Provided by: libxml-structured-perl_1.01-3_all bug

NAME

       XML::Structured - simple conversion API from XML to perl structures and back

SYNOPSIS

           use XML::Structured;

           $dtd = [
               'element' =>
                   'attribute1',
                   'attribute2',
                   [],
                   'element1',
                   [ 'element2' ],
                   [ 'element3' =>
                       ...
                   ],
                   [[ 'element4' =>
                       ...
                   ]],
           ];

           $hashref = XMLin($dtd, $xmlstring);
           $hashref = XMLinfile($dtd, $filename_or_glob);
           $xmlstring = XMLout($dtd, $hashref);

DESCRIPTION

       The XML::Structured module provides a way to convert xml data into a predefined perl data
       structure and back to xml. Unlike with modules like XML::Simple it is an error if the xml
       data does not match the provided skeleton (the "dtd"). Another advantage is that the order
       of the attributes and elements is taken from the dtd when converting back to xml.

   XMLin()
       The XMLin() function takes the dtd and a string as arguments and returns a hash reference
       containing the data.

   XMLinfile()
       This function works like "XMLin()", but takes a filename or a file descriptor glob as
       second argument.

   XMLout()
       "XMLout()" provides the reverse operation to "XMLin()", it takes a dtd and a hash
       reference as arguments and returns an XML string.

The DTD

       The dtd parameter specifies the structure of the allowed xml data.  It consists of nested
       perl arrays.

   simple attributes and elements
       The very simple example for a dtd is:

           $dtd = [ 'user' =>
                        'login',
                        'password',
                  ];

       This dtd will accept/create XML like:

           <user login="foo" password="bar" />

       XMLin doesn't care if "login" or "password" are attributes or elements, so

           <user>
             <login>foo</login>
             <password>bar</password>
           </user>

       is also valid input (but doesn't get re-created by "XMLout()").

   multiple elements of the same name
       If an element may appear multiple times, it must be declared as an array in the dtd:

           $dtd = [ 'user' =>
                        'login',
                        [ 'favorite_fruits' ],
                  ];

       XMLin will create an array reference as value in this case, even if the xml data contains
       only one element. Valid XML looks like:

           <user login="foo">
             <favorite_fruits>apple</favorite_fruits>
             <favorite_fruits>peach</favorite_fruits>
           </user>

       As attributes may not appear multiple times, XMLout will create elements for this case.
       Note also that all attributes must come before the first element, thus the first array in
       the dtd ends the attribute list. As an example, the following dtd

           $dtd = [ 'user' =>
                        'login',
                        [ 'favorite_fruits' ],
                        'password',
                  ];

       will create xml like:

           <user login="foo">
             <favorite_fruits>apple</favorite_fruits>
             <favorite_fruits>peach</favorite_fruits>
             <password>bar</password>
           </user>

       "login" is translated to an attribute and "password" to an element.

       You can use an empty array reference to force the end of the attribute list, e.g.:

           $dtd = [ 'user' =>
                        [],
                        'login',
                        'password',
                  ];

       will translate to

           <user>
             <login>foo</login>
             <password>bar</password>
           </user>

       instead of

           <user login="foo" password="bar" />

   sub-elements
       sub-elements are elements that also contain attributes or other elements. They are
       specified in the dtd as arrays with more than one element. Here is an example:

           $dtd = [ 'user' =>
                        'login',
                        [ 'address' =>
                            'street',
                            'city',
                        ],
                  ];

       Valid xml for this dtd looks like:

           <user login="foo">
             <address street="broadway 7" city="new york" />
           </user>

       It is sometimes useful to specify such dtds in multiple steps:

           $addressdtd = [ 'address' =>
                                'street',
                                'city',
                         ];

           $dtd = [ 'user' =>
                        'login',
                        $addressdtd,
                  ];

   multiple sub-elements with the same name
       As with simple elements, one can allow sub-elements to occur multiple times. "XMLin()"
       creates an array of hash references in this case.  The dtd specification uses an array
       reference to an array for this case, for example:

           $dtd = [ 'user' =>
                        'login',
                        [[ 'address' =>
                            'street',
                            'city',
                        ]],
                  ];
       Or, with the $addressdtd definition used in the previous example:

           $dtd = [ 'user' =>
                        'login',
                        [ $addressdtd ],
                  ];

       Accepted XML is:

           <user login="foo">
             <address street="broadway 7" city="new york" />
             <address street="rural road 12" city="tempe" />
           </user>

   the _content pseudo-element
       All of the non-whitespace parts between elements get collected into a single "_content"
       element. As example,

           <user login="foo">
             <address street="broadway 7" city="new york"/>hello
             <address street="rural road 12" city="tempe"/>world
           </user>

       would set the _content element to "hello world" (the dtd must allow a _content element, of
       course). If the dtd is

           $dtd = [ 'user' =>
                        'login',
                        [ $addressdtd ],
                        '_content',
                  ];

       the xml string created by XMLout() will be:

           <user login="foo">
             <address street="broadway 7" city="new york" />
             <address street="rural road 12" city="tempe" />
             hello world
           </user>

       The exact input cannot be re-created, as the positions and the fragmentation of the
       content data is lost.

SEE ALSO

       XML::Structured requires either XML::Parser or XML::SAX.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 2006 Michael Schroeder <mls@suse.de>

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.