textdata |
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Name
textdata — A text packet
Synopsis
Content Model | |
textdata ::= (#PCDATA, | |
Attributes | |
Name | Type |
id | CDATA |
label | CDATA |
Added in Regina 7.0
Description
This represents a text packet, one of the many types of packet that together form the packet tree that a user sees when they open a Regina data file.
A text packet simply stores an arbitrary amount of text. The text itself is contained in the character data that appears before the first child XML element. All whitespace and line breaks are relevant and are considered a part of this text.
There are several child XML elements that are common to all packet types.
The tag
elements represent an arbitrary set of string
“tags” that users can attach to a packet to help organise
their data.
The remaining child elements list all of Regina's packet types
(container
, textdata
, etc.), and these represent the
immediate children of this packet in the packet tree.
Parents
The following elements can contain any packet element (including this):
angles
, anon
, anonref
, attachment
, container
, filtercomb
, filterprop
, filtertrivial
, hypersurfaces
, link
, regina
, script
, snappeadata
, surfaces
, textdata
, tri
.
This list includes all packet types, as well as the top-level element
regina
.
Children
Element textdata
has no children that are
specific to text packets.
The following children can occur in all packet elements:
angles
, anon
, anonref
, attachment
, container
, filtercomb
, filterprop
, filtertrivial
, hypersurfaces
, link
, script
, snappeadata
, surfaces
, tag
, textdata
, tri
.
This list includes all packet types, as well as the tag
element
for tagging individual packets.
Attributes
The following attributes are common to all packet types:
id
A unique identifier for this packet. Packets are not required to have IDs, but when they are present they must be distinct (i.e., no packets in the same file may share the same ID). IDs do not need to be human-readable, must not contain leading or trailing whitespace, and must not be empty strings. Currently, IDs are built from base 64 hashes of the underlying C++ pointers.
The purpose of these packet IDs is to allow other packets to reference this packet (for instance, so that a script packet can store references to its variables).
IDs are not required to stay the same across subsequent loads and saves of the same file. In other words, if you load a file and save it again, the packet IDs are allowed to change.
label
The name given by the user to this particular packet within the overall packet tree.
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