2008/11/11 Elvis Stansvik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > 2008/11/8 Elvis Stansvik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >> 2008/11/7 Elvis Stansvik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >>> 2008/11/7 Daniel Veillard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >>>> On Thu, Oct 30, 2008 at 09:25:55AM +0800, Yang Songxiang-a22301 wrote: >>>>> Hi, all, >>>>> >>>>> I used the libxml2 package recently, found it's a perfect XML parser. >>>>> The example codes/document are good for a newcomer to use the LibXML2, >>>>> but they lack of enough detail information. I had to dig into the >>>>> sources code if I want more furthermore details. I think we can write a >>>>> bible book, give a complete introduction for LibXML2 package, not only >>>>> it's calling convention, but also including it's design framework. >>>> >>>> I had been approached a few years ago about writing a libxml2 book, >>>> but it's a lot of work, I didn't had the time (and not much more now) >>>> and it was made relatively clear that financially that may not be very >>>> interesting. >>>> I don't have much time, so when i have some for libxml2 I prefer to >>>> focuse on bugs or improvements that other contributors are less likely >>>> to provide. >>>> >>>>> My draft idea: >>>>> 1) Generate a DocBook framework, >>>>> 2) Anyone can select a chapter that he/she interested. >>>>> 3) Organize all chapters into a complete LibXML2 bible book. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I think this would help a lot for many C/C++ programmers who're the >>>>> first time using LibXML2, and would make LibXML2 more popular in C/C++ >>>>> domain. Maybe the book can be published by O.Reilly if it's good enough. >>>>> :) >>>>> >>>>> What's your opinions? >>>> >>>> Sounds better than a wiki in my opinion, I'm fine adding this to CVS >>>> and integrating patches to the docs as they come. >>> >>> I think personally a wiki would be better, and then content could be >>> taken from that and integrated into a more "official" DocBook in CVS. >>> I heard you had tried setting up a wiki some years ago but had >>> problems with SPAM, but surely that's a problem that can be solved? >>> E.g. by only allowing e-mail confirmed registered users. Anything else >>> that speaks against a wiki? It would be easier to contribute, and >>> easier to make small fixes with less maintenance than sending patches, >>> IMHO. >> >> Just to throw something out there, I sketched out a preliminary layout >> that could be used (and of course improved upon) as a skeleton for a >> DocBook or Wiki: > > I have now taken the liberty and set up a MediaWiki installation and > started adding some content. It's available at: > > http://libxml2wiki.dose.se > > I'm blocking search engine robots in robots.txt at the moment. > > As you can see I've styled the wiki to look similar to xmlsoft.org. If > you want the regular MonoBook skin, just change it in the preferences. > > I have started to reconsider the structure of the main content (yet to > be written). Maybe it should be more task oriented and not sectioned > by the different APIs? > > I also added created a tag extension so you can use e.g. > <api>xmlNode</api> and it will turn into a link to the libxml2 API > documentation. This extension uses information from the > libxml2-api.xml generated from libxml2 2.7.2 at the moment. I'm also > planning on patching the syntax highlighting extension I'm using to > automatically identify libxml2 symbols within <source /> tags and turn > them into API documentation links. > > If anyone feel like helping out, just register and edit away! A simple > thing is to add installation instructions for your platform, as I've > only added it for the platforms I'm familar with. > > Hope to get some response on this! > > Daniel, what is xmlsoft.org running on? Would you consider again > making a wiki.xmlsoft.org for this? I'd be willing to maintain the > MediaWiki installation and handle security updates to it, as well as > combat any SPAM problems that might arise. The server I'm running this > on now is on a dynamic IP DSL line in Sweden, which is not really > optimal.
The above question goes of course to anyone that has a stable server on a static IP and that could consider sponsoring with hosting a (probably low-traffic) MediaWiki installation. It requires modern versions of PHP and MySQL, and preferably SSH access with the SVN command line client. Elvis > > Regards, > Elvis > >> >> The libxml2 Library >> >> Introduction >> History >> What is libxml2? >> What libxml2 Is Not >> libxml2 Architecture >> >> Getting started >> Installing libxml2 >> Binaries >> Linux >> Ubuntu / Debian >> OpenSUSE >> Fedora >> Gentoo >> FreeBSD >> OpenBSD >> Windows >> MacOS X >> Building from source >> Download libxml2 >> Stable Version >> Subversion >> Configure Options >> Building >> Linux / BSD >> Windows >> MacOS X >> Quick Start >> Hello World >> Building Your Program >> >> The libxml2 APIs >> Choosing the Right API >> The Tree API >> Introduction >> Basic Example >> Complex Example >> Common Problems >> The Reader API >> Introduction >> Basic Example >> Complex Example >> Common Problems >> The SAX2 API >> Introduction >> Basic Example >> Complex Example >> Common Problems >> The HTML API >> Introduction >> Basic Example >> Complex Example >> Common Problems >> XPath API >> Introduction >> Basic Example >> Complex Example >> Common Problems >> XPointer API >> Introduction >> Basic Example >> Complex Example >> Common Problems >> XInclude API >> Introduction >> Basic Example >> Complex Example >> Common Problems >> Utility APIs >> String Handling >> HTTP / FTP >> XML and SGML Catalogs >> String Dictionaries >> Hash Tables >> Putting It All Together >> (Some more complex "task oriented" examples exercising >> the various APIs and using XML found in the wild) >> >> Validation >> Introduction >> DTDs >> XML Schemas >> RelaxNG >> Schematron >> >> Namespaces >> Introduction >> Basic Example >> Complex Example >> Common Problems >> >> Error Handling >> Introduction >> Basic Example >> Complex Example >> Common Problems >> >> Threads >> Introduction >> Thread Safety >> Basic Example >> Complex Example >> Common Problems >> >> Language Bindings >> Perl >> PHP >> Python >> Ruby >> >> Appendix >> A See Also >> B Acknowledgements >> >> As you can see the sections for the various APIs are pretty sparse and >> repetitive, with just an introduction to each API along with some >> examples, the idea being that the current examples on xmlsoft.org can >> be taken and improved upon, and as people (hopefully) contribute more >> hands on and anecdotal information, those sections could be fleshed >> out. >> >> Any comments? I've probably left something out. >> >> Are you dead against giving a wiki a try again Daniel? Even a >> "registration required" one? If so, I could arrange this skeleton into >> a DocBook XML instead and send it over. >> >> Regards, >> Elvis >> >>> >>>> >>>>> Best Regards >>>>> -Scord >>>>> >>>>> Motorola Software Center >>>>> [x] Public >>>>> [ ] Internal >>>>> [ ] Motorola Confidential Restricted >>>> >>>> Heh, finally a smart non threatening way to label expected recipient >>>> for mails issued by a corporation. Nice ! >>> >>> Yea I jumped at that too! Finally! :) >>> >>> Regards, >>> Elvis >>> >>>> >>>> Daniel >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Daniel Veillard | libxml Gnome XML XSLT toolkit http://xmlsoft.org/ >>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] | Rpmfind RPM search engine http://rpmfind.net/ >>>> http://veillard.com/ | virtualization library http://libvirt.org/ >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> xml mailing list, project page http://xmlsoft.org/ >>>> [email protected] >>>> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/xml >>>> >>> >> > _______________________________________________ xml mailing list, project page http://xmlsoft.org/ [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/xml
