Please visit our sponsors !
SOAP Attributes
SOAP elements can have the attributes: actor, encodingStyle and
mustUnderstand.
The Actor Attribute
The Actor attribute defines the URI for which the header elements are
intended.
The Actor attribute has the following syntax:
Example:
<soap:Header>
<m:local xmlns:m="http://www.w3schools.com/local/"
soap:actor="http://www.w3schools.com/appml">
<m:language>en</m:language>
<m:currency>USD</m:currency>
</m:local>
</soap:Header>
|
The encodingStyle Attribute
The encodingStyle element is used to define the format (data types) that is
used in the document.
The encodingStyle attribute has the following syntax:
Example:
<soap:Envelope
xmlns:soap="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
soap:encodingStyle="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/">
...
Message information goes here
...
</soap:Envelope>
|
The mustUnderstand Attribute
The mustUnderstand attribute is used to define if the receiver of a message
must process a header element.
The mustUnderstand attribute has the following syntax:
soap:mustUnderstand="boolean"
|
Example:
<soap:Header>
<m:local xmlns:m="http://www.w3schools.com/local/">
<m:language soap:mustUnderstand="0">en</m:language>
<m:currency soap:mustUnderstand="1">USD</m:currency>
</m:local>
</soap:Header>
|
Jump to: Top of Page
or HOME or
Printer friendly page
Search W3Schools:
What Others Say About Us
Does the world know about us? Check out these places:
Dogpile
Alta Vista
MSN
Google
Excite
Lycos
Yahoo
Ask Jeeves
We Help You For Free. You Can Help Us!
W3Schools is for training only. We do not warrant its correctness or its fitness for use.
The risk of using it remains entirely with the user. While using this site, you agree to have read and accepted our
terms of use and
privacy policy.
Copyright 1999-2002 by Refsnes Data. All Rights Reserved
|