table of contents
XML::LibXML::AttributeHash(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | XML::LibXML::AttributeHash(3) |
NAME¶
XML::LibXML::AttributeHash - tie an XML::LibXML::Element to a hash to access its attributes
SYNOPSIS¶
tie my %hash, 'XML::LibXML::AttributeHash', $element; $hash{'href'} = 'http://example.com/'; print $element->getAttribute('href') . "\n";
DESCRIPTION¶
This class allows an element's attributes to be accessed as if they were a plain old Perl hash. Attribute names become hash keys. Namespaced attributes are keyed using Clark notation.
my $XLINK = 'http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink'; tie my %hash, 'XML::LibXML::AttributeHash', $element; $hash{"{$XLINK}href"} = 'http://localhost/'; print $element->getAttributeNS($XLINK, 'href') . "\n";
There is rarely any need to use XML::LibXML::AttributeHash directly. In general, it is possible to take advantage of XML::LibXML::Element's overloading. The example in the SYNOPSIS could have been written:
$element->{'href'} = 'http://example.com/'; print $element->getAttribute('href') . "\n";
The tie interface allows the passing of additional arguments to XML::LibXML::AttributeHash:
tie my %hash, 'XML::LibXML::AttributeHash', $element, %args;
Currently only one argument is supported, the boolean "weaken" which (if true) indicates that the tied object's reference to the element should be a weak reference. This is used by XML::LibXML::Element's overloading. The "weaken" argument is ignored if you don't have a working Scalar::Util::weaken.
2013-05-13 | perl v5.16.3 |