Is there any Ruby package that will read a XML file and build Ruby classes for the tags found (classes that can handle reading, writing, setting attributes, etc), using the object relationships from the XML? Most preferably, get everything from the DTD and build the Ruby classes from there?
I've used REXML which worked very well. The only drawback is that it
is not a validating parser.
Peter.
···
On 22 Nov, 12:39, Jari Williamsson <jari.williams...@mailbox.swipnet.se> wrote:
Is there any Ruby package that will read a XML file and build Ruby
classes for the tags found (classes that can handle reading, writing,
setting attributes, etc), using the object relationships from the XML?
Most preferably, get everything from the DTD and build the Ruby classes
from there?
Is there any Ruby package that will read a XML file and build Ruby classes for the tags found (classes that can handle reading, writing, setting attributes, etc), using the object relationships from the XML? Most preferably, get everything from the DTD and build the Ruby classes from there?
some time ago, I built a small class to do that, you can check it here:
Thanks, but this seems to only make XML data accessible to an existing class?
It seems like I need to specify a bit better what I need: I'm looking for a utility that will _generate_ Ruby code (classes) from a hierarchical XML file.
Let's say this is the XML data:
mymodule.xml
···
======
<root>
<sub id="1">Some data</sub>
<sub id="2>Some more data</sub>
</root>
The utility would then generate 2 .rb module files, such as:
root.rb:
require 'mymodule/sub'
module MyModule
class Root < SomeBaseClass
attr_accessor :sub_elements # Array
# Some more stuff
end
sub.rb:
module MyModule
class Sub < SomeBaseClass
attr_accessor :id
# Some more stuff
end
The more I think about it, this kind of utility probably is required to analyze the DTD rather than the XML to get the proper relationships. Any such utility available?
On 22 Nov, 12:39, Jari Williamsson > <jari.williams...@mailbox.swipnet.se> wrote:
Is there any Ruby package that will read a XML file and build Ruby
classes for the tags found (classes that can handle reading, writing,
setting attributes, etc), using the object relationships from the XML?
Most preferably, get everything from the DTD and build the Ruby classes
from there?
Best regards,
Jari Williamsson
I've used REXML which worked very well. The only drawback is that it
is not a validating parser.
Is there any Ruby package that will read a XML file and build Ruby
classes for the tags found (classes that can handle reading, writing,
setting attributes, etc), using the object relationships from the XML?
Most preferably, get everything from the DTD and build the Ruby classes
from there?
Best regards,
Jari Williamsson
I've used REXML which worked very well. The only drawback is that it
is not a validating parser.
How do you get REXML to generate Ruby classes?
Best regards,
Jari Williamsson
try xml-mapper it builds classes from XML files
···
On 22 Nov, 12:39, Jari Williamsson >> <jari.williams...@mailbox.swipnet.se> wrote:
Thanks, but this seems to only make XML data accessible to an existing class?
It seems like I need to specify a bit better what I need: I'm looking for a utility that will _generate_ Ruby code (classes) from a hierarchical XML file.
well, that's exactly what my class do: convert from xml to ruby classes, convert from ruby classes to xml. Check the test file for examples.
--
Rolando Abarca
Phone: +56-9 97851962
···
On Nov 22, 2007, at 11:06 AM, Jari Williamsson wrote:
I really have no idea how your XML file above maps to the output you
describe. It appears that you just look at the unique element names
and create classes from them. You ignore the hierarchy of the XML
file, you ignore all the attributes of the elements, and you ignore
all the text content of the elements?
So, you just need something like this:
raw_xml = IO.read( 'myfile.xml' )
all_tag_names = raw_xml.scan( /<(\w+)/ ).flatten.uniq
all_tag_names.each{ |tag_name|
# use ERB here to create new files using
# tag_name.capitalize as the foundation for the class name
}
···
On Nov 22, 7:06 am, Jari Williamsson <jari.williams...@mailbox.swipnet.se> wrote:
Rolando Abarca wrote:
It seems like I need to specify a bit better what I need: I'm looking
for a utility that will _generate_ Ruby code (classes) from a
hierarchical XML file.
