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| Related Syntax | Related Concepts | ||||
| control structure | do xml-parse | ||||
Syntax
do xml-parse document (with id-checking switch-expression)? 
                      (with utf-8 switch-expression)? 
                      (creating xml-dtds{string-expression})? scan string-source-expression 
   local-declaration*
   action*
done
do xml-parse scan string-source-expression 
   local-declaration*
   action*
done
do xml-parse instance (with document-element string-expression)? 
                      (with (xml-dtds{string-expression} | current xml-dtd))?
                      (with id-checking switch-expression)? scan string-source-expression 
   local-declaration*
   action*
done
    
 do xml-parse is used to invoke the XML parser. A number of activities
          must occur within a do xml-parse block.
          
markup source, either directly as #content or by executing
              exactly one parse continuation operator (%c or suppress) to fire markup rules.
          
 Well-formed parsing (that is, XML parsing without validating against a DTD) is invoked by providing an input
          to the parser, without any other arguments.
          
  do xml-parse scan file #args[1]
     output "%c"
  done
            
        
 Earlier versions of OmniMark required the keyword instance following do xml-parse
          when configuring the parser for well-formed parsing. This use of the keyword instance is
          deprecated: the instance keyword should be reserved for validating against a pre-compiled DTD.
        
The instance supplied to the parser when performing a well-formed parse may include a DTD: the parser will read and use entity definitions from the DTD but will not validate against the structural information in the DTD.
 The document keyword is used to configure the XML parser to validate its input against a DTD. The
          DTD is supplied as part of the input.
          
  do xml-parse document scan file #args[1]
     output "%c"
  done
            
        
 This assumes that the file whose name is specified on the command-line contains an XML document. If the DTD
          and the instance are in different files, they can be joined:
          
  do xml-parse document scan file #args[1] || file #args[2]
     output "%c"
  done
            
      
 If the same DTD is to be used to parse several input instances, it is best to pre-compile the DTD and store
          it on the built-in sgml-dtds shelf:
          
  do xml-parse document creating xml-dtds{"my-dtd"} scan file #args[1]
     suppress
  done
            
 
          If the instance file names are stored on a shelf my-instances, then each instance can then be
          processed in turn:
            repeat over my-instances
     do xml-parse instance with xml-dtds{"my-dtd"} scan file my-instances 
        output "%c"
     done
  again   
            
      
 A nested XML parse can use the same DTD as an outer XML parse to validate its own input: for instance,
          
  process
     using group "one"
     do xml-parse document scan "<!DOCTYPE a ["
                              || "<!ELEMENT a (b | #PCDATA)*>"
                              || "<!ELEMENT b (#PCDATA)>]>"
                              || "<a><b>Hello, World!</b></a>"
        output "%c"
     done
  
  
  group "one"
     element "a"
        using group "b"
        do xml-parse instance with current xml-dtd scan "<a>Salut, Monde!</a>"
           output "%c"
        done
        output "%c"
  
  
     element "b"
        output "%c"
  
  
  group "b"
     element "a"
        output "%c"
            
        
 In this program, the XML parse launched in the element rule for a inside group
          one uses the same DTD as the parse launched in the process rule.
      
 It is possible to parse a partial instance: a piece of data comprising an element from a DTD which is not
          the
        doctype element of that DTD. In this case, the element to be used as the effective doctype for parsing the data is specified using the document-element argument:
          
  do xml-parse instance with document-element "lamb" with xml-dtds{"my-dtd"} scan file #args[1]
     output "%c"
  done
            
 
          XML comments, processing instructions and even marked sections can precede and follow the element's start and
          end tags, but anything else (particularly other elements, data, or entity references) is an error.
      
 By default, OmniMark checks all XML idref attributes to make sure they reference valid IDs. This checking may not be appropriate in processing a partial instance. It also takes time. It can
          be disabled using with id-checking followed by a switch expression. The following code will
          parse the specified document without checking IDREFs:
          
  do xml-parse document with id-checking false scan file #args[1]
     output "%c"
  done
            
      
The XML standard specifies that XML documents use the Unicode character set. However, there are many different encodings of the Unicode character set. OmniMark can process documents in any of these encodings: see Character set encoding for details.
One character encoding issue that arises in markup processing is the question of which character set encoding the parser is to use when resolving numeric character entities. When doing well-formed parsing, OmniMark uses UTF-8 encoding to represent numeric character entities. When doing validating parsing, the parser can be configured to use either UTF-8 or Latin-1 encoding for numeric character entities. The default is Latin-1. This has a number of consequences.
with utf-8 modifier
              should be passed to do xml-parse, with a switch expression that evaluates to true:
              process do xml-parse document with utf-8 true scan file #args[1] output "%c" done
| Related Syntax | Related Concepts | 
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