1WWW::Twilio::TwiML(3) User Contributed Perl DocumentationWWW::Twilio::TwiML(3)
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NAME

6       WWW::Twilio::TwiML - Light and fast TwiML generator
7

SYNOPSIS

9         use WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
10
11         my $t = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
12         $t->Response->Dial("+1234567890");
13         print $t->to_string;
14

DESCRIPTION

16       WWW::Twilio::TwiML creates Twilio-compatible TwiML documents. Documents
17       can be built by creating and nesting one element at a time or by
18       chaining objects. Elements can contain attributes, text content, or
19       other elements.
20
21       TwiML, being XML, could be trivially generated with XML::LibXML or any
22       number of other XML parsers/generators. Philosophically,
23       WWW::Twilio::TwiML represents an economical TwiML generator. It has a
24       small footprint (TwiML documents are typically small and simple) and
25       means to make TwiML creation straightforward and moderately fun.
26
27       WWW::Twilio::TwiML's primary aim is for economy of expression.
28       Therefore, Any method you call on a TwiML object (except those
29       described below) will create new TwiML objects by the name of the
30       method you called. By chaining method calls, you can create robust
31       TwiML documents with very little code.
32
33   new( key => value, ... )
34       Creates a new TwiML object. With no arguments, this will create a root
35       for your TwiML document. You can also call new with name, content, or
36       attributes arguments to create unattached elements.
37
38       The following examples all create the this TwiML document using
39       different calling styles:
40
41         <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
42         <Response>
43           <Say voice="man">Kilroy was here</Say>
44         </Response>
45
46       The upside-down, piecemeal, verbose way:
47
48         my $say = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
49         $say->name('Say');
50         $say->content("Kilroy was here");
51         $say->attributes({voice => "man"});
52
53         my $resp = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
54         $resp->name('Response');
55         $resp->content($say);
56
57         my $tw = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
58         $tw->content($resp);
59         print $tw->to_string;
60
61       The same thing, with a little more powerful constructor:
62
63         my $say = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML(name => 'Say',
64                                          content => "Kilroy was here",
65                                          attributes => {voice => "man"});
66
67         my $tw = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
68         $tw->Response->add_child($say);
69         print $tw->to_string;
70
71       The concise way:
72
73         my $tw = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
74         $tw->Response->Say({voice => "man"}, "Kilroy was here");
75         print $tw->to_string;
76
77       And the obligatory one-liner (spread across 4 lines for readability):
78
79         print WWW::Twilio::TwiML->new
80           ->Response
81           ->Say({voice => "man"}, "Kilroy was here")
82           ->root->to_string;
83
84       What you don't see in the latter two examples is that both Response and
85       Say create and return objects with the names Response and Say
86       respectively. When called in this way, methods can chain, making for
87       compact, yet readable expressions.
88
89   Any TwiML Verb( string | { attributes } )
90       Constructor shortcuts. TwiML verbs are described at
91       <http://www.twilio.com/docs/api/twiml>. Some examples include Response,
92       Say, Play, Gather, Record, Sms, Dial, Number, Client, Conference,
93       Hangup, Redirect, Reject, and Pause (this list may be out of date with
94       respect to the official documentation).
95
96       See Twilio's documentation for usage for these and other TwiML verbs.
97
98       The (any TwiML verb) shortcut is a constructor of a TwiML object. When
99       you call (any TwiML verb) on an existing TwiML object, the following
100       occurs:
101
102       ·   A new object is created and named by the method you called. E.g.,
103           if you called:
104
105             $tw->Response;
106
107           a TwiML object named 'Response' will be created.
108
109       ·   The newly created object is attached to its parent (the object
110           called to create it).
111
112       ·   The parent object has the new object added to its list of children.
113
114       These last two items means the objects are "chained" to each other.
115       Chaining objects allows concise expressions to create TwiML documents.
116       We could add another object to the chain:
117
118         $tw->Response
119           ->Say("I'm calling you.")
120             ->parent
121           ->Dial("+17175558309");
122
123       The parent method returns the Say object's parent (Response object),
124       and we chain a Dial object from it. The resulting $tw object returns:
125
126         <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
127         <Response>
128           <Say>I&apos;m calling you.</Say>
129           <Dial>+17175558309</Dial>
130         </Response>
131
132   name( string )
133       Gives a name to an element. This is what is used when the element is
134       printed out. If you're generally chaining objects, you won't use this
135       method often.
136
137         $elem->name('Dial');
138         $elem->content("+1234567890");
139
140       becomes:
141
142         <Dial>+1234567890</Dial>
143
144       When no string is supplied, the name of the object is returned.
145
146         print $elem->name . "\n";
147
148       The element name may also be given with new or is implicit when you
149       call the constructor by the name of the element you want to create.
150
151   content( string | object )
152       Sets the content of an element. A TwiML object's content can be either
153       a string or a listref of objects, but not both. If the argument is
154       another WWW::Twilio::TwiML object, the content of the element (if any)
