Provided by: libtest-xml-perl_0.08-4_all bug

NAME

       Test::XML::XPath - Test XPath assertions

SYNOPSIS

         use Test::XML::XPath tests => 3;
         like_xpath( '<foo />', '/foo' );   # PASS
         like_xpath( '<foo />', '/bar' );   # FAIL
         unlike_xpath( '<foo />', '/bar' ); # PASS

         is_xpath( '<foo>bar</foo>', '/foo', 'bar' ); # PASS
         is_xpath( '<foo>bar</foo>', '/bar', 'foo' ); # FAIL

         # More interesting examples of xpath assertions.
         my $xml = '<foo attrib="1"><bish><bosh args="42">pub</bosh></bish></foo>';

         # Do testing for attributes.
         like_xpath( $xml, '/foo[@attrib="1"]' ); # PASS
         # Find an element anywhere in the document.
         like_xpath( $xml, '//bosh' ); # PASS
         # Both.
         like_xpath( $xml, '//bosh[@args="42"]' ); # PASS

DESCRIPTION

       This module allows you to assert statements about your XML in the form of XPath statements.  You can say
       that a piece of XML must contain certain tags, with so-and-so attributes, etc.  It will try to use any
       installed XPath module that it knows about.  Currently, this means XML::LibXML and XML::XPath, in that
       order.

       NB: Normally in XPath processing, the statement occurs from a context node.  In the case of like_xpath(),
       the context node will always be the root node.  In practice, this means that these two statements are
       identical:

          # Absolute path.
          like_xpath( '<foo/>', '/foo' );
          # Path relative to root.
          like_xpath( '<foo/>', 'foo' );

       It's probably best to use absolute paths everywhere in order to keep things simple.

       NB: Beware of specifying attributes.  Because they use an @-sign, perl will complain about trying to
       interpolate arrays if you don't escape them or use single quotes.

FUNCTIONS

       like_xpath ( XML, XPATH [, NAME ] )
           Assert that XML (a string containing XML) matches the statement XPATH.  NAME is the name of the test.

           Returns true or false depending upon test success.

       unlike_xpath ( XML, XPATH [, NAME ] )
           This is the reverse of like_xpath().  The test will only pass if XPATH does not generates any matches
           in XML.

           Returns true or false depending upon test success.

       is_xpath ( XML, XPATH, EXPECTED [, NAME ] )
           Evaluates XPATH against XML, and pass the test if the is EXPECTED.  Uses findvalue() internally.

           Returns true or false depending upon test success.

       set_xpath_processor ( CLASS )
           Set the class name of the XPath processor used.  It is up to you to ensure that this class is loaded.

       In all cases, XML must be well formed, or the test will fail.

SEE ALSO

       Test::XML.

       XML::XPath, which is the basis for this module.

       If you are not conversant with XPath, there are many tutorials available on the web.  Google will point
       you at them.  The first one that I saw was: <http://www.zvon.org/xxl/XPathTutorial/>, which appears to
       offer interactive XPath as well as the tutorials.

AUTHOR

       Dominic Mitchell <cpan2 (at) semantico.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright 2002 by semantico

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