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libxml is released under 2 (compatible) licences:
Yes. The W3C IPR allows you to also keep proprietary the changes you made to libxml, but it would be graceful to provide back bugfixes and improvements as patches for possible incorporation in the main development tree
The original distribution comes from rpmfind.net or gnome.org
Most linux and Bsd distribution includes libxml, this is probably the safer way for end-users
David Doolin provides precompiled Windows versions at http://www.ce.berkeley.edu/~doolin/code/libxmlwin32/
You probably have an old libxml0 package used to provide the shared library for libxml.so.0, you can probably safely remove it. Anyway the libxml packages provided on rpmfind.net provides libxml.so.0
As most UNIX libraries libxml follows the "standard":
gunzip -c xxx.tar.gz | tar xvf -
cd libxml-xxxx
./configure --help
to see the options, then the compilation/installation proper
./configure [possible options]
make
make install
At that point you may have to rerun ldconfig or similar utility to update your list of installed shared libs.
Libxml does not requires any other library, the normal C ANSI API should be sufficient (please report any violation to this rule you may find).
However if found at configuration time libxml will detect and use the following libs:
this is due to macro limitations. Try to add " -Wp,-H16800 -Ae" to the CFLAGS
you can also install and use gcc instead or use a precompiled version of libxml, both available from the HP-UX Porting and Archive Centre
Sometime the regression tests results don't completely match the value produced by the parser, and the makefile uses diff to print the delta. On some platforms the diff return breaks the compilation process, if the diff is small this is probably not a serious problem
For a XML file as below:
<?xml version="1.0"?> <PLAN xmlns="http://www.argus.ca/autotest/1.0/"> <NODE CommFlag="0"/> <NODE CommFlag="1"/> </PLAN>
after parsing it with the function pxmlDoc=xmlParseFile(...);
I want to the get the content of the first node (node with the CommFlag="0")
so I did it as following;
xmlNodePtr pode; pnode=pxmlDoc->children->children;
but it does not work. If I change it to
pnode=pxmlDoc->children->children->next;
then it works. Can someone explain it to me.
In XML all characters in the content of the document are significant including blanks and formatting line breaks.
The extra nodes you are wondering about are just that, text nodes with the formatting spaces wich are part of the document but that people tend to forget. There is a function xmlKeepBlanksDefault () to remove those at parse time, but that's an heuristic, and its use should be limited to case where you are sure there is no mixed-content in the document.
You are compiling code developed for libxml version 1 and using a libxml2 development environment. Either switch back to libxml v1 devel or even better fix the code to compile with libxml2 (or both) by following the instructions.
The source code you are using has been upgraded to be able to compile with both libxml and libxml2, but you need to install a more recent version: libxml(-devel) >= 1.8.8 or libxml2(-devel) >= 2.1.0
XPath implementation prior to 2.3.0 was really incomplete, upgrade to a recent version, the implementation and debug of libxslt generated fixes for most obvious problems.
It's hard to maintain the documentation in sync with the code <grin/> ...
Check the previous points 1/ and 2/ raised before, and send patches.
Ideally a libxml book would be nice. I have no such plan ... But you can:
http://cvs.gnome.org/lxr/search?string=xmlAddChild
This may be slow, a large hardware donation to the gnome project could cure this :-)
libxml is written in pure C in order to allow easy reuse on a number of platforms, including embedded systems. I don't intend to convert to C++.
There is however a C++ wrapper provided by Ari Johnson <ari@btigate.com> which may fullfill your needs:
Website: http://lusis.org/~ari/xml++/
It is possible to validate documents which had not been validated at initial parsing time or documents who have been built from scratch using the API. Use the xmlValidateDtd() function. It is also possible to simply add a Dtd to an existing document:
xmlDocPtr doc; /* your existing document */ xmlDtdPtr dtd = xmlParseDTD(NULL, filename_of_dtd); /* parse the DTD */ dtd->name = xmlStrDup((xmlChar*)"root_name"); /* use the given root */ doc->intSubset = dtd; if (doc->children == NULL) xmlAddChild((xmlNodePtr)doc, (xmlNodePtr)dtd); else xmlAddPrevSibling(doc->children, (xmlNodePtr)dtd);
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