155       will be replaced with the object. Any other argument will be considered
156       string content.
157
158         my $say = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML(name => 'Say');
159         $say->content("Eat at Joe's!");  ## a string as content
160
161       becomes:
162
163         <Say>Eat at Joe&apos;s!</Say>
164
165       Now we can add $say to another element:
166
167         my $parent = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML(name => 'Response');
168         $parent->content($say);  ## an object as content
169
170       which becomes:
171
172         <Response>
173           <Say>Eat at Joe&apos;s!</Say>
174         </Response>
175
176       When no argument is supplied, the existing contents are returned.
177
178         my $content = $elem->content;
179         if( ref($content) ) {
180           for my $obj ( @$content ) {
181             ## do something with each $obj
182           }
183         }
184
185         else {
186           print $content . "\n";  ## assuming a string here
187         }
188
189   add_child( object )
190       Adds an element to the content of the TwiML object. Returns a reference
191       to the added object. Unlike content, add_child does not replace the
192       existing content, but appends an object to the existing content. Also
193       unlike content, add_child is not appropriate to use for setting text
194       content of an element.
195
196         my $tw = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
197         my $resp = $tw->Response;
198         $resp->add_child(new WWW::Twilio::TwiML(name => 'Say',
199                                                 content => 'Soooey!'));
200
201         my $email = uri_escape('biff@example.com');
202         my $msg = uri_escape("Heeer piiiig!");
203         my $url = "http://twimlets.com/voicemail?Email=$email&Message=$msg";
204         $resp->add_child(new WWW::Twilio::TwiML(name => 'Redirect',
205                                                 content => $url));
206
207         print $tw->to_string({'Content-type' => 'text/xml'});
208
209       becomes:
210
211         Content-type: text/xml
212
213         <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
214         <Response>
215           <Say>Soooey!</Say>
216           <Redirect>http://twimlets.com/voicemail?Email=\
217           biff%40example.com&amp;Message=Heeer%20piiiig!</Redirect>
218         </Response>
219
220   attributes({ key => value })
221       Sets attributes for an element. If a hash reference is not supplied, a
222       hashref of the existing attributes is returned.
223
224         my $elem = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML(name => 'Say');
225         $elem->attributes({voice => 'woman'});
226         $elem->content("gimme another donut");
227
228       becomes:
229
230         <Say voice="woman">gimme another donut</Say>
231
232   root
233       Returns a handle to the root object.
234
235         print WWW::Twilio::TwiML->new
236           ->Response
237           ->Say("All men are brothers,")
238             ->parent
239           ->Say("Like Jacob and Esau.")
240           ->root->to_string;
241
242       prints:
243
244         <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
245         <Response>
246           <Say>All men are brothers,</Say>
247           <Say>Like Jacob and Esau.</Say>
248         </Response>
249
250       root is a convenient way to get a handle to the root TwiML object when
251       you're ready to print.
252
253   to_string( { header => value } )
254       Returns the object as a string. Unnamed (root) elements will include
255       the XML declaration entity. If a hashref is supplied, those will be
256       emitted as RFC 822 headers followed by a blank line.
257
258       Example:
259
260         print WWW::Twilio::TwiML->new->to_string;
261
262       prints:
263
264         <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
265
266       while this:
267
268         print WWW::Twilio::TwiML->new
269           ->Response
270           ->Say("plugh")
271           ->root->to_string;
272
273       prints:
274
275         <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
276         <Response>
277           <Say>plugh</Say>
278         </Response>
279
280       If we forget the call to root in the previous example, like this:
281
282         print WWW::Twilio::TwiML->new
283           ->Response
284           ->Say("plugh")
285           ->to_string;
286
287       we get:
288
289         <Say>plugh</Say>
290
291       because to_string is being applied to the object created by Say, not
292       $tw.
293
294       By specifying a hashref, you can add RFC 822 headers to your documents:
295
296         $tw = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
297         $tw->Response->Say('Arf!');
298         $tw->to_string({'Content-type' => 'text/xml'});
299
300       which returns:
301
302         Content-type: text/xml
303
304         <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
305         <Response>
306           <Say>Arf!</Say>
307         </Response>
308
309   parent( object )
310       Sets the parent of the object; this done automatically by add_child and
311       content. When no arguments are given, the existing parent object is
312       returned.
313
314       Because WWW::Twilio::TwiML objects chain, parent is useful for getting
315       the previous object so you can add more content to it:
316
317         WWW::Twilio::TwiML->new
318           ->Response
319           ->Gather({action => "/process_gather.cgi", method => "GET"})
320             ->Say("Please enter your account number.")
321               ->parent  ## Say's parent, Gather
322             ->parent    ## Gather's parent, Response
323           ->Say("We didn't receive any input. Goodbye!");
324
325       becomes:
326
327         <Response>
328           <Gather action="/process_gather.cgi" method="GET">
329             <Say>Please enter your account number.</Say>
330           </Gather>
331           <Say>We didn't receive any input. Goodbye!</Say>
332         </Response>
333
334       A note on readability: the author recommends indenting multi-line
335       chains to show the parent-child relationship. Each time parent is
336       invoked, the next line should be outdented, as illustrated above.
337

