Let's use the example of terminator as a delimiter.

If I provide an expression so that I can compute terminator at runtime, is it allowed to return empty string? I.e., equivalent to writing dfdl:terminator="" which is effectively "turning off" use of terminator?

It seems very problematic to me if we allow this.  Nor do I think this generality is needed.

We should clarify that for initiator/terminator/separator, if a runtime expression is used, then it must return at least one non-zero-length value. So using a runtime expression for a delimiter is effectively saying "yes there will be a delimiter", you are just not binding its specific value.

I believe this runtime expression capability for delimiters was intended to allow the choice of the specific delimiter to be made based on data containing the value. This is common practice in data formats.

However, turning on/off whether delimiters are present or not, is not something I anticipated, and it has far bigger implications for the format. I mean you really can't decide much about the data format statically if even the existence of delimiters as part of the format or not can be postponed to runtime.

Comments?

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Mike Beckerle | OGF DFDL WG Co-Chair 
Tel:  781-330-0412