NAME¶
xsxp - eXtremely Simple Xml Parser
SYNOPSIS¶
package require
Tcl 8.4
package require
xsxp 1
package require
xml
xsxp::parse xml
xsxp::fetch pxml path ?
part?
xsxp::fetchall pxml_list path ?
part?
xsxp::only pxml tagname
xsxp::prettyprint pxml ?
chan?
DESCRIPTION¶
This package provides a simple interface to parse XML into a pure-value list. It
also provides accessor routines to pull out specific subtags, not unlike DOM
access. This package was written for and is used by Darren New's Amazon S3
access package.
This is pretty lame, but I needed something like this for S3, and at the time,
TclDOM would not work with the new 8.5 Tcl due to version number problems.
In addition, this is a pure-value implementation. There is no garbage to clean
up in the event of a thrown error, for example. This simplifies the code for
sufficiently small XML documents, which is what Amazon's S3 guarantees.
Copyright 2006 Darren New. All Rights Reserved. NO WARRANTIES OF ANY TYPE ARE
PROVIDED. COPYING OR USE INDEMNIFIES THE AUTHOR IN ALL WAYS. This software is
licensed under essentially the same terms as Tcl. See LICENSE.txt for the
terms.
COMMANDS¶
The package implements five rather simple procedures. One parses, one is for
debugging, and the rest pull various parts of the parsed document out for
processing.
- xsxp::parse xml
- This parses an XML document (using the standard xml tcllib module in a SAX
sort of way) and builds a data structure which it returns if the parsing
succeeded. The return value is referred to herein as a "pxml",
or "parsed xml". The list consists of two or more elements:
- •
- The first element is the name of the tag.
- •
- The second element is an array-get formatted list of key/value pairs. The
keys are attribute names and the values are attribute values. This is an
empty list if there are no attributes on the tag.
- •
- The third through end elements are the children of the node, if any. Each
child is, recursively, a pxml.
- •
- Note that if the zero'th element, i.e. the tag name, is
"%PCDATA", then the attributes will be empty and the third
element will be the text of the element. In addition, if an element's
contents consists only of PCDATA, it will have only one child, and all the
PCDATA will be concatenated. In other words, this parser works poorly for
XML with elements that contain both child tags and PCDATA. Since Amazon S3
does not do this (and for that matter most uses of XML where XML is a poor
choice don't do this), this is probably not a serious limitation.
- xsxp::fetch pxml path ?part?
- pxml is a parsed XML, as returned from xsxp::parse. path is
a list of element tag names. Each element is the name of a child to look
up, optionally followed by a hash ("#") and a string of digits.
An empty list or an initial empty element selects pxml. If no hash
sign is present, the behavior is as if "#0" had been appended to
that element. (In addition to a list, slashes can separate subparts where
convenient.)
An element of path scans the children at the indicated level for the
n'th instance of a child whose tag matches the part of the element before
the hash sign. If an element is simply "#" followed by digits,
that indexed child is selected, regardless of the tags in the children.
Hence, an element of "#3" will always select the fourth child of
the node under consideration.
part defaults to "%ALL". It can be one of the following
case-sensitive terms:
- %ALL
- returns the entire selected element.
- %TAGNAME
- returns lindex 0 of the selected element.
- %ATTRIBUTES
- returns index 1 of the selected element.
- %CHILDREN
- returns lrange 2 through end of the selected element, resulting in a list
of elements being returned.
- %PCDATA
- returns a concatenation of all the bodies of direct children of this node
whose tag is %PCDATA. It throws an error if no such children are found.
That is, part=%PCDATA means return the textual content found in that node
but not its children nodes.
- %PCDATA?
- is like %PCDATA, but returns an empty string if no PCDATA is found.
For example, to fetch the first bold text from the fifth paragraph of the body
of your HTML file,
xsxp::fetch $pxml {html body p#4 b} %PCDATA
- xsxp::fetchall pxml_list path ?part?
- This iterates over each PXML in pxml_list (which must be a list of
pxmls) selecting the indicated path from it, building a new list with the
selected data, and returning that new list.
For example, pxml_list might be the %CHILDREN of a particular
element, and the path and part might select from each child
a sub-element in which we're interested.
- xsxp::only pxml tagname
- This iterates over the direct children of pxml and selects only
those with tagname as their tag. Returns a list of matching
elements.
- xsxp::prettyprint pxml ?chan?
- This outputs to chan (default stdout) a pretty-printed version of
pxml.
BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK¶
This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and
other problems. Please report such in the category
amazon-s3 of the
Tcllib Trackers [
http://core.tcl.tk/tcllib/reportlist]. Please also
report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either package and/or
documentation.
KEYWORDS¶
dom, parser, xml
CATEGORY¶
Text processing
COPYRIGHT¶
2006 Darren New. All Rights Reserved.