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=head1 WARNING
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This manual page was copied from the XML::Parser distribution (version 2.27)
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written by Clark Cooper. You can find newer versions at CPAN.
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=head1 NAME
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XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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use XML::Parser;
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$p1 = new XML::Parser(Style => 'Debug');
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$p1->parsefile('REC-xml-19980210.xml');
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$p1->parse('<foo id="me">Hello World</foo>');
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# Alternative
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$p2 = new XML::Parser(Handlers => {Start => \&handle_start,
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End => \&handle_end,
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Char => \&handle_char});
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$p2->parse($socket);
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# Another alternative
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$p3 = new XML::Parser(ErrorContext => 2);
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$p3->setHandlers(Char => \&text,
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Default => \&other);
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open(FOO, 'xmlgenerator |');
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$p3->parse(*FOO, ProtocolEncoding => 'ISO-8859-1');
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close(FOO);
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$p3->parsefile('junk.xml', ErrorContext => 3);
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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This module provides ways to parse XML documents. It is built on top of
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L<XML::Parser::Expat>, which is a lower level interface to James Clark's
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expat library. Each call to one of the parsing methods creates a new
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instance of XML::Parser::Expat which is then used to parse the document.
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Expat options may be provided when the XML::Parser object is created.
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These options are then passed on to the Expat object on each parse call.
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They can also be given as extra arguments to the parse methods, in which
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case they override options given at XML::Parser creation time.
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The behavior of the parser is controlled either by C<L</Style>> and/or
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C<L</Handlers>> options, or by L</setHandlers> method. These all provide
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mechanisms for XML::Parser to set the handlers needed by XML::Parser::Expat.
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If neither C<Style> nor C<Handlers> are specified, then parsing just
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checks the document for being well-formed.
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When underlying handlers get called, they receive as their first parameter
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the I<Expat> object, not the Parser object.
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=head1 METHODS
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=over 4
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=item new
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This is a class method, the constructor for XML::Parser. Options are passed
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as keyword value pairs. Recognized options are:
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=over 4
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=item * Style
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This option provides an easy way to create a given style of parser. The
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built in styles are: L<"Debug">, L<"Subs">, L<"Tree">, L<"Objects">,
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and L<"Stream">.
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Custom styles can be provided by giving a full package name containing
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at least one '::'. This package should then have subs defined for each
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handler it wishes to have installed. See L<"STYLES"> below
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for a discussion of each built in style.
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=item * Handlers
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When provided, this option should be an anonymous hash containing as
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keys the type of handler and as values a sub reference to handle that
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type of event. All the handlers get passed as their 1st parameter the
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instance of expat that is parsing the document. Further details on
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handlers can be found in L<"HANDLERS">. Any handler set here
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overrides the corresponding handler set with the Style option.
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=item * Pkg
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Some styles will refer to subs defined in this package. If not provided,
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it defaults to the package which called the constructor.
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=item * ErrorContext
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This is an Expat option. When this option is defined, errors are reported
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in context. The value should be the number of lines to show on either side
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of the line in which the error occurred.
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=item * ProtocolEncoding
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This is an Expat option. This sets the protocol encoding name. It defaults
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to none. The built-in encodings are: C<UTF-8>, C<ISO-8859-1>, C<UTF-16>, and
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C<US-ASCII>. Other encodings may be used if they have encoding maps in one
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of the directories in the @Encoding_Path list. Check L<"ENCODINGS"> for
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more information on encoding maps. Setting the protocol encoding overrides
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any encoding in the XML declaration.
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=item * Namespaces
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This is an Expat option. If this is set to a true value, then namespace
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processing is done during the parse. See L<XML::Parser::Expat/"Namespaces">
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for further discussion of namespace processing.
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=item * NoExpand
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This is an Expat option. Normally, the parser will try to expand references
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to entities defined in the internal subset. If this option is set to a true
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value, and a default handler is also set, then the default handler will be
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called when an entity reference is seen in text. This has no effect if a
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default handler has not been registered, and it has no effect on the expansion
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of entity references inside attribute values.
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=item * Stream_Delimiter
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This is an Expat option. It takes a string value. When this string is found
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alone on a line while parsing from a stream, then the parse is ended as if it
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saw an end of file. The intended use is with a stream of xml documents in a
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MIME multipart format. The string should not contain a trailing newline.