Let's say this is the XML data:
mymodule.xml
<root>
<sub id="1">Some data</sub>
<sub id="2>Some more data</sub>
</root>
The utility would then generate 2 .rb module files, such as:
root.rb:
require 'mymodule/sub'
module MyModule
class Root < SomeBaseClass
attr_accessor :sub_elements # Array
# Some more stuff
end
sub.rb:
module MyModule
class Sub < SomeBaseClass
attr_accessor :id
# Some more stuff
end
end
The more I think about it, this kind of utility probably is required to
analyze the DTD rather than the XML to get the proper relationships. Any
such utility available?
Rolando Abarca wrote:
It seems like I need to specify a bit better what I need: I'm looking
for a utility that will _generate_ Ruby code (classes) from a
hierarchical XML file.
Let's say this is the XML data:
mymodule.xml
<root>
<sub id="1">Some data</sub>
<sub id="2>Some more data</sub>
</root>
The utility would then generate 2 .rb module files, such as:
root.rb:
require 'mymodule/sub'
module MyModule
class Root < SomeBaseClass
attr_accessor :sub_elements # Array
# Some more stuff
end
sub.rb:
module MyModule
class Sub < SomeBaseClass
attr_accessor :id
# Some more stuff
end
The more I think about it, this kind of utility probably is required to
analyze the DTD rather than the XML to get the proper relationships. Any
such utility available?
I really have no idea how your XML file above maps to the output you
describe. It appears that you just look at the unique element names
and create classes from them. You ignore the hierarchy of the XML
file, you ignore all the attributes of the elements, and you ignore
all the text content of the elements?
I think Jari might be confusing things with the test case he provided. It seems to me that he has shown the nesting of elements/classes (e.g. sub_elements -- the 'sub' is an element name) and attributes (e.g. the 'id' accessor -- the 'id' is an attribute name). He's missed the text (and all that that implies), but he's looking for the tool not promoting one so that's okay.
FWIW, my thing, xampl, generates 2 classes, 2 modules, and 59 methods for Jari's example. Xampl defines a bunch of stuff to help you work with the generated code. Xampl doesn't use DTDs or schemas to do this.
Cheers,
Bob
···
On 22-Nov-07, at 10:34 PM, Phrogz wrote:
On Nov 22, 7:06 am, Jari Williamsson > <jari.williams...@mailbox.swipnet.se> wrote:
So, you just need something like this:
raw_xml = IO.read( 'myfile.xml' )
all_tag_names = raw_xml.scan( /<(\w+)/ ).flatten.uniq
all_tag_names.each{ |tag_name|
# use ERB here to create new files using
# tag_name.capitalize as the foundation for the class name
}
Thanks, Bob! You understood despite my bad sample code.
By reading the description of your Xampl tool, this seems to be the tool I need! In my case, analyzing a bunch of XML files like your tool do would work as good as working on the DTD.
Best regards,
Jari Williamsson
Bob Hutchison wrote:
···
On 22-Nov-07, at 10:34 PM, Phrogz wrote:
On Nov 22, 7:06 am, Jari Williamsson >> <jari.williams...@mailbox.swipnet.se> wrote:
Rolando Abarca wrote:
It seems like I need to specify a bit better what I need: I'm looking
for a utility that will _generate_ Ruby code (classes) from a
hierarchical XML file.
Let's say this is the XML data:
mymodule.xml
<root>
<sub id="1">Some data</sub>
<sub id="2>Some more data</sub>
</root>
The utility would then generate 2 .rb module files, such as:
root.rb:
require 'mymodule/sub'
module MyModule
class Root < SomeBaseClass
attr_accessor :sub_elements # Array
# Some more stuff
end
sub.rb:
module MyModule
class Sub < SomeBaseClass
attr_accessor :id
# Some more stuff
end
The more I think about it, this kind of utility probably is required to
analyze the DTD rather than the XML to get the proper relationships. Any
such utility available?
