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Simple XML Validation with Perl |
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Simple XML Validation with Perl |
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XML / Development |
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Click to Visit |
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Although XML Schemas and RELAX promise fine-grained validation for XML documents, neither are presently available in the Perl world. You need a way to validate the structure of your documents. This can be achieved by combining the simplicity of Test.pm from the standard Perl distribution with the flexibility of XPath.
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| Top XML scripts |
1).
Simple XML Validation with Perl This article explains how to validate the structure of XML documents with Perl. It does so by combining the simplicity of Test.pm from the standard Perl distribution with the flexibility of XPath.
2).
Recurse, not divide, to conquer This article demonstrates how to shift your thinking into the XSLT recursive approach.This is especially helpful if you have a background in a procedural language (Java and the like). Sample code demonstrates how to work with a flat XML or XHTML file that you want to process hierarchically
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Recurse, not divide, to conquer This article will help you to bridge processing of an HTML element over two XSLT templates? Sample code available demonstrate the right way (and the wrong way) to work with a flat XML or XHTML file that you want to process hierarchically.
4).
Expand XSL with extensions Most developers familiar with the basics of XML and XSL are not utilizing the combined power of XML and XSL for representing, manipulating, and presenting data over the Web and sharing data across differing applications. This article shows developers how to use extensions, a technique that allows you to expand the capabilities of XSL
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Using XLink to simplify the representation of data This explains how to use XLink pointers when representing data to make XML documents more compact and flexible. It is demonstrated by examples of an invoice with and without the XLink pointers, plus an example of using XLinks with a URL-addressable database
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| New XML scripts |
1).
Recurse, not divide, to conquer This article demonstrates how to shift your thinking into the XSLT recursive approach.This is especially helpful if you have a background in a procedural language (Java and the like). Sample code demonstrates how to work with a flat XML or XHTML file that you want to process hierarchically
2).
Simple XML Validation with Perl This article explains how to validate the structure of XML documents with Perl. It does so by combining the simplicity of Test.pm from the standard Perl distribution with the flexibility of XPath.
3).
Recurse, not divide, to conquer This article will help you to bridge processing of an HTML element over two XSLT templates? Sample code available demonstrate the right way (and the wrong way) to work with a flat XML or XHTML file that you want to process hierarchically.
4).
Expand XSL with extensions Most developers familiar with the basics of XML and XSL are not utilizing the combined power of XML and XSL for representing, manipulating, and presenting data over the Web and sharing data across differing applications. This article shows developers how to use extensions, a technique that allows you to expand the capabilities of XSL
5).
Using XLink to simplify the representation of data This explains how to use XLink pointers when representing data to make XML documents more compact and flexible. It is demonstrated by examples of an invoice with and without the XLink pointers, plus an example of using XLinks with a URL-addressable database
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