PACKAGE VARIABLES

339       You may control the behavior of WWW::Twilio::TwiML in several ways by
340       setting package variables described in this section.
341
342   Newlines
343       You may change the default newline from "\n" to anything else by
344       setting the $NL package variable:
345
346         local $WWW::Twilio::TwiML::NL = "\r\n";
347
348   Strict mode
349       WWW:Twilio::TwiML is capable of generating well-formed but invalid
350       TwiML documents. WWW::Twilio::TwiML uses autoloaded methods to
351       determine the name of TwiML elements (Response, Say, Dial, Redirect,
352       etc.); this means that if you specify an incorrectly named method, your
353       TwiML will be incorrect:
354
355         $tw->Response->Saay('plugh');
356
357       Saay is not a valid Twilio TwiML tag and you will not know it until
358       Twilio's TwiML parser attempts to handle your TwiML document.
359
360       You may enable strict checks on the TwiML elements at runtime by
361       setting two package variables:
362
363       $STRICT
364           When true, WWW::Twilio::TwiML's autoloader will look up the
365           unhandled method call in the %TAGS package variable (below). If the
366           method name is not in that hash, the autoloader will die with an
367           "Undefined subroutine" error.
368
369       %TAGS
370           Empty by default. When $STRICT is true, this hash will be consulted
371           to determine whether a method call is a valid TwiML tag or not.
372
373       For example:
374
375         local $WWW::Twilio::TwiML::STRICT = 1;
376         local %WWW::Twilio::TwiML::TAGS = (Response => 1, Say => 1, Dial => 1);
377
378       Now any methods invoked on WWW::Twilio::TwiML objects that are not
379       Response, Say, or Dial will die with an error. E.g.:
380
381         WWW::Twilio::TwiML->Response->Saay("Let's play Twister!");
382
383       generates the following fatal error:
384
385         Undefined subroutine Saay at line 1.
386
387       You may wish to use the fast hash creation with hash slices (I learned
388       this syntax from Damian Conway at a conference some years ago--it's
389       faster than map over an array for building hashes):
390
391         ## TwiML verbs taken from http://www.twilio.com/docs/api/twiml
392         my @tags = qw(Response Say Play Gather Record Sms Dial Number
393                       Client Conference Hangup Redirect Reject Pause);
394
395         local @WWW::Twilio::TwiML::TAGS{@tags} = (1) x @tags;
396         local $WWW::Twilio::TwiML::STRICT = 1;
397
398         ## all method calls in this scope are now strict
399         ...
400

