!/usr/bin/perl -w
 4C3HOH1 - XML::Tidy.pm created by Pip Stuart <Pip@CPAN.Org>
   to tidy XML documents as parsed XML::XPath objects.

NAME

XML::Tidy - tidy indenting of XML documents

VERSION

This documentation refers to version 1.2.4CCJW4G of 
XML::Tidy, which was released on Sun Dec 12 19:32:04:16 2004.

SYNOPSIS

  use XML::Tidy;

  # create new   XML::Tidy object from         MainFile.xml
  my $tidy_obj = XML::Tidy->new('filename' => 'MainFile.xml');

  # Tidy up the indenting
     $tidy_obj->tidy();

  # Write out changes back to MainFile.xml
     $tidy_obj->write();

DESCRIPTION

This module creates XML document objects (with inheritance from
L<XML::XPath>) to tidy mixed-content (ie. non-data) text node
indenting.

2DO

- mk tidy keep doc order when duping attz, namespaces,
          (hopefully someday PIs) into temp $docu && $tnod

- fix reload() from messing up unicode escaped &XYZ; components like
          Copyright &#xA9; ->  && Registered &#xAE; -> 

-     What else does Tidy need?

USAGE

new()

This is the standard Tidy object constructor.  It can take
the same parameters as an L<XML::XPath> object constructor to
initialize the XML document object.  These can be any one of:

  'filename' => 'SomeFile.xml'
  'xml'      => $variable_which_holds_a_bunch_of_XML_data
  'ioref'    => $file_InputOutput_reference
  'context'  => $existing_node_at_specified_context_to_become_new_obj

reload()

The reload() member function causes the latest data contained in
a Tidy object to be re-parsed which re-indexes all nodes.
This can be necessary after modifications have been made to nodes
which impact the tree node hierarchy because L<XML::XPath>'s find()
member preserves state info which can get out-of-sync.  reload() is
probably rarely useful by itself but it is needed by strip() &&
prune() so it is exposed as a method in case it comes in handy for
other uses.

strip()

The strip() member function searches the Tidy object for all
mixed-content (ie. non-data) text nodes && empties them out.
This will basically unformat any markup indenting.  strip() is
probably barely useful by itself but it is needed by tidy() &&
is exposed as a method in case it comes in handy for other uses.
It does make XML files smaller (sometimes significantly so) if
you don't care about human readability.

tidy()

The tidy() member function can take a single optional parameter as
the string that should be inserted for each indent level.  Some
examples:

  # Tidy up indenting with default two  (2) spaces per indent level
     $tidy_obj->tidy();

  # Tidy up indenting with         four (4) spaces per indent level
     $tidy_obj->tidy('    ');

  # Tidy up indenting with         one  (1) tab    per indent level
     $tidy_obj->tidy("\t");

The default behavior is to use two (2) spaces (ie. '  ') for each
indent level.  The Tidy object gets all mixed-content (ie. non-data)
text nodes reformatted to appropriate indent levels according to tree
nesting depth.

NOTE: There seems to be a bug in L<XML::XPath> which does not allow
finding XML processing instructions (PIs) properly so they have been
commented out of tidy().  This means that tidy() unfortunately
removes processing instructions from files it operates on.  I hope
this shortcoming can be repaired in the near future.  tidy() also
disturbs some XML escapes in whatever ways L<XML::XPath> does.

prune()

The prune() member function takes an XPath location to remove (along
with all attributes && child nodes) from the Tidy object.  For
example, to remove all comments:

  $tidy_obj->prune('//comment()');

or to remove the third baz (XPath indexing is 1-based):

  $tidy_obj->prune('/foo/bar/baz[3]');

Pruning your XML tree is a form of tidying too so it snuck in here. =)
It seems L<XML::XPath> objects are dramatically more useful when they
all have access to this class of additional member functions.

write()

The write() member function can take an optional filename parameter
to write out any changes to the Tidy object.  If no parameters
are given, write() overwrites the original XML document file (if
a 'filename' parameter was given to the constructor).

write() will croak() if no filename can be found to write to.

write() can also take a secondary parameter which specifies an XPath
location to be written out as the new root element instead of the
Tidy object's root.  Only the first matching element is written.

CHANGES

Revision history for Perl extension XML::Tidy:

- 1.2.4CCJW4G  Sun Dec 12 19:32:04:16 2004

* added optional 'xpath_loc' => to prune()

- 1.0.4CAJna1  Fri Dec 10 19:49:36:01 2004

* added optional 'filename' => to write()

- 1.0.4CAAf5B  Fri Dec 10 10:41:05:11 2004

* removed 2nd param from tidy() so that 1st param is just indent string

* fixed pod errors

- 1.0.4C9JpoP  Thu Dec  9 19:51:50:25 2004

* added xplc option to write()

* added prune()

- 1.0.4C8K1Ah  Wed Dec  8 20:01:10:43 2004

* inherited from XPath so that those methods can be called directly

* original version (separating Tidy.pm from Merge.pm)

INSTALL

From the command shell, please run:

    `perl -MCPAN -e "install XML::Tidy"`

or uncompress the package && run the standard:

    `perl Makefile.PL; make; make test; make install`

FILES

XML::Tidy requires:

L<Carp>                  to allow errors to croak() from calling sub

L<XML::XPath>            to use XPath statements to query && update XML

L<XML::XPath::XMLParser> to parse XML documents into XPath objects

LICENSE

Most source code should be Free!
  Code I have lawful authority over is && shall be!
Copyright: (c) 2004, Pip Stuart.
Copyleft : This software is licensed under the GNU General Public
  License (version 2), && as such comes with NO WARRANTY.  Please
  consult the Free Software Foundation (http://FSF.Org) for
  important information about your freedom.

AUTHOR

Pip Stuart <Pip@CPAN.Org>

