XML::LibXML::Element(3User Contributed Perl DocumentaXML::LibXML::Element(3pm)NAMEXML::LibXML::Element - XML::LibXML Class for Element Nodes
SYNOPSIS
use XML::LibXML;
# Only methods specific to Element nodes are listed here,
# see XML::LibXML::Node manpage for other methods
$node = XML::LibXML::Element->new( $name );
$node->setAttribute( $aname, $avalue );
$node->setAttributeNS( $nsURI, $aname, $avalue );
$avalue = $node->getAttribute( $aname );
$avalue = $node->getAttributeNS( $nsURI, $aname );
$attrnode = $node->getAttributeNode( $aname );
$attrnode = $node->getAttributeNodeNS( $namespaceURI, $aname );
$node->removeAttribute( $aname );
$node->removeAttributeNS( $nsURI, $aname );
$boolean = $node->hasAttribute( $aname );
$boolean = $node->hasAttributeNS( $nsURI, $aname );
@nodes = $node->getChildrenByTagName($tagname);
@nodes = $node->getChildrenByTagNameNS($nsURI,$tagname);
@nodes = $node->getChildrenByLocalName($localname);
@nodes = $node->getElementsByTagName($tagname);
@nodes = $node->getElementsByTagNameNS($nsURI,$localname);
@nodes = $node->getElementsByLocalName($localname);
$node->appendWellBalancedChunk( $chunk );
$node->appendText( $PCDATA );
$node->appendTextNode( $PCDATA );
$node->appendTextChild( $childname , $PCDATA );
$node->setNamespace( $nsURI , $nsPrefix, $activate );
$node->setNamespaceDeclURI( $nsPrefix, $newURI );
$node->setNamespaceDeclPrefix( $oldPrefix, $newPrefix );
METHODS
The class inherits from XML::LibXML::Node. The documentation for
Inherited methods is not listed here.
Many functions listed here are extensively documented in the DOM Level
3 specification (<http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-3-Core/>). Please
refer to the specification for extensive documentation.
new
$node = XML::LibXML::Element->new( $name );
This function creates a new node unbound to any DOM.
setAttribute
$node->setAttribute( $aname, $avalue );
This method sets or replaces the node's attribute $aname to the
value $avalue
setAttributeNS
$node->setAttributeNS( $nsURI, $aname, $avalue );
Namespace-aware version of "setAttribute", where $nsURI is a
namespace URI, $aname is a qualified name, and $avalue is the
value. The namespace URI may be null (empty or undefined) in order
to create an attribute which has no namespace.
The current implementation differs from DOM in the following
aspects
If an attribute with the same local name and namespace URI already
exists on the element, but its prefix differs from the prefix of
$aname, then this function is supposed to change the prefix
(regardless of namespace declarations and possible collisions).
However, the current implementation does rather the opposite. If a
prefix is declared for the namespace URI in the scope of the
attribute, then the already declared prefix is used, disregarding
the prefix specified in $aname. If no prefix is declared for the
namespace, the function tries to declare the prefix specified in
$aname and dies if the prefix is already taken by some other
namespace.
According to DOM Level 2 specification, this method can also be
used to create or modify special attributes used for declaring XML
namespaces (which belong to the namespace
"http://www.w3.org/2000/xmlns/" and have prefix or name "xmlns").
This should work since version 1.61, but again the implementation
differs from DOM specification in the following: if a declaration
of the same namespace prefix already exists on the element, then
changing its value via this method automatically changes the
namespace of all elements and attributes in its scope. This is
because in libxml2 the namespace URI of an element is not static
but is computed from a pointer to a namespace declaration
attribute.
getAttribute
$avalue = $node->getAttribute( $aname );
If $node has an attribute with the name $aname, the value of this
attribute will get returned.
getAttributeNS
$avalue = $node->getAttributeNS( $nsURI, $aname );
Retrieves an attribute value by local name and namespace URI.
getAttributeNode
$attrnode = $node->getAttributeNode( $aname );
Retrieve an attribute node by name. If no attribute with a given
name exists, "undef" is returned.
