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Perl and XML

prostoalex writes: "In the world of information technology, information, as the name suggests, is as important as technology itself. Erik T. Ray's and Jason McIntosh's Perl and XML is an attempt to take a look at perhaps the most popular languages for data processing. XML is an open-standard specification for documents, while Perl's natural powers lie in the area of data processing, and, as the name suggests, practical extracting and reporting." Prostalex has reviewed Perl & XML below; read on for his take on the book. Perl and XML author Erik T. Ray, Jason McIntosh pages 216 publisher O'Reilly rating 4/5 reviewer Alex Moskalyuk ISBN 059600205X summary Introduction to XML processing with Perl

With qualities like these, one might think that the marriage of Perl and XML would be total bliss, and the two languages would live happily ever after. In reality, however, the marriage has been far from perfect, and has produced an enormous number of kids: some uglier, some prettier, some simpler, some more sophisticated. Perl & XML is a good attempt to provide an overview of XML processing techniques existing nowadays in the Perl world.

The book does not even make an attempt to give you a brief introduction to Perl, and thus eliminates the weak point of trying to be another Camel book, as many publications in the field attempt to do. The logical assumption is that you know Perl and have heard something about XML. The first chapter of the book tells you why there are so many variations of Perl modules for XML processing, who is behind the well-known modules and why the interaction of Perl with XML has been rather disorganized. Indeed, a short visit to the XML section of CPAN brings up dozens of available modules, most of which characterized by some intimidating or non-descriptive names like SAX, Grove, YAWriter, etc.

The second chapter is titled "XML Recap"; the contents of the chapter, though, are good enough to be called "Concise but Informative Introduction to XML". Don't get your expectations too high -- O'Reilly has a whole bundle of books related just to learning XML, and thus a single chapter can barely touch the surface of what you might need to know, but it provides a good introduction to the world of markup, elements, namespaces, character encoding, processing instructions, schemas and transformations in XML.

Chapter 3 goes from theory to practice, and gives the reader an opportunity to try his first Perl script on XML data. The parsers covered in this chapter are XML::Parser, XML::LibXML, XML::XPath and XML::Writer. Document validation and well-formedness are also explained, and luckily enough this exact chapter is what O'Reilly Publishing decided to publish as a free chapter available on the Web. In this chapter, the authors make a distinction between stream-based and tree-based XML processing, and thus it doesn't come as a big surprise that the next four chapters are dedicated to examples of such processing.

Chapter 4, Event Streams, discusses the issues of processing XML document as a stream of data, where your application has to react to various input without really knowing where the end of the document is. XML::PYX and XML::Parser are covered in this chapter.

Chapter 5 shows examples of using SAX for XML processing with Perl, and also provides an overview of SAX history, which in a nutshell tells you that SAX has been designed for Java with its strong type checking and interface classes. It goes to explain that using it in Perl, which is known for its forgiving nature, thus requires a certain responsibility on the part of programmer. XML::Handler::YAWriter is also discussed in this chapter.

From stream processing, the authors take you to parsing XML trees. In this case, the document is assumed to be loaded into memory and Perl script can safely assume that the whole XML document has been loaded. XML::Simple, XML::SimpleObject, XML::TreeBuilder and XML::Grove are discussed in this chapter, with XML::Parser revisited.

DOM (Document Object Model) is another standard recommended by W3C and it is mostly concerned with how an XML document is stored in computer's memory. XML::DOM is discussed in this chapter with XML::LibXML revisited. The authors also provide a good overview of DOM standard.

The last three chapters deal with applications of Perl in XML data processing that go beyond stream and tree processing -- XPath and XSLT are explained with copious examples. Remember though, that both technologies have several-hundred-page books written about them, and thus several pages in a Perl and XML book can serve at best as good introduction. Chapter 9 deals with RSS and writing SOAP with Perl and XML, with XML::RSS and SOAP::Lite being explained. The last chapter deals with such issues as namespacing, subclassing and for Web designers provides a handy tutorial on converting your XML data into HTML via XSLT stylesheets.

The table of contents is posted on the publisher's Web site.

The first three chapters of the book are easy to read, since they provide a general overview of the data-processing world, history of XML with reference to appropriate events in the Perl community. However, data processing can hardly be called an exciting topic and thus bulk of the book is about routinely introducing particular modules, telling you what you can do with each, and then giving you an example of Perl code processing some XML document. The examples are apt and relate to some of data processing that some us had to do, i.e. shopping lists, address books, recipes, diaries of mad professors, etc.

The code examples are numerous, and if you get tired after looking at pages and pages of Perl lines, you better plan accordingly, as sometimes the subchapter consists of nothing more than an XML file and related Perl processing code with author's notes. For a 200-page book Perl and XML provides a great introduction into the area, provided you have good knowledge of Perl, using CPAN modules and just general knowledge about data processing. The book would probably have a more exact title if it had the word "Cookbook" in its name -- some might consider it a good reference. However, for those just getting acquainted with XML, another tutorial might be needed to get a full comprehension of XML's power.

You can purchase Perl & XML from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

1 of 74 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Repeat? by Pinball+Wizard · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Well, I'll be sure and give /. the benefit of the doubt. This time, the repeat was intentional! :)

    --

    No, Thursday's out. How about never - is never good for you?