vote up 0 vote down star

The manual page for XML::Parser::Style::Objects is horrible. A simple hello world style program would really be helpful.

I really wanted to do something like this: (not real code of course)

use XML::Parser;
my $p = XML::Parser->new(Style => 'Objects', Pkg => 'MyNode');
my $tree = $p->parsefile('foo.xml');
$tree->doSomething();

MyNode::doSomething() {
  my $self = shift;
  print "This is a normal node";
  for $kid ($self->Kids)
  {
    $kid->doSomething();
  }
}

MyNode::special::doSomething() {
  my $self = shift;
  print "This is a special node";
}
flag

2 Answers

vote up 0 vote down check

In all cases here is actual code that runs ... doesn't mean much but produces output and hopefully can get you started ...

use XML::Parser;

package MyNode::inner;
	sub doSomething {
	  my $self = shift;
	  print "This is an inner node containing : ";
	  print $self->{Kids}->[0]->{Text};
	  print "\n";
	}
package MyNode::Characters;
	sub doSomething {}
package MyNode::foo;
	sub doSomething {
	  my $self = shift;
	  print "This is an external node\n";
	  for $kid (@ { $self->{Kids} }) {
		$kid->doSomething();
	  }
	}

package main;

my $p = XML::Parser->new(Style => 'Objects', Pkg => 'MyNode');
my $tree = $p->parsefile('foo.xml');
for (@$tree) {
	$_->doSomething();
}

with foo.xml

 <foo> <inner>some text</inner> <inner>something else</inner></foo>

which outputs

>perl -w "tree.pl"     
This is an external node
This is an inner node containing : some text
This is an inner node containing : something else

Hope that helps.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

When ever I need to do something similar, usually I end up using XML::Parser::EasyTree it has better documentation and is simpler to use.

I highly recommend it.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.