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=item * ParseParamEnt
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This is an Expat option. Unless standalone is set to "yes" in the XML
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declaration, setting this to a true value allows the external DTD to be read,
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and parameter entities to be parsed and expanded.
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=item * Non-Expat-Options
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If provided, this should be an anonymous hash whose keys are options that
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shouldn't be passed to Expat. This should only be of concern to those
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subclassing XML::Parser.
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=back
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=item setHandlers(TYPE, HANDLER [, TYPE, HANDLER [...]])
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This method registers handlers for various parser events. It overrides any
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previous handlers registered through the Style or Handler options or through
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earlier calls to setHandlers. By providing a false or undefined value as
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the handler, the existing handler can be unset.
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This method returns a list of type, handler pairs corresponding to the
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input. The handlers returned are the ones that were in effect prior to
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the call.
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See a description of the handler types in L<"HANDLERS">.
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=item parse(SOURCE [, OPT => OPT_VALUE [...]])
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The SOURCE parameter should either be a string containing the whole XML
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document, or it should be an open IO::Handle. Constructor options to
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XML::Parser::Expat given as keyword-value pairs may follow the SOURCE
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parameter. These override, for this call, any options or attributes passed
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through from the XML::Parser instance.
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A die call is thrown if a parse error occurs. Otherwise it will return 1
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or whatever is returned from the B<Final> handler, if one is installed.
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In other words, what parse may return depends on the style.
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=item parsestring
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This is just an alias for parse for backwards compatibility.
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=item parsefile(FILE [, OPT => OPT_VALUE [...]])
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Open FILE for reading, then call parse with the open handle. The file
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is closed no matter how parse returns. Returns what parse returns.
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=item parse_start([ OPT => OPT_VALUE [...]])
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Create and return a new instance of XML::Parser::ExpatNB. Constructor
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options may be provided. If an init handler has been provided, it is
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called before returning the ExpatNB object. Documents are parsed by
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making incremental calls to the parse_more method of this object, which
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takes a string. A single call to the parse_done method of this object,
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which takes no arguments, indicates that the document is finished.
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If there is a final handler installed, it is executed by the parse_done
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method before returning and the parse_done method returns whatever is
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returned by the final handler.
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=back
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=head1 HANDLERS
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Expat is an event based parser. As the parser recognizes parts of the
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document (say the start or end tag for an XML element), then any handlers
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registered for that type of an event are called with suitable parameters.
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All handlers receive an instance of XML::Parser::Expat as their first
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argument. See L<XML::Parser::Expat/"METHODS"> for a discussion of the
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methods that can be called on this object.
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=head2 Init (Expat)
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This is called just before the parsing of the document starts.
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=head2 Final (Expat)
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This is called just after parsing has finished, but only if no errors
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occurred during the parse. Parse returns what this returns.
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=head2 Start (Expat, Element [, Attr, Val [,...]])
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This event is generated when an XML start tag is recognized. Element is the
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name of the XML element type that is opened with the start tag. The Attr &
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Val pairs are generated for each attribute in the start tag.
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=head2 End (Expat, Element)
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This event is generated when an XML end tag is recognized. Note that
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an XML empty tag (<foo/>) generates both a start and an end event.
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=head2 Char (Expat, String)
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This event is generated when non-markup is recognized. The non-markup
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sequence of characters is in String. A single non-markup sequence of
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characters may generate multiple calls to this handler. Whatever the
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encoding of the string in the original document, this is given to the
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handler in UTF-8.
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=head2 Proc (Expat, Target, Data)
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This event is generated when a processing instruction is recognized.
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=head2 Comment (Expat, Data)
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This event is generated when a comment is recognized.
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=head2 CdataStart (Expat)
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This is called at the start of a CDATA section.
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=head2 CdataEnd (Expat)
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This is called at the end of a CDATA section.
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=head2 Default (Expat, String)
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This is called for any characters that don't have a registered handler.
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This includes both characters that are part of markup for which no
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events are generated (markup declarations) and characters that
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could generate events, but for which no handler has been registered.
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Whatever the encoding in the original document, the string is returned to
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the handler in UTF-8.
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=head2 Unparsed (Expat, Entity, Base, Sysid, Pubid, Notation)
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This is called for a declaration of an unparsed entity. Entity is the name
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of the entity. Base is the base to be used for resolving a relative URI.
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Sysid is the system id. Pubid is the public id. Notation is the notation
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name. Base and Pubid may be undefined.
