx/genschema/jibx-genschema.jar
Schema generator main class is org.jibx.binding.Compile. It is available in jibx-bind.jar.
This jar can be added to your project with maven dependency org.jibx:jibx-bind:1.2.3 (for example).
The SchemaGen tool has been included in the jibx-tools.jar file for some time. See the JiBX Binding Generator page for instructions on running tools in the jar, just substitute the target class org.jibx.schema.generator.SchemaGen to run the schema generator.
I have build that produces a (NCover 3.4 Summary) html report.
I'd like to configure the Dashboard to show the html report.
The report is produced perfectly in working folder during the build - my problem is referencing the report from the Dashboard. Should I do something to store it from working folder into the 'cc.net build records'? I don't really understand the inner workings there...
My use of plugin in the Dashboard.config is shown below. I don't know what I should use actionName for and have left it with value from documentation.
The link in CC.Net resolves as: http://DummyServerName/ccnet/server/local/project/DummyProject/build/log20101221100723Lbuild.2.0.0.176.xml/viewReport.aspx
Thanks for any comments,
Anders, Denmark
<htmlReportPlugin description="NCover Summary" actionName="viewReport" htmlFileName="coverage_summary.html" />
From the CCNET Documentation [1] :
This plug-in can display any file that
is in the build folder under artefacts
folder for the project. It cannot
display files from any other location
(for security reasons). Files can be
published to a build folder using the
File Merge Task. This will
automatically generate the correct
folder structure for the HTML reports.
Either way, you can generate an xml report, merge it into the ccnet log and use an xsl to display it in the dashboard/emails.[2]
[1] http://build.nauck-it.de/doc/CCNET/HTML%20Report%20Plugin.html
[2] http://docs.ncover.com/how-to/continuous-integration/cruisecontrol-net/