I thought this was as simple as reversing
the order of the bits in a byte as each byte is read/written? If
not then I have not understood what it is doing.
Reading through, my overall comment
is that most readers will struggle to understand what this property is
trying to achieve. It needs to be more accessible.
I'm limiting my comments to the below for
now, until I get my head round what this property is doing.
"Determines the way that the positions
of bits within a byte of data are interpreted for content that occupies
only part of a byte, or which spans from part of one byte to part of another."
I was expecting this just to say "Determines the way that
the positions of bits within a byte of data are interpreted".
The description needs to say when the property
applies. It is not just when byteOrder applies, so I think it is to all
schema components (ie, anything that can potentially have a representation
in the data).
Regards
Steve Hanson
Architect, IBM Data Format Description Language (DFDL)
Co-Chair, OGF
DFDL Working Group
IBM SWG, Hursley, UK
smh@uk.ibm.com
tel:+44-1962-815848
From:
Mike Beckerle <mbeckerle.dfdl@gmail.com>
To:
"dfdl-wg@ogf.org"
<dfdl-wg@ogf.org>,
Date:
08/10/2013 03:00
Subject:
[DFDL-WG] bit
order - proposed new erratum - response to public comment 43, action item
234
Sent by:
dfdl-wg-bounces@ogf.org
Attached is a MS-Word document containing my first cut
at an errata to describe adding a new bitOrder property to DFDL.
It is more complicated than I would like.
Mike Beckerle | OGF DFDL Workgroup Co-Chair | Tresys Technology | www.tresys.com
Please note: Contributions to the DFDL Workgroup's email
discussions are subject to the OGF
Intellectual Property Policy
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