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diff --git a/test/rexml/data/documentation.xml b/test/rexml/data/documentation.xml new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..a1ad6e878b --- /dev/null +++ b/test/rexml/data/documentation.xml @@ -0,0 +1,542 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> +<?xml-stylesheet type="text/css" href="http://www.germane-software.com/repositories/public/documentation/documentation.css"?> +<?xml-stylesheet alternative="yes" type="text/css" href="file:/home/ser/Work/documentation/documentation.css"?> +<?xml-stylesheet alternative="yes" type="text/xsl" href="http://www.germane-software.com/repositories/public/documentation/paged.xsl"?> +<!DOCTYPE documentation SYSTEM "http://www.germane-software.com/repositories/public/documentation/documentation.dtd"> +<documentation> + <head> + <title>REXML</title> + + <banner href="img/rexml.png" /> + + <version>@ANT_VERSION@</version> + + <date>@ANT_DATE@</date> + + <home>http://www.germane-software.com/software/rexml</home> + + <base>rexml</base> + + <language>ruby</language> + + <author email="ser@germane-software.com" + href="http://www.ser1.net/" jabber="seanerussell@gmail.com">Sean + Russell</author> + </head> + + <overview> + <purpose lang="en"> + <p>REXML is a conformant XML processor for the Ruby programming + language. REXML passes 100% of the Oasis non-validating tests and + includes full XPath support. It is reasonably fast, and is implemented + in pure Ruby. Best of all, it has a clean, intuitive API. REXML is + included in the standard library of Ruby</p> + + <p>This software is distribute under the <link href="LICENSE.txt">Ruby + license</link>.</p> + </purpose> + + <general> + <p>REXML arose out of a desire for a straightforward XML API, and is an + attempt at an API that doesn't require constant referencing of + documentation to do common tasks. "Keep the common case simple, and the + uncommon, possible."</p> + + <p>REXML avoids The DOM API, which violates the maxim of simplicity. It + does provide <em>a</em> DOM model, but one that is Ruby-ized. It is an + XML API oriented for Ruby programmers, not for XML programmers coming + from Java.</p> + + <p>Some of the common differences are that the Ruby API relies on block + enumerations, rather than iterators. For example, the Java code:</p> + + <example>for (Enumeration e=parent.getChildren(); e.hasMoreElements(); ) { + Element child = (Element)e.nextElement(); // Do something with child +}</example> + + <p>in Ruby becomes:</p> + + <example>parent.each_child{ |child| # Do something with child }</example> + + <p>Can't you feel the peace and contentment in this block of code? Ruby + is the language Buddha would have programmed in.</p> + + <p>One last thing. If you use and like this software, and you're in a + position of power in a company in Western Europe and are looking for a + software architect or developer, drop me a line. I took a lot of French + classes in college (all of which I've forgotten), and I lived in Munich + long enough that I was pretty fluent by the time I left, and I'd love to + get back over there.</p> + </general> + + <features lang="en"> + <item>Four intuitive parsing APIs.</item> + + <item>Intuitive, powerful, and reasonably fast tree parsing API (a-la + DOM</item> + + <item>Fast stream parsing API (a-la SAX)<footnote>This is not a SAX + API.</footnote></item> + + <item>SAX2-based API<footnote>In addition to the native REXML streaming + API. This is slower than the native REXML API, but does a lot more work + for you.</footnote></item> + + <item>Pull parsing API.</item> + + <item>Small</item> + + <item>Reasonably fast (for interpreted code)</item> + + <item>Native Ruby</item> + + <item>Full XPath support<footnote>Currently only available for the tree + API</footnote></item> + + <item>XML 1.0 conformant<footnote>REXML passes all of the non-validating + OASIS tests. There are probably places where REXML isn't conformant, but + I try to fix them as they're reported.</footnote></item> + + <item>ISO-8859-1, UNILE, UTF-16 and UTF-8 input and output; also, + support for any encoding the iconv supports.</item> + + <item>Documentation</item> + </features> + </overview> + + <operation lang="en"> + <subsection title="Installation"> + <p>You don't <em>have</em> to install anything; if you're running a + version of Ruby greater than 1.8, REXML is included. However, if you + choose to upgrade from the REXML distribution, run the command: + <code>ruby bin/install.rb</code>. By the way, you really should look at + these sorts of files before you run them as root. They could contain + anything, and since (in Ruby, at least) they tend to be mercifully + short, it doesn't hurt to glance over them. If you want to uninstall + REXML, run <code>ruby bin/install.rb -u</code>.