What's the difference between <a_element /> and <a_element xsi:nil="true" />?

Dark Defender picture Dark Defender · Sep 21, 2010 · Viewed 44.5k times · Source

do you know if there's a difference between these tags on XML/XSD?

<a_element /> and <a_element xsi:nil="true"/>

e.g:

<SpreadCurve>
      <Index>3M</Index>
      <IndexNumber>4587</IndexNumber>
      <BusinessArea xsi:nil="true" />
</SpreadCurve>

and

<SpreadCurve>
      <Index>3M</Index>
      <IndexNumber>4587</IndexNumber>
      <BusinessArea />
</SpreadCurve>

Are these equivalent ?

If I have a XSD element:

<xsd:element name="BusinessArea" type="xsd:string"/>

this means that it is by default xsi:nil="false". And this means it will not accept a null value for this element.

My doubt is, will it accept this one?

<BusinessArea />

What does this really mean to the XSD?

Best regards

Answer

YoK picture YoK · Sep 21, 2010

You get this as your XSD BusinessArea should be defined as nillable="true". Something like:

<xsd:element name="BusinessArea" nillable="true">
.....
</xsd:element> 

What this mean is that BusinessArea element can have null value i.e. empty.

And if element in XML doesn't contain any value then it must have attribute xsi:nil="true":

<BusinessArea xsi:nil="true" />

This should be invalid :

<BusinessArea />

Two examples you showed should not be equivalent.

Check this out for understanding xsi:nil and nillable:

http://www.zvon.org/xxl/XMLSchemaTutorial/Output/ser_over_st0.html

http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-0/#Nils