getAttributeNodeNS
$attrnode = $node->getAttributeNodeNS( $namespaceURI, $aname );
Retrieves an attribute node by local name and namespace URI. If no
attribute with a given localname and namespace exists, "undef" is
returned.
removeAttribute
$node->removeAttribute( $aname );
The method removes the attribute $aname from the node's attribute
list, if the attribute can be found.
removeAttributeNS
$node->removeAttributeNS( $nsURI, $aname );
Namespace version of "removeAttribute"
hasAttribute
$boolean = $node->hasAttribute( $aname );
This function tests if the named attribute is set for the node. If
the attribute is specified, TRUE \fIs0(1) will be returned,
otherwise the return value is FALSE \fIs0(0).
hasAttributeNS
$boolean = $node->hasAttributeNS( $nsURI, $aname );
namespace version of "hasAttribute"
getChildrenByTagName
@nodes = $node->getChildrenByTagName($tagname);
The function gives direct access to all child elements of the
current node with a given tagname, where tagname is a qualified
name, that is, in case of namespace usage it may consist of a
prefix and local name. This function makes things a lot easier if
one needs to handle big data sets. A special tagname '*' can be
used to match any name.
If this function is called in SCALAR context, it returns the number
of elements found.
getChildrenByTagNameNS
@nodes = $node->getChildrenByTagNameNS($nsURI,$tagname);
Namespace version of "getChildrenByTagName". A special nsURI '*'
matches any namespace URI, in which case the function behaves just
like "getChildrenByLocalName".
If this function is called in SCALAR context, it returns the number
of elements found.
getChildrenByLocalName
@nodes = $node->getChildrenByLocalName($localname);
The function gives direct access to all child elements of the
current node with a given local name. It makes things a lot easier
if one needs to handle big data sets. A special "localname" '*' can
be used to match any local name.
If this function is called in SCALAR context, it returns the number
of elements found.
getElementsByTagName
@nodes = $node->getElementsByTagName($tagname);
This function is part of the spec. It fetches all descendants of a
node with a given tagname, where "tagname" is a qualified name,
that is, in case of namespace usage it may consist of a prefix and
local name. A special "tagname" '*' can be used to match any tag
name.
In SCALAR context this function returns an XML::LibXML::NodeList
object.
getElementsByTagNameNS
@nodes = $node->getElementsByTagNameNS($nsURI,$localname);
Namespace version of "getElementsByTagName" as found in the DOM
spec. A special "localname" '*' can be used to match any local name
and "nsURI" '*' can be used to match any namespace URI.
In SCALAR context this function returns an XML::LibXML::NodeList
object.
getElementsByLocalName
@nodes = $node->getElementsByLocalName($localname);
This function is not found in the DOM specification. It is a mix of
getElementsByTagName and getElementsByTagNameNS. It will fetch all
tags matching the given local-name. This allows one to select tags
with the same local name across namespace borders.
In SCALAR context this function returns an XML::LibXML::NodeList
object.
appendWellBalancedChunk
$node->appendWellBalancedChunk( $chunk );
Sometimes it is necessary to append a string coded XML Tree to a
node. appendWellBalancedChunk will do the trick for you. But this
is only done if the String is "well-balanced".
Note that appendWellBalancedChunk() is only left for compatibility
reasons. Implicitly it uses
my $fragment = $parser->parse_balanced_chunk( $chunk );
$node->appendChild( $fragment );
This form is more explicit and makes it easier to control the flow
of a script.
appendText
$node->appendText( $PCDATA );
alias for appendTextNode().
appendTextNode
$node->appendTextNode( $PCDATA );
This wrapper function lets you add a string directly to an element
node.
appendTextChild
$node->appendTextChild( $childname , $PCDATA );
Somewhat similar with "appendTextNode": It lets you set an Element,
that contains only a "text node" directly by specifying the name
and the text content.
setNamespace
$node->setNamespace( $nsURI , $nsPrefix, $activate );
setNamespace() allows one to apply a namespace to an element. The
function takes three parameters: 1. the namespace URI, which is
required and the two optional values prefix, which is the namespace
prefix, as it should be used in child elements or attributes as
well as the additional activate parameter. If prefix is not given,
undefined or empty, this function tries to create a declaration of
the default namespace.
