1TokeParser(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation TokeParser(3)
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6 XML::TokeParser - Simplified interface to XML::Parser
7
9 use XML::TokeParser;
10 #
11 #parse from file
12 my $p = XML::TokeParser->new('file.xml')
13 #
14 #parse from open handle
15 open IN, 'file.xml' or die $!;
16 my $p = XML::TokeParser->new( \*IN, Noempty => 1 );
17 #
18 #parse literal text
19 my $text = '<tag xmlns="http://www.omsdev.com">text</tag>';
20 my $p = XML::TokeParser->new( \$text, Namespaces => 1 );
21 #
22 #read next token
23 my $token = $p->get_token();
24 #
25 #skip to <title> and read text
26 $p->get_tag('title');
27 $p->get_text();
28 #
29 #read text of next <para>, ignoring any internal markup
30 $p->get_tag('para');
31 $p->get_trimmed_text('/para');
32 #
33 #process <para> if interesting text
34 $t = $p->get_tag('para');
35 $p->begin_saving($t);
36 if ( $p->get_trimmed_text('/para') =~ /interesting stuff/ ) {
37 $p->restore_saved();
38 process_para($p);
39 }
40
42 XML::TokeParser provides a procedural ("pull mode") interface to
43 XML::Parser in much the same way that Gisle Aas' HTML::TokeParser
44 provides a procedural interface to HTML::Parser. XML::TokeParser
45 splits its XML input up into "tokens," each corresponding to an
46 XML::Parser event.
47
48 A token is a bless'd reference to an array whose first element is an
49 event-type string and whose last element is the literal text of the XML
50 input that generated the event, with intermediate elements varying
51 according to the event type.
52
53 Each token is an object of type XML::TokeParser::Token. Read
54 "XML::TokeParser::Token" to learn what methods are available for
55 inspecting the token, and retrieving data from it.
56
58 $p = XML::TokeParser->new($input, [options])
59 Creates a new parser, specifying the input source and any options.
60 If $input is a string, it is the name of the file to parse. If
61 $input is a reference to a string, that string is the actual text
62 to parse. If $input is a reference to a typeglob or an IO::Handle
63 object corresponding to an open file or socket, the text read from
64 the handle will be parsed.
65
66 Options are name=>value pairs and can be any of the following:
67
68 Namespaces
69 If set to a true value, namespace processing is enabled.
70
71 ParseParamEnt
72 This option is passed on to the underlying XML::Parser object;
73 see that module's documentation for details.
74
75 Noempty
76 If set to a true value, text tokens consisting of only
77 whitespace (such as those created by indentation and line
78 breaks in between tags) will be ignored.
79
80 Latin
81 If set to a true value, all text other than the literal text
82 elements of tokens will be translated into the ISO 8859-1
83 (Latin-1) character encoding rather than the normal UTF-8
84 encoding.
85
86 Catalog
87 The value is the URI of a catalog file used to resolve PUBLIC
88 and SYSTEM identifiers. See XML::Catalog for details.
89
90 $token = $p->get_token()
91 Returns the next token, as an array reference, from the input.
92 Returns undef if there are no remaining tokens.
93
94 $p->unget_token($token,...)
95 Pushes tokens back so they will be re-read. Useful if you've read
96 one or more tokens too far. Correctly handles "partial" tokens
97 returned by get_tag().
98
99 $token = $p->get_tag( [$token] )
100 If no argument given, skips tokens until the next start tag or end
101 tag token. If an argument is given, skips tokens until the start
102 tag or end tag (if the argument begins with '/') for the named
103 element. The returned token does not include an event type code;
104 its first element is the element name, prefixed by a '/' if the
105 token is for an end tag.
106
107 $text = $p->get_text( [$token] )
108 If no argument given, returns the text at the current position, or
109 an empty string if the next token is not a 'T' token. If an
110 argument is given, gathers up all text between the current position
111 and the specified start or end tag, stripping out any intervening
112 tags (much like the way a typical Web browser deals with unknown
113 tags).
114
115 $text = $p->get_trimmed_text( [$token] )
116 Like get_text(), but deletes any leading or trailing whitespaces
117 and collapses multiple whitespace (including newlines) into single
118 spaces.
119
120 $p->begin_saving( [$token] )
121 Causes subsequent calls to get_token(), get_tag(), get_text(), and
122 get_trimmed_text() to save the returned tokens. In conjunction
123 with restore_saved(), allows you to "back up" within a token
124 stream. If an argument is supplied, it is placed at the beginning
125 of the list of saved tokens (useful because you often won't know
126 you want to begin saving until you've already read the first token
127 you want saved).
128
129 $p->restore_saved()
130 Pushes all the tokens saved by begin_saving() back onto the token
131 stream. Stops saving tokens. To cancel saving without backing up,
132 call begin_saving() and restore_saved() in succession.
133
134 XML::TokeParser::Token
135 A token is a blessed array reference, that you acquire using
136 "$p->get_token" or "$p->get_tag", and that might look like:
137
138 ["S", $tag, $attr, $attrseq, $raw]
139 ["E", $tag, $raw]
140 ["T", $text, $raw]
141 ["C", $text, $raw]
142 ["PI", $target, $data, $raw]
143
144 If you don't like remembering array indices (you're a real programmer),
145 you may access the attributes of a token like:
146
147 "$t->tag", "$t->attr", "$t->attrseq", "$t->raw", "$t->text",
148 "$t->target", "$t->data".
