This strategy unconditionally replaces the "top-level" properties of a node with its direct update
but replaces the children of the node with the children of the its indirect update.
Loosely speaking, this strategy causes unselect to only pull back updates to the name, prefix,
scope, and attributes of a conflicted element. Updates to the children property of such an element
are silently ignored. Instead, the element's children are determined by whatever updates occurred
to the descendant nodes in zipper.
If a node has been multiplied via a flatMap operation or the like, then the strategy will be uniformly applied to
all of the resulting nodes. If it has been completely elided, then it will be elided in the result as well.
See also the RequireLocal strategy, which behaves similarly except
that it throws an error if it detects changes to a conflicted element's children property.
This strategy unconditionally replaces the "top-level" properties of a node with its direct update but replaces the children of the node with the children of the its indirect update.
Loosely speaking, this strategy causes
unselect
to only pull back updates to thename
,prefix
,scope
, andattributes
of a conflicted element. Updates to thechildren
property of such an element are silently ignored. Instead, the element's children are determined by whatever updates occurred to the descendant nodes in zipper.If a node has been multiplied via a
flatMap
operation or the like, then the strategy will be uniformly applied to all of the resulting nodes. If it has been completely elided, then it will be elided in the result as well.See also the
RequireLocal
strategy, which behaves similarly except that it throws an error if it detects changes to a conflicted element'schildren
property.com.codecommit.antixml.Zipper