Provided by: libmods-record-perl_0.12-1_all bug

NAME

       MODS::Record - Perl extension for handling MODS records

SYNOPSIS

        use MODS::Record qw(xml_string);
        use open qw(:utf8);

        my $mods = MODS::Record->new;

        my $collection = MODS::Collection->new;

        my $mods = $collection->add_mods(ID => '1234');

        $mods->add_abstract("Hello", lang => 'eng');
        $mods->add_abstract("Bonjour", lang => 'fra');

        # Set a deeply nested field...
        $mods->add_language()->add_languageTerm('eng');

        # Set a list of deeply nested fields...
        $mods->add_location(sub {
           $_[0]->add_physicalLocation('here');
           $_[0]->add_shelfLocator('here too');
           $_[0]->add_url('http://here.org/there');
        });

        # Set an inline XML extension...
        $mods->add_accessCondition(xml_string("<x:foo><x:bar>21212</x:bar></x:foo>"));

        # Retrieve a field by a filter...
        $mods->get_abstract(lang => 'fra')->body("Bonjour :)");
        $mods->get_abstract(lang => 'fra')->contentType('text/plain');

        for ($mods->get_abstract(lang => 'fra')) {
           printf "%s\n" , $_->body;
        }

        # Set a field to a new value
        my @newabstract;
        for ($mods->get_abstract) {
           push @newabstract, $_ unless $_->lang eq 'fra';
        }
        $mods->set_abstract(@newabstract);

        # Clear all abstracts;
        $mods->set_abstract(undef);

        # Serialize
        print $mods->as_json(pretty => 1);
        print $mods->as_xml;

        # Deserialize
        my $mods = MODS::Record->from_xml(IO::File->new('mods.xml'));
        my $mods = MODS::Record->from_json(IO::File->new('mods.js'));

        my $count = MODS::Record->from_xml(IO::File->new('mods.xml'), sub {
           my $mods = shift;
           ...
        });

        my $count = MODS::Record->from_json(IO::File->new('mods.js'), sub {
           my $mods = shift;
           ...
        });

DESCRIPTION

       This module provides MODS (http://www.loc.gov/standards/mods/) parsing and creation for
       MODS Schema 3.5.

METHODS

   MODS::Record->new(%attribs)
   MODS::Collection->new(%attribs)
       Create a new MODS record or collection. Optionally attributes can be provided as defined
       by the MODS specification. E.g.

        $mods = MODS::Record->new(ID='123');

   add_xxx()
       Add a new element to the record where 'xxx' is the name of a MODS element (e.g. titleInfo,
       name, genre, etc).  This method returns an instance of the added MODS element. E.g.

        $titleInfo = $mods->add_titleInfo; # $titleInfo is a 'MODS::Element::TitleInfo'

   add_xxx($text,%attribs)
       Add a new element to the record where 'xxx' is the name of a MODS element. Set the text
       content of the element to $text and optionally provide further attributes. This method
       returns an instance of the added MODS element. E.g.

        $mods->add_abstract("My abstract", lang=>'eng');

   add_xxx(sub { })
       Add a new element to the record where 'xxx' is the name of a MODS element. The provided
       coderef gets as input an instance of the added MODS element. This method returns an
       instance of the added MODS element. E.g.

        $mods->add_abstract(sub {
           my $o = shift;
           $o->body("My abstract");
           $o->lang("eng");
        })

   add_xxx($obj)
       Add a new element to the record where 'xxx' is the name of a MODS element. The $obj is an
       instance of a MODS::Element::Xxx class (where Xxx is the corresponding MODS element). This
       method returns an instance of the added MODS element. E.g.

        $mods->add_abstract(
            MODS::Element::Abstract->new(_body=>'My abstract', lang=>'eng')
        );

   get_xxx()
   get_xxx(%filter)
   get_xxx(sub { })
       Retrieve an element from the record where 'xxx' is the name of a MODS element. This
       methods return in array context all the matching elements or the first match in scalar
       context. Optionally provide a %filter or a coderef filter function.  E.g.

        @titles = $mods->get_titleInfo();
        $alt    = $mods->get_titleInfo(type=>'alternate');
        $alt    = $mods->get_titleInfo(sub { shift->type eq 'alternate'});

   set_xxxx()
   set_xxx(undef)
   set_xxx($array_ref)
   set_xxx($xxx1,$xxx2,...)
       Set an element of the record to a new value where 'xxx' is the name of a MODS element.
       When no arguments are provided, then this is a null operation. When undef als argument is
       provided, then the element is deleted. To overwrite the existing content of the element an
       ARRAY (ref) of MODS::Element::Xxx can be provided (where 'Xxx' is the corresponding MODS
       element). E.g.

        # Delete all abstracts
        $mods->set_abstract(undef);

        # Set all abstracts
        $mods->set_abstract(MODS::Element::Abstract->new(), MODS::Element::Abstract->new(), ...);
        $mods->set_abstract([ MODS::Element::Abstract->new(), MODS::Element::Abstract->new(), ... ]);

   as_xml()
   as_xml(xml_prolog=>1)
       Return the record as XML.

   from_xml($string [, $callback])
   from_xml(IO::Handle [, $callback])
       Parse an XML string or IO::Handle into a MODS::Record. This method return the parsed JSON.

       If a callback function is provided then for each MODS element in the XML stream the
       callback will be called.  The method returns the number of parsed MODS elements.

        E.g.
           my $mods = MODS::Record->from_xml( IO::File->new(...) );

           my $count = MODS::Record->from_xml( IO::File->new(...) , sub {
               my $mods = shift;
           } );

   as_json()
   as_json(pretty=>1)
       Return the record as JSON string.

   from_json($string [, $callback])
   from_json(IO::Handle [, $callback])
       Parse and JSON string or JSON::Handle into a MODS::Record. This method return the parsed
       JSON.

       If a callback function is provided then we expect as input a stream of JSON strings (each
       line one JSON string). For each MODS object in the JSON stream the callback will be
       called.  The method returns the number of parsed strings.

        E.g.
           my $mods = MODS::Record->from_json( IO::File->new(...) );

           my $count = MODS::Record->from_json( IO::File->new(...) , sub {
               my $mods = shift;
           } );

SEE ALSO

       •   Library Of Congress MODS pages (http://www.loc.gov/standards/mods/)

DESIGN NOTES

       •   I'm not a MODS expert

       •   I needed a MODS module to parse and create MODS records for our institutional
           repository

       •   This module is part of the LibreCat/Catmandu project http://librecat.org

       •   This module is not created for speed

       •   This module doesn't have any notion of ordering of MODS elements themselves (e.g.
           first 'titleInfo', then 'name').  But each sub-element keeps its original order (e.g.
           each 'title' in 'titleInfo').

       •   Heiko Jansen provides at GitHub a Moose-based MODS parser
           https://github.com/heikojansen/MODS--Record

AUTHORS

       •   Patrick Hochstenbach <Patrick . Hochstenbach at UGent . be>

LICENSE

       This library is free software and may be distributed under the same terms as perl itself.
       See <http://dev.perl.org/licenses/>.