Provided by: libcgi-xmlform-perl_0.10-14_all 

NAME
CGI::XMLForm - Extension of CGI.pm which reads/generates formated XML.
NB: This is a subclass of CGI.pm, so can be used in it's place.
SYNOPSIS
use CGI::XMLForm;
my $cgi = new CGI::XMLForm;
if ($cgi->param) {
print $cgi->header, $cgi->pre($cgi->escapeHTML($cgi->toXML));
}
else {
open(FILE, "test.xml") or die "Can't open: $!";
my @queries = ('/a', '/a/b*', '/a/b/c*', /a/d');
print $cgi->header,
$cgi->pre($cgi->escapeHTML(
join "\n", $cgi->readXML(*FILE, @queries)));
}
DESCRIPTION
This module can either create form field values from XML based on XQL/XSL style queries (full XQL is
_not_ supported - this module is designed for speed), or it can create XML from form values. There are 2
key functions: toXML and readXML.
toXML
The module takes form fields given in a specialised format, and outputs them to XML based on that format.
The idea is that you can create forms that define the resulting XML at the back end.
The format for the form elements is:
<input name="/body/p/ul/li">
which creates the following XML:
<body>
<p>
<ul>
<li>Entered Value</li>
</ul>
</p>
</body>
It's the user's responsibility to design appropriate forms to make use of this module. Details of how
come below...
Also supported are attribute form items, that allow creation of element attributes. The syntax for this
is:
<input name="/body/p[@id='mypara' and @onClick='someFunc()']/@class">
Which creates the following XML:
<body>
<p id="mypara" onClick="someFunc()" class="Entered Value"></p>
</body>
Also possible are relative paths. So the following form elements:
<input type="hidden" name="/table/tr">
<input type="text" name="td">
<input type="text" name="td">
<input type="text" name="../tr/td">
Will create the following XML:
<table>
<tr>
<td>value1</td>
<td>value2</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>value3</td>
</tr>
</table>
SYNTAX
The following is a brief syntax guideline
Full paths start with a "/" :
"/table/tr/td"
Relative paths start with either ".." or just a tag name.
"../tr/td"
"td"
Relative paths go at the level above the previous path, unless the previous path was also a relative
path, in which case it goes at the same level. This seems confusing at first (you might expect it to
always go at the level above the previous element), but it makes your form easier to design. Take the
following example: You have a timesheet (see the example supplied in the archive) that has
monday,tuesday,etc. Our form can look like this:
<input type="text" name="/timesheet/projects/project/@Name">
<input type="text" name="monday">
<input type="text" name="tuesday">
...
Rather than:
<input type="text" name="/timesheet/projects/project/@Name">
<input type="text" name="monday">
<input type="text" name="../tuesday">
<input type="text" name="../wednesday">
...
If unsure I recommend using full paths, relative paths are great for repeating groups of data, but weak
for heavily structured data. Picture the following paths:
/timesheet/employee/name/forename
../surname
title
../department
This actually creates the following XML:
<timesheet>
<employee>
<name>
<forename>val1</forname>
<surname>val2</surname>
<title>val3></title>
</name>
<department>val4</department>
</employee>
</timesheet>
Confusing eh? Far better to say:
/timesheet/employee/name/forename
/timesheet/employee/name/surname
/timesheet/employee/name/title
/timesheet/employee/department
Or alternatively, better still:
/timesheet/employee/name (Make hidden and no value)
forename
surname
title
../department
Attributes go in square brackets. Attribute names are preceded with an "@", and attribute values follow
an "=" sign and are enclosed in quotes. Multiple attributes are separated with " and ".
/table[@bgcolor="blue" and @width="100%"]/tr/td
If setting an attribute, it follows after the tag that it is associated with, after a "/" and it's name
is preceded with an "@".
/table/@bgcolor
readXML
readXML takes either a file handle or text as the first parameter and a list of queries following that.
The XML is searched for the queries and it returns a list of tuples that are the query and the match.
It's easier to demonstrate this with an example. Given the following XML:
<a>Foo
<b>Bar
<c>Fred</c>
<c>Blogs</c>
</b>
<b>Red
<c>Barbara</c>
<c>Cartland</c>
</b>
<d>Food</d>
</a>
And the following queries:
/a
/a/b*
c*
/a/d
it returns the following result as a list:
/a
Foo
/a/b
Bar
c
Fred
c
Blogs
/a/b
Red
c
Barbara
c
Cartland
/a/d
Food
(NB: This is slightly incorrect - for /a and /a/b it will return "Foo\n " and "Bar\n "
respectively).
The queries support relative paths like toXML (including parent paths), and they also support wildcards
using ".*" or ".*?" (preferably ".*?" as it's probably a better match). If a wildcard is specified the
results will have the actual value substituted with the wildcard. Wildcards are a bit experimental, so be
careful ;-)
Caveats
There are a few caveats to using this module:
• Parameters must be on the form in the order they will appear in the XML.
• There is no support for multiple attribute setting (i.e. you can only set one attribute for an
element at a time).
• You can't set an attribute and a value for that element, it's one or the other.
• You can use this module in place of CGI.pm, since it's a subclass.
• There are bound to be lots of bugs! Although it's in production use right now - just watch CPAN for
regular updates.
AUTHOR
Matt Sergeant msergeant@ndirect.co.uk, sergeant@geocities.com
Based on an original concept, and discussions with, Jonathan Eisenzopf. Thanks to the Perl-XML mailing
list for suggesting the XSL syntax.
Special thanks to Francois Belanger (francois@sitepak.com) for his mentoring and help with the syntax
design.
SEE ALSO
CGI(1), CGI::XML
perl v5.18.1 2013-12-14 XMLForm(3pm)