</p> + </subsection> + + <subsection title="Unit tests"> + <p>If you have Test::Unit installed, you can run the unit test cases. + Run the command: <code>ruby bin/suite.rb</code>; it runs against the + distribution, not against the installed version.</p> + </subsection> + + <subsection title="Benchmarks"> + <p>There is a benchmark suite in <code>benchmarks/</code>. To run the + benchmarks, change into that directory and run <code>ruby + comparison.rb</code>. If you have nothing else installed, only the + benchmarks for REXML will be run. However, if you have any of the + following installed, benchmarks for those tools will also be run:</p> + + <list> + <item>NQXML</item> + + <item>XMLParser</item> + + <item>Electric XML (you must copy <code>EXML.jar</code> into the + <code>benchmarks</code> directory and compile + <code>flatbench.java</code> before running the test)</item> + </list> + + <p>The results will be written to <code>index.html</code>.</p> + </subsection> + + <subsection title="General Usage"> + <p>Please see <link href="docs/tutorial.html">the Tutorial</link>.</p> + + <p>The API documentation is available <link + href="http://www.germane-software.com/software/XML/rexml/doc">on-line</link>, + or it can be downloaded as an archive <link + href="http://www.germane-software.com/software/archives/rexml_api_@ANT_VERSION@.tgz">in + tgz format (~70Kb)</link> or (if you're a masochist) <link + href="http://www.germane-software.com/software/archives/rexml_api_@ANT_VERSION@.zip">in + zip format (~280Kb)</link>. The best solution is to download and install + Dave Thomas' most excellent <link + href="http://rdoc.sourceforge.net">rdoc</link> and generate the API docs + yourself; then you'll be sure to have the latest API docs and won't have + to keep downloading the doc archive.</p> + + <p>The unit tests in <code>test/</code> and the benchmarking code in + <code>benchmark/</code> provide additional examples of using REXML. The + Tutorial provides examples with commentary. The documentation unpacks + into <link href="doc/index.html"><code>rexml/doc</code></link>.</p> + + <p>Kouhei Sutou maintains a <link + href="http://www.germane-software.com/software/rexml_doc_ja/current/index.html">Japanese + version</link> of the REXML API docs. <link + href="http://www.germane-software.com/software/rexml_doc_ja/current/japanese_documentation.html">Kou's + documentation page</link> contains links to binary archives for various + versions of the documentation.</p> + </subsection> + </operation> + + <status> + <subsection title="Speed and Completeness"> + <p>Unfortunately, NQXML is the only package REXML can be compared + against; XMLParser uses expat, which is a native library, and really is + a different beast altogether. So in comparing NQXML and REXML you can + look at four things: speed, size, completeness, and API.</p> + + <p><link href="benchmarks/index.html">Benchmarks</link></p> + + <p>REXML is faster than NQXML in some things, and slower than NQXML in a + couple of things. You can see this for yourself by running the supplied + benchmarks. Most of the places where REXML are slower are because of the + convenience methods<footnote>For example, + <code>element.elements[index]</code> isn't really an array operation; + index can be an Integer or an XPath, and this feature is relatively time + expensive.</footnote>. On the positive side, most of the convenience + methods can be bypassed if you know what you are doing. Check the <link + href="benchmarks/index.html"> benchmark comparison page</link> for a + <em>general</em> comparison. You can look at the benchmark code yourself + to decide how much salt to take with them.</p> + + <p>The sizes of the XML parsers are close<footnote>As measured with + <code>ruby -nle 'print unless /^\s*(#.*|)$/' *.rb | wc -l</code> + </footnote>. NQXML 1.1.3 has 1580 non-blank, non-comment lines of code; + REXML 2.0 has 2340<footnote>REXML started out with about 1200, but that + number has been steadily increasing as features are added. XPath + accounts for 541 lines of that code, so the core REXML has about 1800 + LOC.</footnote>.</p> + + <p>REXML is a conformant XML 1.0 parser. It supports multiple language + encodings, and internal processing uses the required UTF-8 and UTF-16 + encodings. It passes 100% of the Oasis non-validating tests. + Furthermore, it provides a full implementation of XPath, a SAX2 and a + PullParser API.</p> + </subsection> + + <subsection title="XPath"> + <p>As of release 2.0, XPath 1.0 is fully implemented.</p> + + <p>I fully expect bugs to crop up from time to time, so if you see any + bogus XPath results, please let me know. That said, since I'm now + following the XPath grammar and spec fairly closely, I suspect that you + won't be surprised by REXML's XPath very often, and it should become + rock solid fairly quickly.</p> + + <p>Check the "bugs" section for known problems; there are little bits of + XPath here and there that are not yet implemented, but I'll get to them + soon.