Provided by: libxml-compacttree-perl_0.03-2_all bug

NAME

       XML::CompactTree - builder of compact tree structures from XML documents

VERSION

       Version 0.03

SYNOPSIS

           use XML::CompactTree;
           use XML::LibXML::Reader;

           my $reader = XML::LibXML::Reader->new(location => $url);
           ...
           my $tree = XML::CompactTree::readSubtreeToPerl($reader);
           ...

DESCRIPTION

       This module provides functions that use XML::LibXML::Reader to parse an XML document into a parse tree
       formed of nested arrays (and hashes).

       It aims to be fast in doing that and to presreve all relevant information from the XML (including
       namespaces, document order, mixed content, etc.). It sacrifices user friendliness for speed.

       IMPORTANT: There is an even more efficient XS implementation of this module called XML::CompactTree::XS
       with 100% equivalent functionality.

PURPOSE

       I wrote this module because I noticed that repeated calls to methods implemented in C (XS) were very
       expensive in Perl.

       Therefore traversing a large DOM tree using XML::LibXML or iterating over an XML stream using
       XML::LibXML::Reader was much slower than traversing similarly large and structured native Perl data
       structures.

       This module allows the user to build a document parse tree consisting of native Perl data structures
       (arrays and optionally hashes) using XML::LibXML::Reader with minimal number of XS calls.

       (Note that there XML::CompactTree::XS is 100% equivalent of this module that manages the same with just
       one XS call.)

       It does not provide full DOM navigation but attempts to provide maximum amount of information.  Its
       memory footprint should be somewhat smaller than that of a corresponding XML::LibXML DOM tree.

EXPORT

       By default, the following constants are exported (":flags" export tag) to be used as flags for the tree
       builder:

          XCT_IGNORE_WS
          XCT_IGNORE_SIGNIFICANT_WS
          XCT_IGNORE_PROCESSING_INSTRUCTIONS
          XCT_IGNORE_COMMENTS
          XCT_USE_QNAMES           /* not yet implemented */
          XCT_KEEP_NS_DECLS
          XCT_TEXT_AS_STRING       /* not yet implemented */
          XCT_ATTRIBUTE_ARRAY
          XCT_PRESERVE_PARENT      /* not yet implemented */
          XCT_MERGE_TEXT_NODES     /* not yet implemented */
          XCT_DOCUMENT_ROOT

FUNCTIONS

   readSubtreeToPerl( $reader, $flags, \my %ns )
       Uses a given XML::LibXML::Reader parser objects to parse a subtree at the current reader position to
       build a tree formed of nested arrays (see "OUTPUT FORMAT").

       reader
           A  XML::LibXML::Reader  object to use as the reader. While building the tree, the reader moves to the
           next node on the current or higher level.

       flags
           An integer consisting of 1 bit flags (see constants in the EXPORT section).  Use  binary  or  (|)  to
           combine individual flags.

           The following flags are NOT implemented yet:

              XCT_USE_QNAMES, XCT_TEXT_AS_STRING, XCT_PRESERVE_PARENT, XCT_MERGE_TEXT_NODES

       ns  You  may  pass  an  empty hash reference that will be populated by a namespace_uri to namespace_index
           map, that can be used to decode namespace  indexes  in  the  resulting  data  structure  (see  OUTPUT
           FORMAT).

   readLevelToPerl( $reader, $flags, $ns )
       Like  "readSubtreeToPerl",  but  reads  the  subtree at the current reader position and all its following
       siblings.  It returns an array reference of representations of these subtrees as in the format  described
       in "OUTPUT FORMAT".

OUTPUT FORMAT

       The  result  of  parsing  a subtree is a Perl array reference $node contains a node type followed by node
       data whose interpretation on further positions in $node depends on the node type, as described below:

   Any Node
       •    $node->[0] is an integer representing the node type.  Use  XML::LibXML::Reader  node-tye  constants,
            e.g. XML_READER_TYPE_ELEMENT for an element node, XML_READER_TYPE_TEXT for text node, etc.

   Document or Document Fragment Nodes
       •    $node->[1] contains the document encoding

       •    $node->[2]  is  an  array  reference  containing  similar represention of all the child nodes of the
            document (fragment).

       Note: XML::LibXML::Reader does not document node by default, which means that  calling  readSubtreeToPerl
       on a reader object in its initial state only parses the first node in the document (which can be the root
       element,  but also a comment or a processing instruction). Use XCT_DOCUMENT_ROOT flag to force creating a
       document node in such case.