EXAMPLES

402       This section demonstrates a few things you can do with
403       WWW::Twilio::TwiML.
404
405   Example 1
406         $t = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
407         $t->Response->Say({voice => "woman"}, "This is Jenny");
408         print $t->to_string({'Content-type' => 'text/xml'});
409
410       Output:
411
412         Content-type: text/xml
413
414         <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
415         <Response>
416           <Say voice="woman">This is Jenny</Say>
417         </Response>
418
419   Examples from twilio.com
420       The following examples are from twilio.com's TwiML documentation,
421       listed by the primary verb they implement. Assume a TwiML object $tw
422       for each of these examples has already been created:
423
424         my $tw = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
425
426       and consequently each example would be printed with:
427
428         print $tw->to_string;
429
430       See the t/twilio.t test file distributed with this package for
431       additional context for these examples.
432
433       Say
434             $tw->Response
435               ->Say({voice => "woman", loop => "2"}, "Hello");
436
437       Play
438             $tw->Response
439               ->Play("http://foo.com/cowbell.mp3");
440
441       Gather
442             $tw->Response
443               ->Gather({action => "/process_gather.cgi", method => "GET"})
444                 ->Say("Enter something, or not")
445                   ->parent
446                 ->parent
447               ->Redirect({method => "GET"}, "/process_gather.cgi?Digits=TIMEOUT");
448
449       Record
450             $tw->Response
451               ->Say("Please leave a message at the beep. \
452                      Press the star key when finished.")
453                 ->parent
454               ->Record({action => "http://foo.edu/handleRecording.cgi",
455                         method => "GET",
456                         maxLength => "20",
457                         finishOnKey => "*"});
458                 ->parent
459               ->Say("I did not receive a recording");
460
461       Sms
462             $tw->Response
463               ->Say("Our store is located at 123 East St.")
464                 ->parent
465               ->Sms({action => "/smsHandler.cgi", method => "POST"},
466                     "Store location: 123 East St.");
467
468       Dial
469             $tw->Response
470               ->Dial
471                 ->Number("858-987-6543")->parent
472                 ->Number("415-123-4567")->parent
473                 ->Number("619-765-4321");
474
475       Conference
476             $tw->Response
477               ->Dial
478                 ->Conference({startConferenceOnEnter => "true",
479                               endConferenceOnExit => "true"},
480                              "1234");
481
482       Hangup
483             $tw->Response->Hangup;
484
485       Redirect
486             $tw->Response
487               ->Dial("415-123-4567")->parent
488               ->Redirect("http://www.foo.com/nextInstructions");
489
490       Reject
491             $tw->Response
492               ->Reject({reason => "busy"});
493
494       Pause
495             $tw->Response
496               ->Pause({length => 5})->parent
497               ->Say("Hi there.");
498
499   Other examples
500       Other examples may be found in the t directory that came with this
501       package, also available on CPAN.
502

COMPATIBILITY

504       WWW::Twilio::TwiML will likely be forward compatible with all future
505       revisions of Twilio's TwiML language. This is because method calls are
506       constructors which generate TwiML objects on the fly.
507
508       For example, say Twilio began to support a Belch verb (if only!), we
509       could take advantage of it immediately by simply calling a Belch method
510       like this:
511
512         my $tw = new WWW::Twilio::TwiML;
513         $tw->Response->Belch('Braaaaaap!');
514         print $tw->to_string;
515
516       Because there is no Belch method, WWW::Twilio::TwiML assumes you want
517       to create a node by that name and makes one for you:
518
519         <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
520         <Response>
521           <Belch>Braaaaaap!</Belch>
522         </Response>
523
524       If the $STRICT package variable is enabled, all we need to do is add
525       Belch to our %TAGS hash and we're good to go.
526

SEE ALSO

528       WWW::Twilio::API
529

AUTHOR

531       Scott Wiersdorf, <scott@perlcode.org>
532
534       Copyright (C) 2011 by Scott Wiersdorf
535
536       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
537       under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.1 or, at
538       your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
539
540
541
542perl v5.30.0                      2019-07-26             WWW::Twilio::TwiML(3)
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