</p> + + <p>Namespace support is rather odd, but it isn't my fault. I can only do + so much and still conform to the specs. In particular, XPath attempts to + help as much as possible. Therefore, in the trivial cases, you can pass + namespace prefixes to Element.elements[...] and so on -- in these cases, + XPath will use the namespace environment of the base element you're + starting your XPath search from. However, if you want to do something + more complex, like pass in your own namespace environment, you have to + use the XPath first(), each(), and match() methods. Also, default + namespaces <em>force</em> you to use the XPath methods, rather than the + convenience methods, because there is no way for XPath to know what the + mappings for the default namespaces should be. This is exactly why I + loath namespaces -- a pox on the person(s) who thought them up!</p> + </subsection> + + <subsection title="Namespaces"> + <p>Namespace support is now fairly stable. One thing to be aware of is + that REXML is not (yet) a validating parser. This means that some + invalid namespace declarations are not caught.</p> + </subsection> + + <subsection title="Mailing list"> + <p>There is a low-volume mailing list dedicated to REXML. To subscribe, + send an empty email to <link + href="mailto:ser-rexml-subscribe@germane-software.com">ser-rexml-subscribe@germane-software.com</link>. + This list is more or less spam proof. To unsubscribe, similarly send a + message to <link + href="mailto:ser-rexml-unsubscribe@germane-software.com">ser-rexml-unsubscribe@germane-software.com</link>.</p> + </subsection> + + <subsection title="RSS"> + <p>An <link + href="http://www.germane-software.com/projects/rexml/timeline?ticket=on&max=50&daysback=90&format=rss">RSS + file</link> for REXML is now being generated from the change log. This + allows you to be alerted of bug fixes and feature additions via "pull". + <link href="http://www.germane-software.com/software/rexml/rss.xml">Another + RSS</link> is available which contains a single item: the release notice + for the most recent release. This is an abuse of the RSS + mechanism, which was intended to be a distribution system for headlines + linked back to full articles, but it works. The headline for REXML is + the version number, and the description is the change log. The links all + link back to the REXML home page. The URL for the RSS itself is + http://www.germane-software.com/software/rexml/rss.xml.</p> + + <p>The <link href="release.html">changelog itself is here</link>.</p> + + <p>For those who are interested, there's a <link + href="docs/sloccount.txt">SLOCCount</link> (by David A. Wheeler) file + with stats on the REXML sourcecode. Note that the SLOCCount output + includes the files in the test/, benchmarks/, and bin/ directories, as + well as the main sourcecode for REXML itself.</p> + </subsection> + + <subsection title="Applications that use REXML"> + <list> + <item><link + href="http://www.pablotron.org/software/raggle/">Raggle</link> is a + console-based RSS aggregator.</item> + + <item><link + href="http://www.zweknu.org/technical/index.rhtml?s=p|10/">getrss</link> + is an RSS aggregator</item> + + <item>Ned Konz's <link + href="http://www.bikenomad.microship.com/ruby/">ruby-htmltools</link> + uses REXML</item> + + <item>Hiroshi NAKAMURA's <link + href="http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/raa-list.rhtml?name=SOAP4R">SOAP4R</link> + package can use REXML as the XML processor.</item> + + <item>Chris Morris' <link href="http://clabs.org/clxmlserial.htm">XML + Serializer</link>. XML Serializer provides a serialization mechanism + for Ruby that provides a bidirectional mapping between Ruby classes + and XML documents.</item> + + <item>Much of the <link href="http://www.rubyxml.com">RubyXML</link> + site is generated with scripts that use REXML. RubyXML is a great + place to find information about th intersection between Ruby and + XML.</item> + </list> + </subsection> + + <bugs lang="en"> + <p>You can submit bug reports and feature requests, and view the list of + known bugs, at the <link + href="http://www.germane-software.com/projects/rexml">REXML bug report + page.</link> Please do submit bug reports. If you really want your bug + fixed fast, include an runit or Test::Unit method (or methods) that + illustrates the problem. At the very least, send me some XML that REXML + doesn't process properly.</p> + + <p>You don't have to send an entire test suite -- just the unit test + methods. If you don't send me a unit test, I'll have to write one + myself, which will mean that your bug will take longer to fix.</p> + + <p>When submitting bug reports, please include the version of Ruby and + of REXML that you're using, and the operating system you're running on. + Just run: <code>ruby -vrrexml/rexml -e 'p + REXML::VERSION,PLATFORM'</code> and paste the results in your bug + report. Include your email if you want a response about the bug.