XML::Parser::Style::Tree
use XML::Parser; my $p = XML::Parser->new(Style => 'Tree'); my $tree = $p->parsefile('foo.xml');
When parsing a document, "parse()" will return a parse tree for the document. Each node in the tree takes the form of a tag, content pair. Text nodes are represented with a pseudo-tag of ``0'' and the string that is their content. For elements, the content is an array reference. The first item in the array is a (possibly empty) hash reference containing attributes. The remainder of the array is a sequence of tag-content pairs representing the content of the element.
So for example the result of parsing:
<foo><head id="a">Hello <em>there</em></head><bar>Howdy<ref/></bar>do</foo>
would be:
Tag Content
==================================================================
[foo, [{}, head, [{id => ``a''}, 0, ``Hello '', em, [{}, 0, ``there'']],
bar, [ {}, 0, ``Howdy'', ref, [{}]],
0, ``do''
]
]
The root document ``foo'', has 3 children: a ``head'' element, a ``bar'' element and the text ``do''. After the empty attribute hash, these are represented in it's contents by 3 tag-content pairs.
Закладки на сайте Проследить за страницей |
Created 1996-2024 by Maxim Chirkov Добавить, Поддержать, Вебмастеру |