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NAME

Gedcom - a module to manipulate Gedcom genealogy files

Version 1.07 - 14th March 2000

SYNOPSIS

  use Gedcom;

  my $ged = Gedcom->new(gedcom_file => $gedcom_file);
  my $ged = Gedcom->new(grammar_version => 5.5,
                        gedcom_file     => $gedcom_file,
                        callback        => $cb);
  my $ged = Gedcom->new(grammar_file => "gedcom-5.5.grammar",
                        gedcom_file  => $gedcom_file);
  return unless $ged->validate;
  my $xref = $self->resolve_xref($value);
  $ged->resolve_xrefs;
  $ged->unresolve_xrefs;
  $ged->normalise_dates;
  my %xrefs = $ged->renumber;
  $ged->order;
  $ged->write($new_gedcom_file, $flush);
  $ged->write_xml($fh, $level);
  my @individuals = $ged->individuals;
  my @families = $ged->families;
  my $me = $ged->get_individual("Paul Johnson");
  my $xref = $ged->next_xref("I");

DESCRIPTION

Copyright 1998-2000, Paul Johnson (pjcj@cpan.org)

This software is free. It is licensed under the same terms as Perl itself.

The latest version of this software should be available from my homepage: http://www.pjcj.fsnet.co.uk

This module provides for manipulation of Gedcom files. Gedcom is a format for storing genealogical information designed by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (http://www.lds.org). Information about Gedcom is available as a zip file at ftp://gedcom.org/pub/genealogy/gedcom/gedcom55.zip. Unfortunately, this is only usable if you can access a PC running Windows of some description. Part of the reason I wrote this module is because I don't do that. Well, I didn't. I can now although I prefer not to...

The Gedcom format is specified in a grammar file (gedcom-5.5.grammar). Gedcom.pm parses the grammar which is then used to validate and allow manipulation of the Gedcom file. I have only used Gedcom.pm with version 5.5 of the Gedcom grammar, which I had to modify slightly to correct a few errors. The advantage of this approach is that Gedcom.pm should be useful if the Gedcom grammar is ever updated. It also made the software easier to write, and probably more dependable too. I suppose this is the virtue of laziness shining through.

The vice of laziness is also shining brightly - I need to document how to use this module in much greater detail. This is happening - this release has more documentation than the previous ones - but if you would like information feel free to send me mail.

This module provides some functions which work over the entire Gedcom file, such as reformatting dates, renumbering entries and ordering the entries. It also allows access to individuals, and then to relations of individuals, for example sons, siblings, spouse, parents and so forth.

This release includes a lines2perl program to convert LifeLines programs to Perl. The program works, but it has a few rough edges, and some missing functionality. I'll be working on it when it hits the top of my TODO list.

This release provides an option for read only access to the gedcom file. Actually, this doesn't stop you changing or writing the file, but it does parse the gedcom file lazily, meaning that only those portions of the gedcom file which are needed will be read. This can provide a substantial saving of time and memory providing that not too much of the gedcom file is read. If you are going to read the whole gedcom file, this mode is less efficient.

Note that this is an early release of this software - caveat emptor.

Should you find this software useful, or if you make changes to it, or if you would like me to make changes to it, please send me mail. I would like to have some sort of an idea of the use this software is getting. Apart from being of interest to me, this will guide my decisions when I feel the need to make changes to the interface.

There is a low volume mailing list available for discussing the use of Perl in conjunction with genealogical work. This is an appropriate forum for discussing Gedcom.pm. To subscribe to the regular list, send a message to majordomo@icomm.ca and put subscribe perl-gedcom as the body of the message. To get on the digest version of the list, put subscribe perl-gedcom-digest.

To store my genealogy I wrote a syntax file (gedcom.vim) and used vim (http://www.vim.org) to enter the data, and Gedcom.pm to validate and manipulate it. I find this to be a nice solution.

GETTING STARTED

This space is reserved for something of a tutorial. If you learn best by looking at examples, take a look at the test directory, t. The most simple test is birthdates.t.

