XML and Perl
XML and Perl is written by two well-known members of the Perl XML community. Both are frequent contributors to the "perl-xml" mailing list, so there's certainly no doubt that they know what they are talking about. Which is always a good thing in a technical book.
The book is made up of five sections. The first section has a couple of chapters which introduce you to the concepts covered in the book. Chapter one introduces you separately to XML and Perl and then chapter two takes a first look at how you can use Perl to process XML. This chapter finishes with two example programs for parsing simple XML documents.
Section two goes into a lot more detail about parsing XML documents with Perl. Chapter three looks at event-driven parsing using XML::Parser and XML::Parser::PerlSAX to demonstrate to build example programs before going to talk in some detail about XML::SAX which is currently the state of the art in event-driven XML parsing in Perl. It also looks at XML::Xerces which is a Perl interface to the Apache Software Foundation's Xerces parser. Chapter four covers tree based XML parsing and presents examples using XML::Simple, XML::Twig, XML::DOM and XML::LibXML. In both of these chapters the pros and cons of each of the modules are discussed in detail so that you can easily decide which solution to use in any given situation.
Section three covers generating XML documents. In chapter five we look at generating XML from text sources using simple print statements and also the modules XML::Writer and XML::Handler::YAWriter. Chapter six looks at taking data from a database and turning that into XML using modules like XML::Generator::DBI and XML::DBMS. Chapter seven looks at miscellaneous other input formats and contains examples using XML::SAXDriver::CSV and XML::SAXDriver::Excel.
Section four covers more advanced topics. Chapter eight is about XML transformations and filtering. This chapter covers using XSLT to transform XML documents. It covers the modules XML::LibXSLT, XML::Sabletron and XML::XPath.
Chapter nine goes into detail about Matt Sergeant's AxKit, the Apache XML Kit which allows you to create a website in XML and automatically deliver it to your visitors in the correct format.
Chapter ten rounds off the book with a look at using Perl to create web services. It looks at the two most common modules for creating web services in Perl - XML::RPC and SOAP::Lite.
Finally, section five contains the appendices which provide more background on the introductions to XML and Perl from chapter one.
There was one small point that I found a little annoying when reading the book: Each example was accompanied with a sample of the XML documents to be processed together with both a DTD and an XML Schema definition for the document. This seemed to me to be overkill. Did we really need both DTDs and XML Schemas for every example. I would have found it less distracting if one (or even both) of these had been moved to an appendix.
That small complaint aside, I found it a useful and interesting book. It will be very useful to Perl programmers (like myself) who will increasingly be expected to process (and provide) data in XML formats.
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(For reference, see this rant by the brilliant net.kook Erik Naggum. The most quotable bit, for the lazy among you, is
)Well, perhaps not your soul, but your Perll code just reflects the way you think to a greater extent than other languages. This isn't something that's done underhandedly, it is well advertised in every posting in c.l.perl and the Camel book, and every other book about Perl. Which is that Perl is not at all orthogonal, TMTOWDI (there's more than one way to do it). If you want to be rigorous and declare everything and not have your typos become references automatically, you "use strict" and your magic line is "#!/usr/bin/perl -w". If not, well Perl allows you to do that too. If you want objects, you can do that, if not, not.
// and tr and split I get along just fine.
If is possible to write quality code in Perl Just because the language allows you to not do so isn't its fault. It doesn't stop you from doing it, because that'd stop you from doing brilliant things.
To address some specific things you mentioned, you can do full-fledged exception handling in Perl if you want to (with eval and specific modules), or, you know, not. And I'm not familiar with the false positive matches in regexps (perhaps you're referring to some famous problem). But if a regexp doesn't do what you want it to, isn't is wrong? Between
True and then not so. Perl's flexible data structures and OO make it a simpler approach than languages that think XML == Object Serialisation. It is also very likely that a lot of what you're going to see flying by in SAX or hanging around in DOM will be text. Sometimes lots of it, sometimes text that has non-XML structure and requires microparsing.
But anyway, what really puts Perl ahead of the pack (together with Python, the only viable competitor I've tried -- Java is really lagging these days) is its large wealth of SAX (and to a lesser degree, DOM) tools. All sorts of very useful filters can be grabbed, complex pipeline management is a given, the SAX writing framework is cool, there are SAX parsers for many non-XML formats, etc.
Radioactive cats have 18 half-lives.
As you're also aware, most Comp Sci courses fawn over Pascal, a VERY formalized language. However, it's not mentioned much past education circles (and Apple afficionados).
In practice, reference counting doesn't seem to lead to memory leaks as you describe. And, I would argue it is much more efficient than Java's method.
PERL is an excellent SCRIPTING language. Larry Wall describes it as a "glue" language. XML is a good thing to glue together. It's perfect for that. Every tool has its purpose; push any too far, and you start abusing it.
Trying to find the quote from Larry Wall. I think it goes something like this: "Perl did easy things easily and made impossible things doable."
To Copy from One is Plagiarism; To Copy from Many is Research.
I'm seeing a lot of comments that perl doesn't have any particular strengths when dealing with XML. A good module people should check out is XML::Simple. Basically, it automagically turns XML into a nested data structure, and automagically turns a nested data structure into XML. The great thing about it you just make a single API call, and just directly access the data from there without having to learn anything more complicated. Definitely not an end-all solution, but definitely handles the common case wonderfully, and has quite a few handy options to allow more fine tuned control.