I really have no idea how your XML file above maps to the output you
describe. It appears that you just look at the unique element names
and create classes from them. You ignore the hierarchy of the XML
file, you ignore all the attributes of the elements, and you ignore
all the text content of the elements?
I think Jari might be confusing things with the test case he provided. It seems to me that he has shown the nesting of elements/classes (e.g. sub_elements -- the 'sub' is an element name) and attributes (e.g. the 'id' accessor -- the 'id' is an attribute name). He's missed the text (and all that that implies), but he's looking for the tool not promoting one so that's okay.
FWIW, my thing, xampl, generates 2 classes, 2 modules, and 59 methods for Jari's example. Xampl defines a bunch of stuff to help you work with the generated code. Xampl doesn't use DTDs or schemas to do this.
Cheers,
Bob
So, you just need something like this:
raw_xml = IO.read( 'myfile.xml' )
all_tag_names = raw_xml.scan( /<(\w+)/ ).flatten.uniq
all_tag_names.each{ |tag_name|
# use ERB here to create new files using
# tag_name.capitalize as the foundation for the class name
}
Thanks, Bob! You understood despite my bad sample code.
By reading the description of your Xampl tool, this seems to be the tool I need! In my case, analyzing a bunch of XML files like your tool do would work as good as working on the DTD.
Great! If you need any help, let me know and I'll do what I can. An understatement would be "the documentation is sparse".
Cheers,
Bob
···
On 23-Nov-07, at 10:24 AM, Jari Williamsson wrote:
Best regards,
Jari Williamsson
Bob Hutchison wrote:
On 22-Nov-07, at 10:34 PM, Phrogz wrote:
On Nov 22, 7:06 am, Jari Williamsson >>> <jari.williams...@mailbox.swipnet.se> wrote:
Rolando Abarca wrote:
It seems like I need to specify a bit better what I need: I'm looking
for a utility that will _generate_ Ruby code (classes) from a
hierarchical XML file.
Let's say this is the XML data:
mymodule.xml
<root>
<sub id="1">Some data</sub>
<sub id="2>Some more data</sub>
</root>
The utility would then generate 2 .rb module files, such as:
root.rb:
require 'mymodule/sub'
module MyModule
class Root < SomeBaseClass
attr_accessor :sub_elements # Array
# Some more stuff
end
sub.rb:
module MyModule
class Sub < SomeBaseClass
attr_accessor :id
# Some more stuff
end
The more I think about it, this kind of utility probably is required to
analyze the DTD rather than the XML to get the proper relationships. Any
such utility available?
I really have no idea how your XML file above maps to the output you
describe. It appears that you just look at the unique element names
and create classes from them. You ignore the hierarchy of the XML
file, you ignore all the attributes of the elements, and you ignore
all the text content of the elements?
I think Jari might be confusing things with the test case he provided. It seems to me that he has shown the nesting of elements/classes (e.g. sub_elements -- the 'sub' is an element name) and attributes (e.g. the 'id' accessor -- the 'id' is an attribute name). He's missed the text (and all that that implies), but he's looking for the tool not promoting one so that's okay.
FWIW, my thing, xampl, generates 2 classes, 2 modules, and 59 methods for Jari's example. Xampl defines a bunch of stuff to help you work with the generated code. Xampl doesn't use DTDs or schemas to do this.
Cheers,
Bob
So, you just need something like this:
raw_xml = IO.read( 'myfile.xml' )
all_tag_names = raw_xml.scan( /<(\w+)/ ).flatten.uniq
all_tag_names.each{ |tag_name|
# use ERB here to create new files using
# tag_name.capitalize as the foundation for the class name
}