Provided by: libmkdoc-xml-perl_0.75-4_all bug

NAME

       MKDoc::XML::Dumper - Same as Data::Dumper, but with XML

SYNOPSIS

         use MKDoc::XML::Dumper;
         use Test::More 'no_plan';

         my $stuff  = [ qw /foo bar baz/, [], { hello => 'world', yo => \\'boo' } ];
         my $xml    = MKDoc::XML::Dumper->perl2xml ($stuff);
         my $stuff2 = MKDoc::XML::Dumper->xml2perl ($xml);
         is_deeply ($stuff, $stuff2); # prints 'ok'

SUMMARY

       MKDoc::XML::Dumper provides functionality equivalent to Data::Dumper except that rather
       than serializing structures into a Perl string, it serializes them into a generic XML file
       format.

       Of course since XML cannot be evaled, it also provides a mechanism for undumping the xml
       back into a perl structure.

       MKDoc::XML::Dumper supports scalar references, hash references, array references,
       reference references, and litterals. It also supports circular structures and back
       references to avoid creating unwanted extra copies of the same object.

       That's all there is to it!

API

   my $xml = MKDoc::XML::Dumper->perl2xml ($perl);
       Turns $perl into an XML string. For instance:

         my $perl = [ qw /foo bar baz/, { adam => 'apple', bruno => 'berry', chris => 'cherry' } ];
         print MKDoc::XML::Dumper->perl2xml ($perl);'

       Will print something like:

         <array id="135338912">
           <item key="0">
             <litteral>foo</litteral>
           </item>
           <item key="1">
             <litteral>bar</litteral>
           </item>
           <item key="2">
             <litteral>baz</litteral>
           </item>
           <item key="3">
             <hash id="135338708">
               <item key="bruno">
                 <litteral>berry</litteral>
               </item>
               <item key="adam">
                 <litteral>apple</litteral>
               </item>
               <item key="chris">
                 <litteral>cherry</litteral>
               </item>
             </hash>
           </item>
         </array>

       As you can see, every object has an id. This allows for backreferencing, so:

         my $perl = undef;
         $perl    = \$perl;
         print MKDoc::XML::Dumper->perl2xml ($perl);'

       Prints something like:

         <ref id="135338888">
           <backref id="135338888" />
         </ref>

       For the curious, these identifiers are computed using some perl black magic:

         my $id = 0 + $reference;

   my $perl = MKDoc::XML::Dumper->perl2xml ($xml);
       Does the exact reverse operation as xml2perl().

AUTHOR

       Copyright 2003 - MKDoc Holdings Ltd.

       Author: Jean-Michel Hiver

       This module is free software and is distributed under the same license as Perl itself. Use
       it at your own risk.

SEE ALSO

       MKDoc::XML::Decode MKDoc::XML::Encode