1XML::SAX::Writer(3)   User Contributed Perl Documentation  XML::SAX::Writer(3)
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NAME

6       XML::SAX::Writer - SAX2 Writer
7

SYNOPSIS

9         use XML::SAX::Writer;
10         use XML::SAX::SomeDriver;
11
12         my $w = XML::SAX::Writer->new;
13         my $d = XML::SAX::SomeDriver->new(Handler => $w);
14
15         $d->parse('some options...');
16

DESCRIPTION

18   Why yet another XML Writer ?
19       A new XML Writer was needed to match the SAX2 effort because quite
20       naturally no existing writer understood SAX2. My first intention had
21       been to start patching XML::Handler::YAWriter as it had previously been
22       my favourite writer in the SAX1 world.
23
24       However the more I patched it the more I realised that what I thought
25       was going to be a simple patch (mostly adding a few event handlers and
26       changing the attribute syntax) was turning out to be a rewrite due to
27       various ideas I'd been collecting along the way. Besides, I couldn't
28       find a way to elegantly make it work with SAX2 without breaking the
29       SAX1 compatibility which people are probably still using. There are of
30       course ways to do that, but most require user interaction which is
31       something I wanted to avoid.
32
33       So in the end there was a new writer. I think it's in fact better this
34       way as it helps keep SAX1 and SAX2 separated.
35

METHODS

37       ·   new(%hash)
38
39           This is the constructor for this object.  It takes a number of
40           parameters, all of which are optional.
41
42       ·   -- Output
43
44           This parameter can be one of several things.  If it is a simple
45           scalar, it is interpreted as a filename which will be opened for
46           writing.  If it is a scalar reference, output will be appended to
47           this scalar.  If it is an array reference, output will be pushed
48           onto this array as it is generated.  If it is a filehandle, then
49           output will be sent to this filehandle.
50
51           Finally, it is possible to pass an object for this parameter, in
52           which case it is assumed to be an object that implements the
53           consumer interface described later in the documentation.
54
55           If this parameter is not provided, then output is sent to STDOUT.
56
57       ·   -- Escape
58
59           This should be a hash reference where the keys are characters
60           sequences that should be escaped and the values are the escaped
61           form of the sequence.  By default, this module will escape the
62           ampersand (&), less than (<), greater than (>), double quote ("),
63           and apostrophe ('). Note that some browsers don't support the
64           &apos; escape used for apostrophes so that you should be careful
65           when outputting XHTML.
66
67           If you only want to add entries to the Escape hash, you can first
68           copy the contents of %XML::SAX::Writer::DEFAULT_ESCAPE.
69
70       ·   -- CommentEscape
71
72           Comment content often needs to be escaped differently from other
73           content. This option works exactly as the previous one except that
74           by default it only escapes the double dash (--) and that the
75           contents can be copied from %XML::SAX::Writer::COMMENT_ESCAPE.
76
77       ·   -- EncodeFrom
78
79           The character set encoding in which incoming data will be provided.
80           This defaults to UTF-8, which works for US-ASCII as well.
81
82       ·   -- EncodeTo
83
84           The character set encoding in which output should be encoded.
85            Again, this defaults to UTF-8.
86
87       ·   -- QuoteCharacter
88
89           Set the character used to quote attributes. This defaults to single
90           quotes (') for backwards compatiblity.
91

THE CONSUMER INTERFACE

93       XML::SAX::Writer can receive pluggable consumer objects that will be in
94       charge of writing out what is formatted by this module. Setting a
95       Consumer is done by setting the Output option to the object of your
96       choice instead of to an array, scalar, or file handle as is more
97       commonly done (internally those in fact map to Consumer classes and and
98       simply available as options for your convienience).
99
100       If you don't understand this, don't worry. You don't need it most of
101       the time.
102
103       That object can be from any class, but must have two methods in its
104       API. It is also strongly recommended that it inherits from
105       XML::SAX::Writer::ConsumerInterface so that it will not break if that
106       interface evolves over time. There are examples at the end of
107       XML::SAX::Writer's code.
108
109       The two methods that it needs to implement are:
110
111       ·   output STRING
112
113           (Required)
114
115           This is called whenever the Writer wants to output a string
116           formatted in XML. Encoding conversion, character escaping, and
117           formatting have already taken place. It's up to the consumer to do
118           whatever it wants with the string.
119
120       ·   finalize()
121
122           (Optional)
123
124           This is called once the document has been output in its entirety,
125           during the end_document event. end_document will in fact return
126           whatever finalize() returns, and that in turn should be returned by
127           parse() for whatever parser was invoked. It might be useful if you
128           need to provide feedback of some sort.
129
130       Here's an example of a custom consumer.  Note the extra "$" signs in
131       front of $self; the base class is optimized for the overwhelmingly
132       common case where only one data member is required and $self is a
133       reference to that data member.
134
135           package MyConsumer;
136
137           @ISA = qw( XML::SAX::Writer::ConsumerInterface );
138
139           use strict;
140
141           sub new {
142               my $self = shift->SUPER::new( my $output );
143
144               $$self = '';      # Note the extra '$'
145
146               return $self;
147           }
148
149           sub output {
150               my $self = shift;
151               $$self .= uc shift;
152           }
153
154           sub get_output {
155               my $self = shift;
156               return $$self;
157           }
158
159       And here's one way to use it:
160
161           my $c = MyConsumer->new;
162           my $w = XML::SAX::Writer->new( Output => $c );
163
164           ## ... send events to $w ...
165
166           print $c->get_output;
167
168       If you need to store more that one data member, pass in an array or
169       hash reference:
170
171               my $self = shift->SUPER::new( {} );
172
173       and access it like:
174
175           sub output {
176               my $self = shift;
177               $$self->{Output} .= uc shift;
178           }
179