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=head2 Notation (Expat, Notation, Base, Sysid, Pubid)
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This is called for a declaration of notation. Notation is the notation name.
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Base is the base to be used for resolving a relative URI. Sysid is the system
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id. Pubid is the public id. Base, Sysid, and Pubid may all be undefined.
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=head2 ExternEnt (Expat, Base, Sysid, Pubid)
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This is called when an external entity is referenced. Base is the base to be
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used for resolving a relative URI. Sysid is the system id. Pubid is the public
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id. Base, and Pubid may be undefined.
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This handler should either return a string, which represents the contents of
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the external entity, or return an open filehandle that can be read to obtain
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the contents of the external entity, or return undef, which indicates the
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external entity couldn't be found and will generate a parse error.
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If an open filehandle is returned, it must be returned as either a glob
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(*FOO) or as a reference to a glob (e.g. an instance of IO::Handle). The
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parser will close the filehandle after using it.
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A default handler, XML::Parser::default_ext_ent_handler, is installed
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for this. It only handles the file URL method and it assumes "file:" if
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it isn't there. The expat base method can be used to set a basename for
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relative pathnames. If no basename is given, or if the basename is itself
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a relative name, then it is relative to the current working directory.
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=head2 Entity (Expat, Name, Val, Sysid, Pubid, Ndata)
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This is called when an entity is declared. For internal entities, the Val
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parameter will contain the value and the remaining three parameters will be
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undefined. For external entities, the Val parameter will be undefined, the
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Sysid parameter will have the system id, the Pubid parameter will have the
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public id if it was provided (it will be undefined otherwise), the Ndata
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parameter will contain the notation for unparsed entities. If this is a
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parameter entity declaration, then a '%' will be prefixed to the name.
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Note that this handler and the Unparsed handler above overlap. If both are
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set, then this handler will not be called for unparsed entities.
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=head2 Element (Expat, Name, Model)
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The element handler is called when an element declaration is found. Name
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is the element name, and Model is the content model as a string.
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=head2 Attlist (Expat, Elname, Attname, Type, Default, Fixed)
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This handler is called for each attribute in an ATTLIST declaration.
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So an ATTLIST declaration that has multiple attributes will generate multiple
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calls to this handler. The Elname parameter is the name of the element with
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which the attribute is being associated. The Attname parameter is the name
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of the attribute. Type is the attribute type, given as a string. Default is
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the default value, which will either be "#REQUIRED", "#IMPLIED" or a quoted
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string (i.e. the returned string will begin and end with a quote character).
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If Fixed is true, then this is a fixed attribute.
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=head2 Doctype (Expat, Name, Sysid, Pubid, Internal)
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This handler is called for DOCTYPE declarations. Name is the document type
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name. Sysid is the system id of the document type, if it was provided,
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otherwise it's undefined. Pubid is the public id of the document type,
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which will be undefined if no public id was given. Internal is the internal
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subset, given as a string. If there was no internal subset, it will be
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undefined. Internal will contain all whitespace, comments, processing
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instructions, and declarations seen in the internal subset. The declarations
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will be there whether or not they have been processed by another handler
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(except for unparsed entities processed by the Unparsed handler). However,
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comments and processing instructions will not appear if they've been processed
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by their respective handlers.
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=head2 XMLDecl (Expat, Version, Encoding, Standalone)
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This handler is called for xml declarations. Version is a string containg
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the version. Encoding is either undefined or contains an encoding string.
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Standalone will be either true, false, or undefined if the standalone attribute
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is yes, no, or not made respectively.
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=head1 STYLES
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=head2 Debug
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This just prints out the document in outline form. Nothing special is
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returned by parse.
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=head2 Subs
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Each time an element starts, a sub by that name in the package specified
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by the Pkg option is called with the same parameters that the Start
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handler gets called with.
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Each time an element ends, a sub with that name appended with an underscore
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("_"), is called with the same parameters that the End handler gets called
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with.
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Nothing special is returned by parse.
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=head2 Tree
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Parse will return a parse tree for the document. Each node in the tree
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takes the form of a tag, content pair. Text nodes are represented with
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a pseudo-tag of "0" and the string that is their content. For elements,
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the content is an array reference. The first item in the array is a
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(possibly empty) hash reference containing attributes. The remainder of
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the array is a sequence of tag-content pairs representing the content
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of the element.