   Element nodes
       •    $node->[1] is the local name (UTF-8 encoded character string)

       •    $node->[2] is the namespace index (see NAMESPACES below)

       •    $node->[3] is undef if the element has no attributes.  Otherwise  if  XCT_ATTRIBUTE_ARRAY  flag  was
            used,  $node->[3]  is  an  array  reference  of  the form "[ name1, value1, name2, value2, ....]" of
            attribute names and corresponding values. If XCT_ATTRIBUTE_ARRAY flag was not used, then  $node->[3]
            is  a hash reference mapping attribute names to the corresponding attribute values "{ name1="value1,
            name2=>value2...}>

            The flag XCT_KEEP_NS_DECLS controls whether namespace declarations (xmlns=...  or  xmlns:prefix=...)
            are included along with normal attributes or not.

            Note:  there  is  no  support  for  namespaced attributes yet, but the attribute names are stored as
            QNames, so one can always use XCT_KEEP_NS_DECLS to keep track of namespace prefix  declarations  and
            do the resolving manually. Support for namespaced attributes is planned.

       •    If XTC_LINE_NUMBERS flag was used, $node->[4] contains the line number of the element and $node->[5]
            contains an array reference containing similar representions of the child nodes of the current node.

       •    If  XTC_LINE_NUMBERS  flag  was  NOT  used,  $node->[4]  contains  an  array  reference  of  similar
            representations of the child nodes of the current node.

   Text, CDATA, Comment and White-Space Nodes
       •    $node->[1] contains the node value (UTF-8 encoded character string)

   Unparsed Entity, Processing-Instruction, and Notation Nodes
       •    $node->[1] contains the local name (there is no support for namespaces on these types of nodes yet)

       •    $node->[2] contains the node value

   Skipping Less-Significant Nodes
       White-space (non-significant or significant), processing-instruction and comment nodes can be  completely
       skipped, using the following flags:

          XCT_IGNORE_WS
          XCT_IGNORE_SIGNIFICANT_WS
          XCT_IGNORE_PROCESSING_INSTRUCTIONS
          XCT_IGNORE_COMMENTS

NAMESPACES

       Namespaces  of  element  nodes  are  stored  in the element node as an integer. 0 always represents nodes
       without namespace, all other namespaces are assigned unique  numbers  in  an  increasing  order  as  they
       appear. You can pass an empty hash reference to the parsing functions to obtain the mapping.

   Example
         use XML::CompactTree;
         use XML::LibXML::Reader;

         my $reader = XML::LibXML::Reader->new(location => $ARGV[0]);
         my %ns;
         my $data = XML::CompactTree::readSubtreeToPerl( $reader, XCT_DOCUMENT_ROOT, \%ns );
         $ns_map[$ns{$_}]=$_ for keys %ns;
         my @nodes = ($data);
         while (@nodes) {
           my $node = shift @nodes;
           my $type = $node->[0];
           if ($type == XML_READER_TYPE_ELEMENT) {
             print "element $node->[1] is from ns $node->[2] '$ns_map[$node->[2]]'\n";
             push @nodes, @{$node->[4]}; # queue children
           } elsif ($type == XML_READER_TYPE_DOCUMENT) {
             push @nodes, @{$node->[2]}; # queue children
           }
         }

PLANNED FEATURES

       Planned flags:

          XCT_USE_QNAMES - use QNames instead of local names for all nodes
          XCT_TEXT_AS_STRING - put text nodes into the tree as plain scalars
          XCT_PRESERVE_PARENT - add a slot with a weak reference to the parent node
          XCT_MERGE_TEXT_NODES - merge adjacent text/cdata nodes together

       Features:  allow  blessing the array refs to default or user-specified classes; the default classes would
       provide a very small subset of DOM methods  to  retrieve  node  information,  manipulate  the  tree,  and
       possibly serialize the parse tree back to XML.

AUTHOR

       Petr Pajas, "<pajas@matfyz.cz>"

BUGS

       Please  report  any  bugs or feature requests to "bug-xml-compacttree-xs@rt.cpan.org", or through the web
       interface at <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=XML-CompactTree-XS>.  I  will  be  notified,
       and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE

       Copyright 2008-2009 Petr Pajas, All Rights Reserved.

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

SEE ALSO

         XML::CompactTree::XS

         XML::LibXML::Reader

perl v5.34.0                                       2022-06-28                                   CompactTree(3pm)