The activate parameter is most useful: If this parameter is set to
FALSE \fIs0(0), a new namespace declaration is simply added to the
element while the element's namespace itself is not altered.
Nevertheless, activate is set to TRUE \fIs0(1) on default. In this
case the namespace is used as the node's effective namespace. This
means the namespace prefix is added to the node name and if there
was a namespace already active for the node, it will be replaced
(but its declaration is not removed from the document). A new
namespace declaration is only created if necessary (that is, if the
element is already in the scope of a namespace declaration
associating the prefix with the namespace URI, then this
declaration is reused).
The following example may clarify this:
my $e1 = $doc->createElement("bar");
$e1->setNamespace("http://foobar.org", "foo")
results
<foo:bar xmlns:foo="http://foobar.org"/>
while
my $e2 = $doc->createElement("bar");
$e2->setNamespace("http://foobar.org", "foo",0)
results only
<bar xmlns:foo="http://foobar.org"/>
By using $activate == 0 it is possible to create multiple namespace
declarations on a single element.
The function fails if it is required to create a declaration
associating the prefix with the namespace URI but the element
already carries a declaration with the same prefix but different
namespace URI.
setNamespaceDeclURI
$node->setNamespaceDeclURI( $nsPrefix, $newURI );
EXPERIMENTAL IN 1.61 !
This function manipulates directly with an existing namespace
declaration on an element. It takes two parameters: the prefix by
which it looks up the namespace declaration and a new namespace URI
which replaces its previous value.
It returns 1 if the namespace declaration was found and changed, 0
otherwise.
All elements and attributes (even those previously unbound from the
document) for which the namespace declaration determines their
namespace belong to the new namespace after the change.
If the new URI is undef or empty, the nodes have no namespace and
no prefix after the change. Namespace declarations once nulled in
this way do not further appear in the serialized output (but do
remain in the document for internal integrity of libxml2 data
structures).
This function is NOT part of any DOM API.
setNamespaceDeclPrefix
$node->setNamespaceDeclPrefix( $oldPrefix, $newPrefix );
EXPERIMENTAL IN 1.61 !
This function manipulates directly with an existing namespace
declaration on an element. It takes two parameters: the old prefix
by which it looks up the namespace declaration and a new prefix
which is to replace the old one.
The function dies with an error if the element is in the scope of
another declaration whose prefix equals to the new prefix, or if
the change should result in a declaration with a non-empty prefix
but empty namespace URI. Otherwise, it returns 1 if the namespace
declaration was found and changed and 0 if not found.
All elements and attributes (even those previously unbound from the
document) for which the namespace declaration determines their
namespace change their prefix to the new value.
If the new prefix is undef or empty, the namespace declaration
becomes a declaration of a default namespace. The corresponding
nodes drop their namespace prefix (but remain in the, now default,
namespace). In this case the function fails, if the containing
element is in the scope of another default namespace declaration.
This function is NOT part of any DOM API.
OVERLOADINGXML::LibXML::Element overloads hash dereferencing to provide access to
the element's attributes. For non-namespaced attributes, the attribute
name is the hash key, and the attribute value is the hash value. For
namespaced attributes, the hash key is qualified with the namespace
URI, using Clark notation.
Perl's "tied hash" feature is used, which means that the hash gives you
read-write access to the element's attributes. For more information,
see XML::LibXML::AttributeHash
AUTHORS
Matt Sergeant, Christian Glahn, Petr Pajas
VERSION
2.0108
COPYRIGHT
2001-2007, AxKit.com Ltd.
2002-2006, Christian Glahn.
2006-2009, Petr Pajas.
perl v5.18.1 2013-12-17 XML::LibXML::Element(3pm)