</p> + + <item>Attributes are not handled internally as nodes, so you can't + perform node functions on them. This will have to change. It'll also + probably mean that, rather than returning attribute values, XPath will + return the Attribute nodes.</item> + + <item>Some of the XPath <em>functions</em> are untested<footnote>Mike + Stok has been testing, debugging, and implementing some of these + Functions (and he's been doing a good job) so there's steady improvement + in this area.</footnote>. Any XPath functions that don't work are also + bugs... please report them. If you send a unit test that illustrates the + problem, I'll try to fix the problem within a couple of days (if I can) + and send you a patch, personally.</item> + + <item>Accessing prefixes for which there is no defined namespace in an + XPath should throw an exception. It currently doesn't -- it just fails + to match.</item> + </bugs> + + <todo lang="en"> + <item>Reparsing a tree with a pull/SAX parser</item> + + <item>Better namespace support in SAX</item> + + <item>Lazy tree parsing</item> + + <item>Segregate parsers, for optimized minimal distributions</item> + + <item>XML <-> Ruby</item> + + <item>Validation support</item> + + <item>True XML character support</item> + + <item>Add XPath support for streaming APIs</item> + + <item status="request">XQuery support</item> + + <item status="request">XUpdate support</item> + + <item>Make sure namespaces are supported in pull parser</item> + + <item status="request">Add document start and entity replacement events + in pull parser</item> + + <item>Better stream parsing exception handling</item> + + <item>I'd like to hack XMLRPC4R to use REXML, for my own + purposes.</item> + </todo> + </status> + + <faq> + <q>REXML is hanging while parsing one of my XML files.</q> + + <a>Your XML is probably malformed. Some malformed XML, especially XML that + contains literal '<' embedded in the document, causes REXML to hang. + REXML should be throwing an exception, but it doesn't; this is a bug. I'm + aware that it is an extremely annoying bug, and it is one I'm trying to + solve in a way that doesn't significantly reduce REXML's parsing + speed.</a> + + <q>I'm using the XPath '//foo' on an XML branch node X, and keep getting + all of the 'foo' elements in the entire document. Why? Shouldn't it return + only the 'foo' element descendants of X?</q> + + <a>No. XPath specifies that '/' returns the document root, regardless of + the context node. '//' also starts at the document root. If you want to + limit your search to a branch, you need to use the self:: axe. EG, + 'self::node()//foo', or the shorthand './/foo'.</a> + + <q>I want to parse a document both as a tree, and as a stream. Can I do + this?</q> + + <a>Yes, and no. There is no mechanism that directly supports this in + REXML. However, aside from writing your own traversal layer, there is a + way of doing this. To turn a tree into a stream, just turn the branch you + want to process as a stream back into a string, and re-parse it with your + preferred API. EG: pp = PullParser.new( some_element.to_s ). The other + direction is more difficult; you basically have to build a tree from the + events. REXML will have one of these builders, eventually, but it doesn't + currently exist.</a> + + <q>Why is Element.elements indexed off of '1' instead of '0'?</q> + + <a>Because of XPath. The XPath specification states that the index of the + first child node is '1'. Although it may be counter-intuitive to base + elements on 1, it is more undesireable to have element.elements[0] == + element.elements[ 'node()[1]' ]. Since I can't change the XPath + specification, the result is that Element.elements[1] is the first child + element.</a> + + <q>Why isn't REXML a validating parser?</q> + + <a>Because validating parsers must include code that parses and interprets + DTDs. I hate DTDs. REXML supports the barest minimum of DTD parsing, and + even that isn't complete. There is DTD parsing code in the works, but I + only work on it when I'm really, really bored. Rumor has it that a + contributor is working on a DTD parser for REXML; rest assured that any + such contribution will be included with REXML as soon as it is + available.</a> + + <q>I'm trying to create an ISO-8859-1 document, but when I add text to the + document it isn't being properly encoded.</q> + + <a>Regardless of what the encoding of your document is, when you add text + programmatically to a REXML document you <em>must</em> ensure that you are + only adding UTF-8 to the tree. In particular, you can't add ISO-8859-1 + encoded text that contains characters above 0x80 to REXML trees -- you + must convert it to UTF-8 before doing so. Luckily, this is easy: + <code>text.unpack('C*').pack('U*')</code> will do the trick. 