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174 lines
4.8 KiB
Groff
174 lines
4.8 KiB
Groff
.SH INCLUDE FILE
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#include <mxml.h>
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.SH LIBRARY
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\-lmxml
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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Mini-XML is a small XML parsing library that you can use to
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read XML and XML-like data files in your application without
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requiring large non-standard libraries. Mini-XML only
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requires an ANSI C compatible compiler (GCC works, as do
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most vendors' ANSI C compilers) and a "make" program.
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.PP
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Mini-XML provides the following functionality:
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.IP \(bu 4
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Reading of UTF-8 and UTF-16 and writing of UTF-8 encoded XML files and strings.
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.IP \(bu 4
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Data is stored in a linked-list tree structure,
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preserving the XML data hierarchy.
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.IP \(bu 4
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Supports arbitrary element names, attributes, and attribute
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values with no preset limits, just available memory.
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.IP \(bu 4
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Supports integer, real, opaque ("CDATA"), and text data types in
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"leaf" nodes.
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.IP \(bu 4
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Functions for creating, indexing, and managing trees of data.
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.IP \(bu 4
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"Find" and "walk" functions for easily locating and navigating
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trees of data.
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.PP
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Mini-XML doesn't do validation or other types of processing
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on the data based upon schema files or other sources of
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definition information, nor does it support character
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entities other than those required by the XML
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specification.
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.SH USING MINI-XML
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Mini-XML provides a single header file which you include:
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.nf
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#include <mxml.h>
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.fi
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.PP
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Nodes are defined by the "mxml_node_t" structure; the "type"
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member defines the node type (element, integer, opaque,
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real, or text) which determines which value you want to look
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at in the "value" union. New nodes can be created using the
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"mxmlNewElement()", "mxmlNewInteger()", "mxmlNewOpaque()",
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"mxmlNewReal()", and "mxmlNewText()" functions. Only
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elements can have child nodes, and the top node must be an
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element, usually "?xml".
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.PP
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You load an XML file using the "mxmlLoadFile()" function:
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.nf
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FILE *fp;
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mxml_node_t *tree;
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fp = fopen("filename.xml", "r");
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tree = mxmlLoadFile(NULL, fp, MXML_NO_CALLBACK);
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fclose(fp);
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.fi
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.PP
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Similarly, you save an XML file using the "mxmlSaveFile()"
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function:
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.nf
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FILE *fp;
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mxml_node_t *tree;
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fp = fopen("filename.xml", "w");
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mxmlSaveFile(tree, fp, MXML_NO_CALLBACK);
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fclose(fp);
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.fi
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.PP
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The "mxmlLoadString()", "mxmlSaveAllocString()", and
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"mxmlSaveString()" functions load XML node trees from and save
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XML node trees to strings:
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.nf
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char buffer[8192];
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char *ptr;
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mxml_node_t *tree;
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...
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tree = mxmlLoadString(NULL, buffer, MXML_NO_CALLBACK);
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...
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mxmlSaveString(tree, buffer, sizeof(buffer),
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MXML_NO_CALLBACK);
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...
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ptr = mxmlSaveAllocString(tree, MXML_NO_CALLBACK);
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.fi
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.PP
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You can find a named element/node using the "mxmlFindElement()"
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function:
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.nf
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mxml_node_t *node = mxmlFindElement(tree, tree, "name",
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"attr", "value",
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MXML_DESCEND);
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.fi
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.PP
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The "name", "attr", and "value" arguments can be passed as
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NULL to act as wildcards, e.g.:
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.nf
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/* Find the first "a" element */
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node = mxmlFindElement(tree, tree, "a", NULL, NULL,
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MXML_DESCEND);
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/* Find the first "a" element with "href" attribute */
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node = mxmlFindElement(tree, tree, "a", "href", NULL,
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MXML_DESCEND);
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/* Find the first "a" element with "href" to a URL */
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node = mxmlFindElement(tree, tree, "a", "href",
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"http://www.easysw.com/~mike/mxml/",
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MXML_DESCEND);
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/* Find the first element with a "src" attribute*/
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node = mxmlFindElement(tree, tree, NULL, "src", NULL,
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MXML_DESCEND);
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/* Find the first element with a "src" = "foo.jpg" */
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node = mxmlFindElement(tree, tree, NULL, "src",
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"foo.jpg", MXML_DESCEND);
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.fi
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.PP
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You can also iterate with the same function:
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.nf
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mxml_node_t *node;
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for (node = mxmlFindElement(tree, tree, "name", NULL,
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NULL, MXML_DESCEND);
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node != NULL;
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node = mxmlFindElement(node, tree, "name", NULL,
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NULL, MXML_DESCEND))
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{
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... do something ...
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}
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.fi
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.PP
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To find the value of a specific node in the tree, use the "mxmlFindPath()"
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function:
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.nf
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mxml_node_t *value = mxmlFindPath(tree, "path/to/*/foo/bar");
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.fi
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.PP
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The "mxmlGetInteger()", "mxmlGetOpaque()", "mxmlGetReal()", and "mxmlGetText()"
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functions retrieve the value from a node:
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.nf
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mxml_node_t *node;
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int intvalue = mxmlGetInteger(node);
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const char *opaquevalue = mxmlGetOpaque(node);
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double realvalue = mxmlGetReal(node);
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int whitespacevalue;
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const char *textvalue = mxmlGetText(node, &whitespacevalue);
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.fi
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.PP
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Finally, once you are done with the XML data, use the
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"mxmlDelete()" function to recursively free the memory that
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is used for a particular node or the entire tree:
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.nf
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mxmlDelete(tree);
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.fi
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