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NAME
    XML::Twig - A perl module for processing huge XML documents in tree mode.

SYNOPSIS
    Note that this documentation is intended as a reference to the module.

    Complete docs, including a tutorial, examples, an easier to use HTML version, a quick reference
    card and a FAQ are available at <http://www.xmltwig.org/xmltwig>

    Small documents (loaded in memory as a tree):

      my $twig=XML::Twig->new();    # create the twig
      $twig->parsefile( 'doc.xml'); # build it
      my_process( $twig);           # use twig methods to process it
      $twig->print;                 # output the twig

    Huge documents (processed in combined stream/tree mode):

      # at most one div will be loaded in memory
      my $twig=XML::Twig->new(
        twig_handlers =>
          { title   => sub { $_->set_tag( 'h2') }, # change title tags to h2
                                                   # $_ is the current element
            para    => sub { $_->set_tag( 'p')  }, # change para to p
            hidden  => sub { $_->delete;       },  # remove hidden elements
            list    => \&my_list_process,          # process list elements
            div     => sub { $_[0]->flush;     },  # output and free memory
          },
        pretty_print => 'indented',                # output will be nicely formatted
        empty_tags   => 'html',                    # outputs <empty_tag />
                             );
      $twig->parsefile( 'my_big.xml');

      sub my_list_process
        { my( $twig, $list)= @_;
          # ...
        }

    See XML::Twig 101 for other ways to use the module, as a filter for example.

DESCRIPTION
    This module provides a way to process XML documents. It is build on top of "XML::Parser".

    The module offers a tree interface to the document, while allowing you to output the parts of it
    that have been completely processed.

    It allows minimal resource (CPU and memory) usage by building the tree only for the parts of the
    documents that need actual processing, through the use of the "twig_roots " and
    "twig_print_outside_roots " options. The "finish " and "finish_print " methods also help to
    increase performances.

    XML::Twig tries to make simple things easy so it tries its best to takes care of a lot of the
    (usually) annoying (but sometimes necessary) features that come with XML and XML::Parser.

TOOLS
    XML::Twig comes with a few command-line utilities:

  xml_pp - xml pretty-printer
    XML pretty printer using XML::Twig

  xml_grep - grep XML files looking for specific elements
    "xml_grep" does a grep on XML files. Instead of using regular expressions it uses XPath
    expressions (in fact the subset of XPath supported by XML::Twig).

  xml_split - cut a big XML file into smaller chunks
    "xml_split" takes a (presumably big) XML file and split it in several smaller files, based on
    various criteria (level in the tree, size or an XPath expression)

  xml_merge - merge back XML files split with xml_split
    "xml_merge" takes several xml files that have been split using "xml_split" and recreates a
    single file.

  xml_spellcheck - spellcheck XML files
    "xml_spellcheck" lets you spell check the content of an XML file. It extracts the text (the
    content of elements and optionally of attributes), call a spell checker on it and then recreates
    the XML document.

XML::Twig 101
    XML::Twig can be used either on "small" XML documents (that fit in memory) or on huge ones, by
    processing parts of the document and outputting or discarding them once they are processed.

  Loading an XML document and processing it
      my $t= XML::Twig->new();
      $t->parse( '<d><title>title</title><para>p 1</para><para>p 2</para></d>');
      my $root= $t->root;
      $root->set_tag( 'html');              # change doc to html
      $title= $root->first_child( 'title'); # get the title
      $title->set_tag( 'h1');               # turn it into h1
      my @para= $root->children( 'para');   # get the para children
      foreach my $para (@para)
        { $para->set_tag( 'p'); }           # turn them into p
      $t->print;                            # output the document

    Other useful methods include:

    att: "$elt->{'att'}->{'foo'}" return the "foo" attribute for an element,

    set_att : "$elt->set_att( foo => "bar")" sets the "foo" attribute to the "bar" value,

    next_sibling: "$elt->{next_sibling}" return the next sibling in the document (in the example
    "$title->{next_sibling}" is the first "para", you can also (and actually should) use
    "$elt->next_sibling( 'para')" to get it

    The document can also be transformed through the use of the cut, copy, paste and move methods:
    "$title->cut; $title->paste( after => $p);" for example

    And much, much more, see XML::Twig::Elt.

  Processing an XML document chunk by chunk
    One of the strengths of XML::Twig is that it let you work with files that do not fit in memory
    (BTW storing an XML document in memory as a tree is quite memory-expensive, the expansion factor
    being often around 10).