The first thing to do is to read in the Gedcom file. At its most simple, this will involve a statement such as

  my $ged = Gedcom->new(gedcom_file => $gedcom_file);

It is now possible to access the records within the gedcom file. Each individual and family is a record. Records can contain other records. For example, an individual is a record. The birth information is a sub-record of the individual, and the date of birth is a sub-record of the birth record.

Some records, such as the birth record, are simply containers for other records. Some records have a value, such as the date record, whose value is a date. This is all defined in the Gedcom standard.

To access an individual use a statement such as

  my $i = $ged->get_individual("Paul Johnson");

To access information about the individual, use a function of the same name as the Gedcom tag, or its description. Tags and descriptions are listed at the head of Gedcom.pm. For example

    for my $b ($i->birth)
    {
    }

will loop through all the birth records in the individual. Usually there will only be one such record, but there may be zero, one or more. Calling the function in scalar context will return only the first record.

  my $b = $i->birth;

But the second record may be returned with

  my $b = $i->birth(2);

If the record required has a value, for example

  my $n = $i->name;

then the value is returned, in this case the name of the individual. If there is no value, as is the case for the birth record, then the record itself is returned. If there is a value, but the record itself is required, then the get_record() function can be used.

Information must be accesed through the Gedcom structure so, for example, the birthdate is accessed via the date record from the birth record within an individual.

  my $d = $b->date;

Be aware that if you access a record in scalar context, but there is no such record, then undef is returned. In this case, $b would be undef if $i had no birth record. This is another reason why looping through records is a nice solution, all else being equal.

Access to values can also be gained through the get_value() function. This is a preferable solution where it is necessary to work down the Gedcom structure. For example

  my $bd = $i->get_value("birth date");
  my $bd = $i->get_value(qw(birth date));

will both return an individual's birth date or undef if there is none. And

  my @bd = $i->get_value("birth date");

will return all the birth dates. The second birth date, if there is one, is

  my $bd2 = $i->get_value(["birth", 2], "date");

Using the get_record() function in place of the get_value() function, in all cases will return the record rather than the value.

All records are of a type derived from Gedcom::Item. Individuals are of type Gedcom::Individual. Families are of type Gedcom::Family. Events are of type Gedcom::Event. Other records are of type Gedcom::Record which is the base type of Gedcom::Individual, Gedcom::Family and Gedcom::Event.

As individuals are of type Gedcom::Individual, the functions in Gedcom::Individual.pm are available. These allow access to relations and other information specific to individuals, for example

  my @sons = $i->sons;

It is possible to get all the individuals in the gedcom file as

  my @individuals = $ged->individuals;

HASH MEMBERS

I have not gone the whole hog with data encapsulation and such within this module. Maybe I should have done. Maybe I will. For now though, the data is accessable though hash members. This is partly because having functions to do this is a little slow, especially on my old DECstation, and partly because of laziness again. I'm not too sure whether this is good or bad laziness yet. Time will tell no doubt.

As of version 1.05, you should be able to access all the data through functions. Well, read access anyway. The TODO list mentions something about improving the situation as far as write access is concerned.

Some of the more important hash members are:

$ged->{grammar}

This contains the gedcom grammar.

See Gedcom::Grammar.pm for more details.

$ged->{record}

This contains the top level gedcom record. A record contains a number of items. Each of those items are themselves records. This is the way in which the hierarchies are modelled.

If you want to get at the data in the gedcom object, this is where you start.

See Gedcom::Record.pm for more details.

METHODS

new

  my $ged = Gedcom->new(gedcom_file => $gedcom_file);

  my $ged = Gedcom->new(grammar_version => 5.5,
                        gedcom_file     => $gedcom_file,
                        callback        => $cb);

  my $ged = Gedcom->new(grammar_file => "gedcom-5.5.grammar",
                        gedcom_file  => $gedcom_file);

Create a new gedcom object.

gedcom_file is the name of the gedcom file to parse.

You may optionally pass grammar_version as the version number of the gedcom grammar you want to use. At the moment only version 5.5 is available. If you do not specify a grammar version, you may specify a grammar file as grammar_file. Usually, you will do neither of these, and in this case the grammar version will default to the latest available version, currently 5.5.

callback is an optional reference to a subroutine which will be called at various times while the gedcom file (and the grammar file, ir applicable) is being read. It's purpose is to provide feedback during potentially long operations. The subroutine is called with five arguments:

  my ($title, $txt1, $txt2, $current, $total) = @_;

  $title is a brief description of the current operation
  $txt1 and $txt2 provide more information on the current operation
  $current is the number of operations performed
  $total is the number of operations that need to be performed

If the subroutine returns false, the operation is aborted.

write

  $ged->write($new_gedcom_file, $flush);

Write out the gedcom file.

