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NAME

 XML::Parser::Wrapper - A simple object wrapper around XML::Parser

SYNOPSIS

 use XML::Parser::Wrapper;

 my $xml = qq{<foo><head id="a">Hello World!</head><head2><test_tag id="b"/></head2></foo>};
 my $root = XML::Parser::Wrapper->new($xml);

 my $root2 = XML::Parser::Wrapper->new({ file => '/tmp/test.xml' });

 my $root_tag_name = $root->name;
 my $roots_children = $root->elements;

 foreach my $element (@$roots_children) {
     if ($element->name eq 'head') {
         my $id = $element->attr('id');
         my $hello_world_text = $element->text; # eq "Hello World!"
     }
 }

 my $head_element = $root->element('head2');
 my $head_elements = $root->elements('head2');
 my $test = $root->element('head2')->element('test_tag');

DESCRIPTION

 XML::Parser::Wrapper provides a simple object around XML::Parser
 to make it more convenient to deal with the parse tree returned
 by XML::Parser.

METHODS

new($xml), new({ file => $filename })

 Calls XML::Parser to parse the given XML and returns a new
 XML::Parser::Wrapper object using the parse tree output from
 XML::Parser.

name()

 Returns the name of the element represented by this object.

 Aliases: tag(), getName(), getTag()

is_text()

 Returns a true value if this element is a text element, false
 otherwise.

 Aliases: isText()

text()

 If this element is a text element, the text is returned.
 Otherwise, return the text from the first child text element, or
 undef if there is not one.

 Aliases: content(), getText(), getContent()

html()

 Like text(), except HTML-escape the text (escape &, <, >, and ")
 before returning it.

 Aliases: content_html(), getContentHtml()

xml()

 Like text(), except XML-escape the text (escape &, <, >, and ")
 before returning it.

 Aliases: content_xml(), getContentXml()

attributes(), attributes($name1, $name2, ...)

 If no arguments are given, returns a hash of attributes for this
 element.  If arguments are present, an array of corresponding
 attribute values is returned.  Returns an array in array context
 and an array reference if called in scalar context.

 E.g.,

     <field name="foo" id="42">bar</field>

     my ($name, $id) = $element->attributes('name', 'id');

 Aliases: attrs(), getAttributes(), getAttrs()

attribute($name)

 Similar to attributes(), but only returns one value.

 Aliases: attr(), getAttribute(), getAttr()

elements(), elements($element_name)

 Returns an array of child elements.  If $element_name is passed,
 a list of child elements with that name is returned.

 Aliases: getElements(), kids(), getKids(), children(), getChildren()

first_element(), first_element($element_name)

 Returns the first child element of this element.  If
 $element_name is passed, returns the first child element with
 that name is returned.

 Aliases: getFirstElement(), kid(), first_kid()

first_element_if($element_name)

 Like first_element(), except if there is no corresponding child,
 return an object that will work instead of undef.  This allows
 for reliable chaining, e.g.

 my $class = $root->kid_if('field')->kid_if('field')->kid_if('element')
              ->kid_if('field')->attribute('class');

 Aliases: getFirstElementIf(), kidIf(), first_kid_if()

simple_data()

 Assume a data structure of hashes, arrays, and strings are
 represented in the xml with no attributes.  Return the data
 structure, leaving out the root tag.

dump_simple_data($data)

 The reverse of simple_data() -- return xml representing the data
 structure passed.

EXAMPLES

AUTHOR

 Don Owens <don@regexguy.com>

CONTRIBUTORS

 David Bushong

COPYRIGHT

 Copyright (c) 2003-2007 Don Owens

 All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can
 redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl
 itself.

VERSION

 0.05