THE ENCODER INTERFACE

181       Encoders can be plugged in to allow one to use one's favourite encoder
182       object. Presently there are two encoders: Iconv and NullEncoder, and
183       one based on "Encode" ought to be out soon. They need to implement two
184       methods, and may inherit from XML::SAX::Writer::NullConverter if they
185       wish to
186
187       new FROM_ENCODING, TO_ENCODING
188           Creates a new Encoder. The arguments are the chosen encodings.
189
190       convert STRING
191           Converts that string and returns it.
192

CUSTOM OUTPUT

194       This module is generally used to write XML -- which it does most of the
195       time -- but just like the rest of SAX it can be used as a generic
196       framework to output data, the opposite of a non-XML SAX parser.
197
198       Of course there's only so much that one can abstract, so depending on
199       your format this may or may not be useful. If it is, you'll need to
200       know the followin API (and probably to have a look inside
201       "XML::SAX::Writer::XML", the default Writer).
202
203       init
204           Called before the writing starts, it's a chance for the subclass to
205           do some initialisation if it needs it.
206
207       setConverter
208           This is used to set the proper converter for character encodings.
209           The default implementation should suffice but you can override it.
210           It must set "$self-"{Encoder}> to an Encoder object. Subclasses
211           *should* call it.
212
213       setConsumer
214           Same as above, except that it is for the Consumer object, and that
215           it must set "$self-"{Consumer}>.
216
217       setEscaperRegex
218           Will initialise the escaping regex "$self-"{EscaperRegex}> based on
219           what is needed.
220
221       escape STRING
222           Takes a string and escapes it properly.
223
224       setCommentEscaperRegex and escapeComment STRING
225           These work exactly the same as the two above, except that they are
226           meant to operate on comment contents, which often have different
227           escaping rules than those that apply to regular content.
228

TODO

230           - proper UTF-16 handling
231
232           - the formatting options need to be developed.
233
234           - test, test, test (and then some tests)
235
236           - doc, doc, doc (actually this part is in better shape)
237
238           - remove the xml_decl and replace it with intelligent logic, as
239           discussed on perl-xml
240
241           - make a the Consumer selecting code available in the API, to avoid
242           duplicating
243
244           - add an Apache output Consumer, triggered by passing $r as Output
245

CREDITS

247       Michael Koehne (XML::Handler::YAWriter) for much inspiration and Barrie
248       Slaymaker for the Consumer pattern idea, the coderef output option and
249       miscellaneous bugfixes and performance tweaks. Of course the usual
250       suspects (Kip Hampton and Matt Sergeant) helped in the usual ways.
251

AUTHOR

253       Robin Berjon, robin@knowscape.com
254
256       Copyright (c) 2001-2006 Robin Berjon and Perl XML project. Some rights
257       reserved.  This program is free software; you can redistribute it
258       and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
259

SEE ALSO

261       XML::SAX::*
262

POD ERRORS

264       Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained
265       below:
266
267       Around line 440:
268           Non-ASCII character seen before =encoding in ' It'. Assuming UTF-8
269
270       Around line 443:
271           Expected '=item *'
272
273       Around line 459:
274           Expected '=item *'
275
276       Around line 471:
277           Expected '=item *'
278
279       Around line 478:
280           Expected '=item *'
281
282       Around line 483:
283           Expected '=item *'
284
285       Around line 488:
286           Expected '=item *'
287
288
289
290perl v5.16.3                      2010-07-12               XML::SAX::Writer(3)
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