Provided by: libpod-abstract-perl_0.20-3_all bug

NAME

       Pod::Abstract::Path - Search for POD nodes matching a path within a document tree.

SYNOPSIS

        /head1(1)/head2          # All head2 elements under
                                 # the 2nd head1 element
        //item                   # All items anywhere
        //item[@label =~ {^\*$}] # All items with '*' labels.
        //head2[/hilight]        # All head2 elements containing
                                 # "hilight" elements

        # Top level head1s containing head2s that have headings matching
        # "NAME", and also have at least one list somewhere in their
        # contents.
        /head1[/head2[@heading =~ {NAME}]][//over]

        # Top level headings having the same title as the following heading.
        /head1[@heading = >>@heading]

        # Top level headings containing at least one subheading with the same
        # name.
        /head1[@heading = ./head2@heading]

DESCRIPTION

       Pod::Abstract::Path is a path selection syntax that allows fast and easy traversal of Pod::Abstract
       documents. While it has a simple syntax, there is significant complexity in the queries that you can
       create.

       Not all of the designed features have yet been implemented, but it is currently quite useful, and all of
       the filters in "paf" make use of Pod Paths.

   SYMBOLS:
       /   Selects children of the left hand side.

       //  Selects all descendants of the left hand side.

       .   Selects the current node - this is a NOP that can be used in expressions.

       ..  Selects  the  parrent  node.  If  there  are  multiple  nodes  selected, all of their parents will be
           included.

       ^   Selects the root node of the tree for the current node. This allows  you  to  escape  from  a  nested
           expression. Note that this is the ROOT node, not the node that you started from.

           If  you  want to evaluate an expression from a node as though it were the root node, the easiest ways
           are to detach or dup it - otherwise the root operator will find the original root node.

       name, #cut, :text, :verbatim, :paragraph
           Any element name, or symbolic type name, will restrict the selection to only elements  matching  that
           type. e.g, ""//:paragraph"" will select all descendants, anywhere, but then restrict that set to only
           ":paragraph" type nodes.

           Names together separated by spaces will match all of those names - e.g: "//head1 over" will match all
           lists and all head1s.

       &, | (union and intersection)
           Union  will  take  expressions  on  either side, and return all nodes that are members of either set.
           Intersection returns nodes that are members of BOTH sets. These can be used  to  extend  expressions,
           and  within [ expressions ] where a path is supported (left side of a match, left or right side of an
           = sign). These are NOT logical  and/or,  though  a  similar  effect  can  be  induced  through  these
           operators.

       @attrname
           The  named  attribute  of  the nodes on the left hand side. Current attributes are @heading for head1
           through head4, and @label for list items.

       [ expression ]
           Select only the left hand elements that match the expression in the brackets. The expression will  be
           evaluated from the point of view of each node in the current result set.

           Expressions can be:

           simple: "[/head2]"
               Any  regular  path will be true if there are any nodes matched. The above example will be true if
               there are any head2 nodes as direct children of the selected node.

           regex match: "[@heading =~ {FOO}]"
               A regex match will be true if  the  left  hand  expression  has  nodes  that  match  the  regular
               expression  between the braces on the right hand side. The above example will match anything with
               a heading containing "FOO".

               Optionally, the right hand closing brace may have the  "i"  modifier  to  cause  case-insensitive
               matching. i.e "[@heading =~ {foo}i]" will match "foo" or "fOO".

           complement: "[! /head2 ]"
               Reverses  the  remainder of the expression. The above example will match anything without a child
               head2 node.

           compare operators: eg. "[ /node1 eq /node2 ]"
               Matches nodes where the operator is satistied for at least one pair  of  nodes.  The  right  hand
               expression  can  be  a  constant  string (single quoted: 'string', or a second expression. If two
               expressions are used, they are matched combinationally - i.e, all result nodes on  the  left  are
               matched against all result nodes on the right. Both sides may contain nested expressions.

               The following Perl compatible operators are supported:

               String: " eq gt lt le ge ne "

               Numeric: "== < > <= >= !="

PERFORMANCE

       Pod::Abstract::Path  is  not  designed  to  be  fast.  It is designed to be expressive and useful, but it
       involves sucessive expand/de-duplicate/linear search operations  and  doing  this  with  large  documents
       containing many nodes is not suitable for high performance systems.

       Simple  expressions  can  be fast enough, but there is nothing to stop you from writing "//[<condition>]"
       and linear-searching all 10,000 nodes of your Pod document. Use with caution in interactive systems.

INTERFACE

       It is recommended you use the "<Pod::Abstract::Node-"select>> method to evaluate Path expressions.

       If you wish to generate paths for use in other modules, use "parse_path" to generate a parse  tree,  pass
       that  as an argument to "new", then use "process" to evaluate the expression against a list of nodes. You
       can re-use the same parse tree to process multiple lists of nodes in this fashion.

METHODS

   filter_unique
       It is possible during processing - especially using ^ or  ..  operators  -  to  generate  many  duplicate
       matches of the same nodes. Each pass around the loop, we filter to unique nodes so that duplicates cannot
       inflate more than one time.

       This  effectively  means  that  "//^"  (however  awful  that  is)  will match one node only - just really
       inefficiently.

   parse_path
       Parse a list of lexemes and generate a driver tree for the process method. This  is  a  simple  recursive
       descent parser with one element of lookahead.

AUTHOR

       Ben Lilburne <bnej@mac.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright (C) 2009 Ben Lilburne

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

perl v5.30.0                                       2020-05-17                           Pod::Abstract::Path(3pm)