Hello, If one day we want to replace CDuce which is too heavy weight for our use (albeit quite useful with its static checking), this library could be useful.
Best wishes, d. ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Daniel Bünzli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: 27 févr. 2007 02:16 Subject: [Caml-list] ANNOUNCE: Xmlm To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Xmlm is an OCaml module providing sequential XML input/output and a persistent cursor. It aims at making non valid XML processing robust and painless. The sequential interface can be used to process documents without building an in-memory representation. It also lets the programmer translate its own data structures to an XML representation and vice-versa. The cursor allows to navigate and update a simple in-memory tree representation of XML documents. Updates performed by the cursor are persistent (non destructive). To facilitate direct integration into projects, Xmlm is made of a single module and distributed under a BSD license. Project home page : <http://code.google.com/p/xmlm> Your feedback is welcome, Daniel P.S. Why another XML parser ? Dissatisfaction about existing solutions either too complete and complex or too britlle and restrictive. Besides it seems all existing parsers force you to read the whole document in memory. Here are some points that motivated the design of Xmlm. 1. Easy to integrate into projects without introducing external dependencies. A single module provides everything including documentation (ocamldoc) and the license. 2. Well documented. Features and limitations of the parser are precisely documented. 3. Easy to use yet flexible api. - Choice between sequential (SAX-like) or tree (DOM-like) processing. - Construction/deconstruction of user data structures from/to xml documents. - Tree processing with persistent cursor (zipper). - Simple white space handling options for character data. - Character encodings are translated to UTF-8. UTF-8 is the only encoding the programmer needs to handle. - Character references and predefined entities are resolved. Other entity references can be resolved via a user provided callback. - Early access to data to allow parse time data transformations. - Parse time element pruning. 4. Robust parsing. Does not assume an xml subset. - Supports major encodings : ASCII, UTF-8, UTF-16 (LE and BE), ISO-8559-1. - Parses qualified names (namespaces). - Tail-recursive. 5. Limitations. If you need one of these things use PXP. - Comments, processing instructions and standalone declaration are dropped by the parser (it is a feature). - No DTD support (but it can be extracted and written as a raw string). - No validity support. _______________________________________________ Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management: http://yquem.inria.fr/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/caml-list Archives: http://caml.inria.fr Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs _______________________________________________ Demexp-dev mailing list Demexp-dev@nongnu.org http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/demexp-dev