| Frames | No Frames | |
Deprecated Interfaces | |
| ASAttributeDeclaration An attribute declaration in the context of a ASObject.The
constant 'REQUIRED' is missing from this interface. | |
| ASContentModel The content model of a declared element. | |
| ASDataType The datatypes supported by DOM AS implementations. | |
| ASElementDeclaration The element name along with the content specification in the context of an
ASObject. | |
| ASEntityDeclaration Models a general entity declaration in an abstract schema. | |
| ASModel To begin with, an abstract schema is a generic structure that could
contain both internal and external subsets. | |
| ASNamedObjectMap Objects implementing the ASNamedObjectMap interface are used
to represent collections of abstract schema nodes that can be accessed by
name. | |
| ASNotationDeclaration This interface represents a notation declaration. | |
| ASObject The ASObject interface is analogous to a Node in
, e.g., an element declaration. | |
| ASObjectList The ASObjectList interface provides the abstraction of an
ordered collection of AS nodes, without defining or constraining how this
collection is implemented. | |
| CharacterDataEditAS This interface extends the NodeEditAS interface with
additional methods for document editing. | |
| DocumentAS This interface extends the Document interface with additional
methods for both document and AS editing. | |
| DocumentEditAS This interface extends the NodeEditAS interface with
additional methods for both document and AS editing. | |
| DOMASBuilder An Abstract Schema parser interface. | |
| DOMASWriter A Abstract Schema serialization interface. | |
| DOMImplementationAS This interface allows creation of an ASModel. | |
| ElementEditAS This interface extends the Element interface with additional
methods for guided document editing. | |
| NodeEditAS This interface extends a Node from with additional methods
for guided document editing. | |
Deprecated Classes | |
| DOMASException Abstract Schemas operations may throw a DOMSystemException as
described in their descriptions. | |