XML::LibXML::Iterator - XML::LibXML's Tree Iteration Class |
XML::LibXML::Iterator - XML::LibXML's Tree Iteration Class
use XML::LibXML; use XML::LibXML::Iterator;
my $doc = XML::LibXML->new->parse_string( $somedata ); my $iter= XML::LibXML::Iterator->new( $doc );
$iter->iterator_function( \&iterator_function );
# more control on the flow while ( $iter->nextNode ) { # do something }
# operate on the entire tree $iter->iterate( \&callback_function );
XML::LibXML::Iterator is an iterator class for XML::LibXML parsed documents. This class allows to iterate the document tree as it were a linear data structure. It is possible to step back and forth between the nodes of the tree and do certain operations on that nodes. Different to XPath the nodes are not prefetched but will be calculated for each step. Therefore an iterator is sensible towards the current state of a document tree on each step, while XPath is only per query executed.
XML::LibXML offers by default a W3C DOM interface on the parsed XML documents. This tree has per definition four directions to be traversed: Up, down, foreward and backward. Therefore a tree can be considered two dimensional. Although a tree is still one more simple datastructure it is way to complex for some operations. So the XML::LibXML::Iterator class breaks the for operations down to only two: backward and forward. For some people this easier to understand than DOM or SAX as this follows more the way one actually reads an XML document.
Therefore an iterator has three basic functions:
That's it. With an iterator one does not have to decide when to dive into a subtree or find a parent. It is not even required to care about the boundaries of a certain level. The iterator will get the next node for you until there is no node left to handle.
In short: An iterator will answer the question about what to do next.
XML::LibXML::Iterator requires a parsed document or at least a node to operate on. This node is passed to the iterator class and will be used as the first node of the iteration. One can allways reset the iterator to the first node by using the first()-function.
Once XML::LibXML::Iterator is initialized the tree can be traversed by
using either next()
or previous(). Both function will return a
XML::LibXML::Node object if there is such object available.
Since the current object hold by the iterator class is always
available via the current()
function.
The following example may clearify this:
# get the document from wherever you like my $doc = XML::LibXML->new->parse_stream( *SOMEINPUT );
# get the iterator for the document root. my $iter = XML::LibXML::Iterator->new( $doc->documentElement );
# walk through the document while ( $iter->nextNode() ) { my $curnode = $iter->current(); print $curnode->nodeType(); }
# now get back to the beginning $iter->first(); my $curnode = $iter->current(); print $curnode->nodeType();
Actually the functions nextNode(), previousNode(), first(), last()
and
current()
do return the node which is current after the
operation. E.g. nextNode()
moves to the next node if possible and then
returns the node. Thus the while-loop in the example can be written
as
while ( $iter->nextNode() ) { print $_->nodeType(); }
Note, that just relieing on the return value of next()
and previous()
is somewhat dangerous, because both functions return undef in case
of reaching the iteration boundaries. That means it is not possible
to iterate past the last element or before the first one.
XML::LibXML::Iterator accepts XML::NodeFilters to limit the nodes made available to the caller. Any nodefilter applied to XML::LibXML::Iterator will test if a node returned by the iteration function is visible to the caller.
Different to the DOM Traversal Specification, XML::LibXML::Iterator allows filter stacks. This means it is possible to apply more than a single node filter to your node iterator.
By default XML::LibXML::Iterator will access all nodes of a given DOM tree. An interation based on the default iterator will access each single node in the given subtree once. The order how the nodes will be accessed is given by the following order:
node -> node's childnodes -> node's next sibling
In combination with XML::Nodefilter this is best for a wide range of
scripts and applications. Nevertheless this is still to restrictive
for some applications. XML::LibXML::Iterator allows to change that
behaviour. This is done by resetting XML::LibXML::Iterator's iterator
function. By using the method iterator_function()
to override the
default iterator function, it is possible to implement iterations
based on any iteration rule imaginable.
A valid iterator function has to take two parameters: As the first
parameter it will recieve the iterator object itself, as second the
direction of the iteration will be passed. The direction is either 1
(for next())
or -1 (for previous()). As the iterator-function is
called by next()
and previous()
the interator-function has to be aware
about the iteration boundaries. In case the iteration would pass the
boundary for that operation, the function has to return
undefined. Also the iterator function has to return the new current node,
instead of setting it itself.
*DEVELOPER NOTE* In order a single stepping is rather limited, the direction is given by the sign of the passed integer value. The value of the passed parameter will be used as an indication how many steps should be done. Therefor the interation direction should be tested relative to '0' and not as a equation. A basic template for a iterator function therefore will look like this:
sub iterator_func_templ { my $iter = shift; my $step = shift; my $node = undef; my $current = $iter->current();
if ( $step > 0 ) { # move forward } else { # move backward $step *= -1; # remove the sign }
return $node; }
Another feature of XML::LibXML::Iterator is the ability to repeat a single operation on all nodes in scope. Instead of writing a loop one can specify the opeation as a function, that it applied on each node found. The function that does the trick, is named iterate().
iterate()
takes again two parameter: First the iterator object, second
the node to operate on. iterate()
will iterate through the entire
document starting with the first node. If one has already started an
iteration, the internal position will be reset to the first node.
The following example will show how this works:
$iter->iterate( sub {my ($iter,$node)=@_; map {$iter->setNodeName( lc $iter->nodeName ) if $iter->nodeType != NAMESPACE_DECLARATION } ($node, $node->attributes); } );
This extra long line lowercases all tagnames and the names of the attributes in a given subtree.
new($first_node)
first()
nextNode()
previousNode()
last()
current()
index()
iterator_function($funcion_ref)
set_filter(@filter_list)
add_filter(@filter_list)
iterate($function_ref)
the XML::LibXML::Node manpage, the XML::NodeFilter manpage
Christian Glahn, <phish@cpan.org>
(c) 2002-2007, Christian Glahn. All rights reserved.
This package is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
XML::LibXML::Iterator - XML::LibXML's Tree Iteration Class |