149
150 ****Please note that this may change in the future, where as there will
151 be 4 token types, XML::TokeParser::Token::StartTag ....
152
153 What kind of token is it?
154
155 To find out, inspect your token using any of these is_* methods (1 ==
156 true, 0 == false, d'oh):
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158 is_text
159 is_comment
160 is_pi which is short for is_process_instruction
161 is_start_tag
162 is_end_tag
163 is_tag
164
165 What's that token made of? To retrieve data from your token, use any
166 of the following methods, depending on the kind of token you have:
167
168 target
169 only for process instructions
170
171 data
172 only for process instructions
173
174 raw for all tokens
175
176 attr
177 only for start tags, returns a hashref ( "print "#link ",
178 ""$t->attr""->{href}" ).
179
180 my $attrseq = $t->attrseq
181 only for start tags, returns an array ref of the keys found in
182 "$t->attr" in the order they originally appeared in.
183
184 my $tagname = $t->tag
185 only for tags ( "print "opening ", ""$t->tag"" if
186 ""$t->is_start_tag" ).
187
188 my $text = $token->text
189 only for tokens of type text and comment
190
191 Here's more detailed info about the tokens.
192
193 Start tag
194 The token has five elements: 'S', the element's name, a reference
195 to a hash of attribute values keyed by attribute names, a reference
196 to an array of attribute names in the order in which they appeared
197 in the tag, and the literal text.
198
199 End tag
200 The token has three elements: 'E', the element's name, and the
201 literal text.
202
203 Character data (text)
204 The token has three elements: 'T', the parsed text, and the literal
205 text. All contiguous runs of text are gathered into single tokens;
206 there will never be two 'T' tokens in a row.
207
208 Comment
209 The token has three elements: 'C', the parsed text of the comment,
210 and the literal text.
211
212 Processing instruction
213 The token has four elements: 'PI', the target, the data, and the
214 literal text.
215
216 The literal text includes any markup delimiters (pointy brackets,
217 <![CDATA[, etc.), entity references, and numeric character references
218 and is in the XML document's original character encoding. All other
219 text is in UTF-8 (unless the Latin option is set, in which case it's in
220 ISO-8859-1) regardless of the original encoding, and all entity and
221 character references are expanded.
222
223 If the Namespaces option is set, element and attribute names are
224 prefixed by their (possibly empty) namespace URIs enclosed in curly
225 brackets and xmlns:* attributes do not appear in 'S' tokens.
226
228 Uses a true XML parser rather than a modified HTML parser.
229
230 Text and comment tokens include extracted text as well as literal text.
231
232 PI tokens include target and data as well as literal text.
233
234 No tokens for declarations.
235
236 No "textify" hash.
237
238 unget_token correctly handles partial tokens returned by get_tag().
239
240 begin_saving() and restore_saved()
241
243 Example:
244
245 use XML::TokeParser;
246 use strict;
247 #
248 my $text = '<tag foo="bar" foy="floy"> some text <!--comment--></tag>';
249 my $p = XML::TokeParser->new( \$text );
250 #
251 print $/;
252 #
253 while( defined( my $t = $p->get_token() ) ){
254 local $\="\n";
255 print ' raw = ', $t->raw;
256 #
257 if( $t->tag ){
258 print ' tag = ', $t->tag;
259 #
260 if( $t->is_start_tag ) {
261 print ' attr = ', join ',', %{$t->attr};
262 print ' attrseq = ', join ',', @{$t->attrseq};
263 }
264 #
265 print 'is_tag ', $t->is_tag;
266 print 'is_start_tag ', $t->is_start_tag;
267 print 'is_end_tag ', $t->is_end_tag;
268 }
269 elsif( $t->is_pi ){
270 print ' target = ', $t->target;
271 print ' data = ', $t->data;
272 print 'is_pi ', $t->is_pi;
273 }
274 else {
275 print ' text = ', $t->text;
276 print 'is_text ', $t->is_text;
277 print 'is_comment ', $t->is_comment;
278 }
279 #
280 print $/;
281 }
282 __END__
283
284 Output:
285
286 raw = <tag foo="bar" foy="floy">
287 tag = tag
288 attr = foo,bar,foy,floy
289 attrseq = foo,foy
290 is_tag 1
291 is_start_tag 1
292 is_end_tag 0
293
294
295 raw = some text
296 text = some text
297 is_text 1
298 is_comment 0
299
300
301 raw = <!--comment-->
302 text = comment
303 is_text 0
304 is_comment 1
305
306
307 raw = </tag>
308 tag = tag
309 is_tag 1
310 is_start_tag 0
311 is_end_tag 1
312
314 To report bugs, go to
315 <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=XML-TokeParser> or send mail
316 to <bug-XML-Tokeparser@rt.cpan.org>
317
319 Copyright (c) 2003 D.H. aka PodMaster (current maintainer). Copyright
320 (c) 2001 Eric Bohlman (original author).
321
322 All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can
323 redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
324 If you don't know what this means, visit <http://perl.com/> or
325 <http://cpan.org/>.
326
328 HTML::TokeParser, XML::Parser, XML::Catalog, XML::Smart, XML::Twig.
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332perl v5.26.3 2019-05-14 TokeParser(3)