7-bit ASCII + is identical to UTF-8, so you probably won't need to worry about this.</a> + + <q>How do I get the tag name of an Element?</q> + + <a>You take a look at the APIs, and notice that <code>Element</code> + includes <code>Namespace</code>. Then you click on the + <code>Namespace</code> link and look at the methods that + <code>Element</code> includes from <code>Namespace</code>. One of these is + <code>name()</code>. Another is <code>expanded_name()</code>. Yet another + is <code>prefix()</code>. Then, you email the author of rdoc and ask him + to extend rdoc so that it lists methods in the API that are included from + other files, so that you don't have to do all of that looking around for + your method.</a> + </faq> + + <credits> + <p>I've had help from a number of resources; if I haven't listed you here, + it means that I just haven't gotten around to adding you, or that I'm a + dork and have forgotten. In either case, feel free to write me and + complain.</p> + + <list> + <item>Mike Stok has been very active, sending not only fixes for bugs + (especially in Functions), but also by providing unit tests and making + sure REXML runs under Ruby 1.7. He also sent the most awesome hand + knitted tea cozy, with "REXML" and the Ruby knitted into it.</item> + + <item>Kouhei Sutou translated the REXML API documentation to Japanese! + Links are in the API docs section of the main documentation. He has also + contributed a large number of bug reports and patches to fix bugs in + REXML.</item> + + <item>Erik Terpstra heard my pleas and submitted several logos for + REXML. After sagely procrastinating for several weeks, I finally forced + my poor slave of a wife to pick one (this is what we call "delegation"). + She did, with caveats; Erik quickly made the changes, and the result is + what you now see at the top of this page. He also supplied a <link + href="img/rexml_50p.png">smaller version</link> that you can include + with your projects that use REXML, if you'd like.</item> + + <item>Ernest Ellingson contributed the sourcecode for turning UTF16 and + UNILE encodings into UTF8, which allowed REXML to get the 100% OASIS + valid tests rating.</item> + + <item>Ian Macdonald provided me with a comprehensive, well written RPM + spec file.</item> + + <item>Oliver M . Bolzer is maintaining a Debian package distribution of + REXML. He also has provided good feedback and bug reports about + namespace support.</item> + + <item>Michael Granger supplied a patch for REXML that make the unit + tests pass under Ruby 1.7.</item> + + <item>James Britt contributed code that makes using + Document.parse_stream easier to use by allowing it to be passed either a + Source, File, or String.</item> + + <item>Tobias Reif: Numerous bug reports, and suggestions for + improvement.</item> + + <item>Stefan Scholl, who provided a lot of feedback and bug reports + while I was trying to get ISO-8859-1 support working.</item> + + <item>Steven E Lumos for volunteering information about XPath + particulars.</item> + + <item>Fumitoshi UKAI provided some bug fixes for CData metacharacter + quoting.</item> + + <item>TAKAHASHI Masayoshi, for information on UTF</item> + + <item>Robert Feldt: Bug reports and suggestions/recommendations about + improving REXML. Testing is one of the most important aspects of + software development.</item> + + <item><link + href="http://www.themindelectric.com/exml/index.html">Electric + XML</link>: This was, after all, the inspiration for REXML. Originally, + I was just going to do a straight port, and although REXML doesn't in + any way, shape or form resemble Electric XML, still the basic framework + and philosophy was inspired by E-XML. And I still use E-XML in my Java + projects.</item> + + <item><link + href="http://www.io.com/~jimm/downloads/nqxml/index.html">NQXML</link>: + While I may complain about the NQXML API, I wrote a few applications + using it that wouldn't have been written otherwise, and it was very + useful to me. It also encouraged me to write REXML. Never complain about + free software *slap*.</item> + + <item>See my <link + href="http://www.germane-software.com/~ser/technology.html">technologies + page</link> for a more comprehensive list of computer technologies that + I depend on for my day-to-day work.</item> + + <item>rdoc, an excellent JavaDoc analog<footnote>When I was first + working on REXML, rdoc wasn't, IMO, very good, so I wrote API2XML. + API2XML was good enough for a while, and then there was a flurry of work + on rdoc, and it quickly surpassed API2XML in features. Since I was never + really interested in maintaining a JavaDoc analog, I stopped support of + API2XML, and am now recommending that people use + rdoc.</footnote>.</item> + + <item>Many, many other people who've submitted bug reports, suggestions, + and positive feedback. You're all co-developers!</item> + </list> + </credits> +</documentation> |