Takes the name of the new gedcom file, and whether or not to indent the output according to the level of the record. $flush defaults to false, but the new file name must be specified.

write_xml

  $ged->write_xml($fh);

Write the item to a FileHandle as XML.

Takes the name of the new gedcom file.

Note that this function is experimental. The XML output doesn't conform to any standard that I know of, because I don't know of any standard. If and when such a standard surfaces, and probably even if it doesn't, I'll change the output from this function. If you make use of this function, beware. I'd also be very interested in hearing from you to determine the requirements for the XML.

collect_xrefs

  $ged->collect_xrefs($callback);

Collect all the xrefs into a data structure ($ged->{xrefs}) for easy location. $callback is not used yet.

Called by new().

resolve_xref

  my $xref = $self->resolve_xref($value);

Return the record $value points to, or undef.

resolve_xrefs

  $ged->resolve_xrefs($callback);

Changes all xrefs to reference the record they are pointing to. Like changing a soft link to a hard link on a Unix filesystem. $callback is not used yet.

unresolve_xrefs

  $ged->unresolve_xrefs($callback);

Changes all xrefs to name the record they contained. Like changing a hard link to a soft link on a Unix filesystem. $callback is not used yet.

validate

  return unless $ged->validate($callback);

Validate the gedcom object. This performs a number of consistency checks, but could do even more. $callback is not properly used yet.

Any errors found are given out as warnings. If this is unwanted, use $SIG{__WARN__} to catch the warnings.

Returns true iff the gedcom object is valid.

normalise_dates

  $ged->normalise_dates;
  $ged->normalise_dates("%A, %E %B %Y");

Change all recognised dates into a consistent format. This routine used Date::Manip to do the work, so you can look at it's documentation regarding formats that are recognised and % sequences for the output.

Optionally takes a format to use for the output. The default is currently "%A, %E %B %Y", but I may change this, as it seems that some programs don't like that format.

renumber

  $ged->renumber;
  my %xrefs = $ged->renumber(INDI => 34, FAM => 12, xrefs => [$xref1, $xref2]);

Renumber all the records.

Optional parameters are:

  tag name => last used number (defaults to 0)
  xrefs    => list of xrefs to renumber first

As a record is renumbered, it is assigned the next available number. The husband, wife, children parents and siblings are then renumbered in that order. This helps to ensure that families are numerically close together.

The hash returned is the updated hash that was passed in.

sort_sub

  $ged->order($ged->sort_sub);

Default ordering subroutine.

The sort is by record type in the following order: HEAD, SUBM, INDI, FAM, NOTE, TRLR, and then by xref within the type.

order

  $ged->order;
  $ged->order($order_sub);

Order all the records. Optionally provide a sort subroutine.

This orders the entries within the gedcom object, which will affect the order in which they are written out. The default sort function is Gedcom::sort_sub. You will need to ensure that the HEAD record is first and that the TRLR record is last.

individuals

  my @individuals = $ged->individuals;

Return a list of all the individuals.

families

  my @families = $ged->families;

Return a list of all the families.

get_individual

  my $me = $ged->get_individual("Paul Johnson");

Return a list of all individuals matching the specified name.

There are thirteen matches performed, and the results from the first successful match are returned.

The matches are:

   1 - Xref
   2 - Exact
   3 - On word boundaries
   4 - Anywhere
   5 - Exact, case insensitive
   6 - On word boundaries, case insensitive
   7 - Anywhere, case insensitive
   8 - Names in any order, on word boundaries
   9 - Names in any order, anywhere
  10 - Names in any order, on word boundaries, case insensitive
  11 - Names in any order, anywhere, case insensitive
  12 - Soundex code
  13 - Soundex of name

next_xref

  my $xref = $ged->next_xref("I");

Return the next available xref with the specified prefix.