LibXML(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | LibXML(3pm) |
XML::SimpleObject::LibXML - Perl extension allowing a simple(r) object representation of an XML::LibXML DOM object.
use XML::SimpleObject::LibXML; # Construct with the key/value pairs as argument; this will create its # own XML::LibXML object. my $xmlobj = new XML::SimpleObject(XML => $XML); # ... or construct with the parsed tree as the only argument, having to # create the XML::Parser object separately. my $parser = new XML::LibXML; my $dom = $parser->parse_file($file); # or $parser->parse_string($xml); my $xmlobj = new XML::SimpleObject::LibXML ($dom); my $filesobj = $xmlobj->child("files")->child("file"); $filesobj->name; $filesobj->value; $filesobj->attribute("type"); %attributes = $filesobj->attributes; @children = $filesobj->children; @some_children = $filesobj->children("some"); @children_names = $filesobj->children_names;
This is a short and simple class allowing simple object access to a parsed XML::LibXML tree, with methods for fetching children and attributes in as clean a manner as possible. My apologies for further polluting the XML:: space; this is a small and quick module, with easy and compact usage. Some will rightfully question placing another interface over the DOM methods provided by XML::LibXML, but my experience is that people appreciate the total simplicity provided by this module, despite its limitations.
After creating $xmlobj, this object can now be used to browse the XML tree with the following methods.
Given this XML document:
<files> <file type="symlink"> <name>/etc/dosemu.conf</name> <dest>dosemu.conf-drdos703.eval</dest> </file> <file> <name>/etc/passwd</name> <bytes>948</bytes> </file> </files>
You can then interpret the tree as follows:
my $parser = new XML::LibXML; my $xmlobj = new XML::SimpleObject::LibXML ($parser->parse_string($XML)); print "Files: \n"; foreach my $element ($xmlobj->child("files")->children("file")) { print " filename: " . $element->child("name")->value . "\n"; if ($element->attribute("type")) { print " type: " . $element->attribute("type") . "\n"; } print " bytes: " . $element->child("bytes")->value . "\n"; }
This will output:
Files: filename: /etc/dosemu.conf type: symlink bytes: 20 filename: /etc/passwd bytes: 948
You can use 'children()' without arguments to step through all children of a given element:
my $filesobj = $xmlobj->child("files")->child("file"); foreach my $child ($filesobj->children) { print "child: ", $child->name, ": ", $child->value, "\n"; }
For the tree above, this will output:
child: bytes: 20 child: dest: dosemu.conf-drdos703.eval child: name: /etc/dosemu.conf
Using 'children_names()', you can step through all children for a given element:
my $filesobj = $xmlobj->child("files"); foreach my $childname ($filesobj->children_names) { print "$childname has children: "; print join (", ", $filesobj->child($childname)->children_names), "\n"; }
This will print:
file has children: bytes, dest, name
By always using 'children()', you can step through each child object, retrieving them with 'child()'.
Dan Brian <dan@brians.org>
perl(1), XML::SimpleObject, XML::Parser, XML::LibXML.
2022-06-28 | perl v5.34.0 |