The following are limitations related to EXTENDED-XER:
For BASE64: ASN1C only supports
                        BASE64 on octet strings. Using
                        BASE64 with octet stings having contents constraints,
                     open types, or restricted character strings is not supported.
For encoder's options: ASN1C decoders do not support the following encoder's options allowed by EXTENDED-XER:
encoding named bits as empty elements
encoding named numbers as empty elements
Enforcement of Encoding Instruction Restrictions: ASN1C does not check
                     that you are using encoding instructions properly. Misapplication of
                     encoding instructions has undefined results. For example, X.693 does not
                     generally allow ATTRIBUTE to be applied to a sequence
                     type (there are a few cases where it can be); such an application produces
                     malformed XML.
In particular, when applying ATTRIBUTE to a restricted
                     character string type, the type should be restricted to exclude the control
                     characters listed in X.680 15.15.5, since these control characters are
                     encoded as empty elements. (Another solution would be to use
                        ATTRIBUTE and BASE64 together,
                     except that ASN1C does not currently support BASE64 for
                     restricted character strings.) ASN1C will not enforce this rule, but you
                     will get malformed XML if you try to encode a string having control
                     characters as an attribute.
XSD Generation: The -xsd switch does not currently
                     generate XSD that can be used to validate EXTENDED-XER encodings. (Actually,
                     in the worst cases, it is not possible to produce XSD that validates
                     precisely the set of valid EXTENDED-XER encodings; the closest
                     approximations would either fail to reject some invalid encodings or fail to
                     accept some valid encodings. This is a result of the encoder's options,
                     which can produce mixed content models and XML Schema's limited abilities to
                     constrain mixed content models.)