AnyEvent::XMPP::Node(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation AnyEvent::XMPP::Node(3)

AnyEvent::XMPP::Node - XML node tree helper for the parser.

use AnyEvent::XMPP::Node;
...

This class represens a XML node. AnyEvent::XMPP should usually not require messing with the parse tree, but sometimes it is neccessary.

If you experience any need for messing with these and feel AnyEvent::XMPP should rather take care of it drop me a mail, feature request or most preferably a patch!

Every AnyEvent::XMPP::Node has a namespace, attributes, text and child nodes.

You can access these with the following methods:

Creates a new AnyEvent::XMPP::Node object with the node tag name $el in the namespace URI $ns and the attributes $attrs. The $parser must be the instance of "AnyEvent::XMPP::Parser" which generated this node.
The tag name of this node.
Returns the namespace URI of this node.
Returns true whether the current element matches the tag name $name in the namespaces pointed at by $namespace_or_alias.

You can either pass an alias that was defined in AnyEvent::XMPP::Namespaces or pass an namespace URI in $namespace_or_alias. If no alias with the name $namespace_or_alias was found in AnyEvent::XMPP::Namespaces it will be interpreted as namespace URI.

The first argument to eq can also be another AnyEvent::XMPP::Node instance.

This method return true if the namespace of this instance of AnyEvent::XMPP::Node matches the namespace described by $namespace_or_alias or the namespace of the $node which has to be another AnyEvent::XMPP::Node instance.

See "eq" for the meaning of $namespace_or_alias.

Returns the contents of the $name attribute.
Adds a sub-node to the current node.
Returns a list of sub nodes.
Adds character data to the current node.
Returns the text for this node.
This method does a recursive descent through the sub-nodes and fetches all nodes that match the last element of @path.

The elements of @path consist of a array reference to an array with two elements: the namespace key known by the $parser and the tagname we search for.

This writes the current node out to the AnyEvent::XMPP::Writer object in $writer.
This method returns the original character representation of this XML element (and it's children nodes). Please note that the string is a unicode string, meaning: to get octets use:
my $octets = encode ('UTF-8', $node->as_string);

Now you can roll stunts like this:

my $libxml = XML::LibXML->new;
my $doc    = $libxml->parse_string (encode ('UTF-8', $node->as_string ()));

(You can use your favorite XML parser :)

This method is called by the parser to store original strings of this element.
This method takes anything that can receive SAX events. See also XML::GDOME::SAX::Builder or XML::Handler::BuildDOM or XML::LibXML::SAX::Builder.

With this you can convert this node to any DOM level 2 structure you want:

my $builder = XML::LibXML::SAX::Builder->new;
$node->to_sax_events ($builder);
my $dom = $builder->result;
print "Canonized: " . $dom->toStringC14N . "\n";

Robin Redeker, "<elmex at ta-sa.org>", JID: "<elmex at jabber.org>"

Copyright 2007, 2008 Robin Redeker, all rights reserved.

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

2024-07-13 perl v5.38.2