1Test::XML::XPath(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::XML::XPath(3)
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6 Test::XML::XPath - Test XPath assertions
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9 use Test::XML::XPath tests => 3;
10 like_xpath( '<foo />', '/foo' ); # PASS
11 like_xpath( '<foo />', '/bar' ); # FAIL
12 unlike_xpath( '<foo />', '/bar' ); # PASS
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14 is_xpath( '<foo>bar</foo>', '/foo', 'bar' ); # PASS
15 is_xpath( '<foo>bar</foo>', '/bar', 'foo' ); # FAIL
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17 # More interesting examples of xpath assertions.
18 my $xml = '<foo attrib="1"><bish><bosh args="42">pub</bosh></bish></foo>';
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20 # Do testing for attributes.
21 like_xpath( $xml, '/foo[@attrib="1"]' ); # PASS
22 # Find an element anywhere in the document.
23 like_xpath( $xml, '//bosh' ); # PASS
24 # Both.
25 like_xpath( $xml, '//bosh[@args="42"]' ); # PASS
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28 This module allows you to assert statements about your XML in the form
29 of XPath statements. You can say that a piece of XML must contain
30 certain tags, with so-and-so attributes, etc. It will try to use any
31 installed XPath module that it knows about. Currently, this means
32 XML::LibXML and XML::XPath, in that order.
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34 NB: Normally in XPath processing, the statement occurs from a context
35 node. In the case of like_xpath(), the context node will always be the
36 root node. In practice, this means that these two statements are
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39 # Absolute path.
40 like_xpath( '<foo/>', '/foo' );
41 # Path relative to root.
42 like_xpath( '<foo/>', 'foo' );
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44 It's probably best to use absolute paths everywhere in order to keep
45 things simple.
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47 NB: Beware of specifying attributes. Because they use an @-sign, perl
48 will complain about trying to interpolate arrays if you don't escape
49 them or use single quotes.
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52 like_xpath ( XML, XPATH [, NAME ] )
53 Assert that XML (a string containing XML) matches the statement
54 XPATH. NAME is the name of the test.
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56 Returns true or false depending upon test success.
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58 unlike_xpath ( XML, XPATH [, NAME ] )
59 This is the reverse of like_xpath(). The test will only pass if
60 XPATH does not generates any matches in XML.
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62 Returns true or false depending upon test success.
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64 is_xpath ( XML, XPATH, EXPECTED [, NAME ] )
65 Evaluates XPATH against XML, and pass the test if the is EXPECTED.
66 Uses findvalue() internally.
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68 Returns true or false depending upon test success.
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70 set_xpath_processor ( CLASS )
71 Set the class name of the XPath processor used. It is up to you to
72 ensure that this class is loaded.
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74 In all cases, XML must be well formed, or the test will fail.
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77 Test::XML.
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79 XML::XPath, which is the basis for this module.
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81 If you are not conversant with XPath, there are many tutorials
82 available on the web. Google will point you at them. The first one
83 that I saw was: <http://www.zvon.org/xxl/XPathTutorial/>, which appears
84 to offer interactive XPath as well as the tutorials.
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87 Dominic Mitchell <cpan2 (at) semantico.com>
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90 Copyright 2002 by semantico
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92 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
93 under the same terms as Perl itself.
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97perl v5.30.1 2020-01-30 Test::XML::XPath(3)