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So for example the result of parsing:
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<foo><head id="a">Hello <em>there</em></head><bar>Howdy<ref/></bar>do</foo>
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would be:
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Tag Content
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==================================================================
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[foo, [{}, head, [{id => "a"}, 0, "Hello ", em, [{}, 0, "there"]],
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bar, [ {}, 0, "Howdy", ref, [{}]],
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0, "do"
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]
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]
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The root document "foo", has 3 children: a "head" element, a "bar"
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element and the text "do". After the empty attribute hash, these are
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represented in it's contents by 3 tag-content pairs.
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=head2 Objects
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This is similar to the Tree style, except that a hash object is created for
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each element. The corresponding object will be in the class whose name
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is created by appending "::" and the element name to the package set with
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the Pkg option. Non-markup text will be in the ::Characters class. The
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contents of the corresponding object will be in an anonymous array that
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is the value of the Kids property for that object.
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=head2 Stream
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This style also uses the Pkg package. If none of the subs that this
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style looks for is there, then the effect of parsing with this style is
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to print a canonical copy of the document without comments or declarations.
|
|
398 |
All the subs receive as their 1st parameter the Expat instance for the
|
|
399 |
document they're parsing.
|
|
400 |
|
|
401 |
It looks for the following routines:
|
|
402 |
|
|
403 |
=over 4
|
|
404 |
|
|
405 |
=item * StartDocument
|
|
406 |
|
|
407 |
Called at the start of the parse .
|
|
408 |
|
|
409 |
=item * StartTag
|
|
410 |
|
|
411 |
Called for every start tag with a second parameter of the element type. The $_
|
|
412 |
variable will contain a copy of the tag and the %_ variable will contain
|
|
413 |
attribute values supplied for that element.
|
|
414 |
|
|
415 |
=item * EndTag
|
|
416 |
|
|
417 |
Called for every end tag with a second parameter of the element type. The $_
|
|
418 |
variable will contain a copy of the end tag.
|
|
419 |
|
|
420 |
=item * Text
|
|
421 |
|
|
422 |
Called just before start or end tags with accumulated non-markup text in
|
|
423 |
the $_ variable.
|
|
424 |
|
|
425 |
=item * PI
|
|
426 |
|
|
427 |
Called for processing instructions. The $_ variable will contain a copy of
|
|
428 |
the PI and the target and data are sent as 2nd and 3rd parameters
|
|
429 |
respectively.
|
|
430 |
|
|
431 |
=item * EndDocument
|
|
432 |
|
|
433 |
Called at conclusion of the parse.
|
|
434 |
|
|
435 |
=back
|
|
436 |
|
|
437 |
=head1 ENCODINGS
|
|
438 |
|
|
439 |
XML documents may be encoded in character sets other than Unicode as
|
|
440 |
long as they may be mapped into the Unicode character set. Expat has
|
|
441 |
further restrictions on encodings. Read the xmlparse.h header file in
|
|
442 |
the expat distribution to see details on these restrictions.
|
|
443 |
|
|
444 |
Expat has built-in encodings for: C<UTF-8>, C<ISO-8859-1>, C<UTF-16>, and
|
|
445 |
C<US-ASCII>. Encodings are set either through the XML declaration
|
|
446 |
encoding attribute or through the ProtocolEncoding option to XML::Parser
|
|
447 |
or XML::Parser::Expat.
|
|
448 |
|
|
449 |
For encodings other than the built-ins, expat calls the function
|
|
450 |
load_encoding in the Expat package with the encoding name. This function
|
|
451 |
looks for a file in the path list @XML::Parser::Expat::Encoding_Path, that
|
|
452 |
matches the lower-cased name with a '.enc' extension. The first one it
|
|
453 |
finds, it loads.
|
|
454 |
|
|
455 |
If you wish to build your own encoding maps, check out the XML::Encoding
|
|
456 |
module from CPAN.
|
|
457 |
|
|
458 |
=head1 AUTHORS
|
|
459 |
|
|
460 |
Larry Wall <F<larry@wall.org>> wrote version 1.0.
|
|
461 |
|
|
462 |
Clark Cooper <F<coopercc@netheaven.com>> picked up support, changed the API
|
|
463 |
for this version (2.x), provided documentation,
|
|
464 |
and added some standard package features.
|
|
465 |
|
|
466 |
=cut
|