Well, a "man libxml2" gives you all that you need:
Documentation for libxml is available on-line at
http://www.xmlsoft.org/
;o)
Gal'
2007/5/29, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Galevsky [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, May 29, 2007 4:21 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] OT: An XML Question
>
>
> Hi,
>
> you can learn the xml concepts at http://www.w3schools.com/.
> Then, depending on the language you choose, there is lots of
> libs to deal with xml in many languages. Though you always
> have two different ways of parsing your xml file: a SAX
> parser approach, that runs on an element-by-element process,
> retrieving each element with no view on the next ones. The
> second way is a DOM object builder, parsing the xml file as a
> whole, then giving you back the whole tree as an object that
> can browse later with a set of methods. The later is faster
> to get all the information of the xml, but takes more memory
> since the whole xml tree must be built first. You have to
> look for the libs of your language now for further details,
> but the choice between the two is crucial. I remind a
> Xmlchecker java tool I wrote to run no-diff tests.... I
> implemented first with jdom, and it was good..... until I had
> to deal with 300 Mb files ... and rewrite the whole browsing
> engine with SAX.
>
> Gal'
>
>
> 2007/5/29, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> >
> >
> > Are there any really good XML tutorials on the web, or
> perhaps a book
> > that is actually useful?
<snip>
Thanks for the info!
I think I may look into the DOM approach. ^_^
Does(do?) libxml or libxml2 have a DOM interface? I know that
libxml2 is already on the system (part of the base install), so
it may be a good place to look. :) Does anyone know of a good
tutorial site with a .org or .edu web address? The firewall I
am stuck behind at the moment has some funky restrictions. :P
^_^
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