    To do this you can define handlers, that will be called once a specific element has been
    completely parsed. In these handlers you can access the element and process it as you see fit,
    using the navigation and the cut-n-paste methods, plus lots of convenient ones like "prefix ".
    Once the element is completely processed you can then "flush " it, which will output it and free
    the memory. You can also "purge " it if you don't need to output it (if you are just extracting
    some data from the document for example). The handler will be called again once the next
    relevant element has been parsed.

      my $t= XML::Twig->new( twig_handlers =>
                              { section => \&section,
                                para   => sub { $_->set_tag( 'p'); }
                              },
                           );
      $t->parsefile( 'doc.xml');

      # the handler is called once a section is completely parsed, ie when
      # the end tag for section is found, it receives the twig itself and
      # the element (including all its sub-elements) as arguments
      sub section
        { my( $t, $section)= @_;      # arguments for all twig_handlers
          $section->set_tag( 'div');  # change the tag name
          # let's use the attribute nb as a prefix to the title
          my $title= $section->first_child( 'title'); # find the title
          my $nb= $title->{'att'}->{'nb'}; # get the attribute
          $title->prefix( "$nb - ");  # easy isn't it?
          $section->flush;            # outputs the section and frees memory
        }

    There is of course more to it: you can trigger handlers on more elaborate conditions than just
    the name of the element, "section/title" for example.

      my $t= XML::Twig->new( twig_handlers =>
                               { 'section/title' => sub { $_->print } }
                           )
                      ->parsefile( 'doc.xml');

    Here "sub { $_->print }" simply prints the current element ($_ is aliased to the element in the
    handler).

    You can also trigger a handler on a test on an attribute:

      my $t= XML::Twig->new( twig_handlers =>
                          { 'section[@level="1"]' => sub { $_->print } }
                           );
                      ->parsefile( 'doc.xml');

    You can also use "start_tag_handlers " to process an element as soon as the start tag is found.
    Besides "prefix " you can also use "suffix ",

  Processing just parts of an XML document
    The twig_roots mode builds only the required sub-trees from the document Anything outside of the
    twig roots will just be ignored:

      my $t= XML::Twig->new(
           # the twig will include just the root and selected titles
               twig_roots   => { 'section/title' => \&print_n_purge,
                                 'annex/title'   => \&print_n_purge
               }
                          );
      $t->parsefile( 'doc.xml');

      sub print_n_purge
        { my( $t, $elt)= @_;
          print $elt->text;    # print the text (including sub-element texts)
          $t->purge;           # frees the memory
        }

    You can use that mode when you want to process parts of a documents but are not interested in
    the rest and you don't want to pay the price, either in time or memory, to build the tree for
    the it.

  Building an XML filter
    You can combine the "twig_roots" and the "twig_print_outside_roots" options to build filters,
    which let you modify selected elements and will output the rest of the document as is.

    This would convert prices in $ to prices in Euro in a document:

      my $t= XML::Twig->new(
               twig_roots   => { 'price' => \&convert, },   # process prices
               twig_print_outside_roots => 1,               # print the rest
                          );
      $t->parsefile( 'doc.xml');

      sub convert
        { my( $t, $price)= @_;
          my $currency=  $price->{'att'}->{'currency'};          # get the currency
          if( $currency eq 'USD')
            { $usd_price= $price->text;                     # get the price
              # %rate is just a conversion table
              my $euro_price= $usd_price * $rate{usd2euro};
              $price->set_text( $euro_price);               # set the new price
              $price->set_att( currency => 'EUR');          # don't forget this!
            }
          $price->print;                                    # output the price
        }

  XML::Twig and various versions of Perl, XML::Parser and expat:
    XML::Twig is a lot more sensitive to variations in versions of perl, XML::Parser and expat than
    to the OS, so this should cover some reasonable configurations.

    The "recommended configuration" is perl 5.8.3+ (for good Unicode support), XML::Parser 2.31+ and
    expat 1.95.5+

    See <http://testers.cpan.org/search?request=dist&dist=XML-Twig> for the CPAN testers reports on
    XML::Twig, which list all tested configurations.

    An Atom feed of the CPAN Testers results is available at
    <http://xmltwig.org/rss/twig_testers.rss>

    Finally:

    XML::Twig does NOT work with expat 1.95.4
    XML::Twig only works with XML::Parser 2.27 in perl 5.6.*
        Note that I can't compile XML::Parser 2.27 anymore, so I can't guarantee that it still works

    XML::Parser 2.28 does not really work

    When in doubt, upgrade expat, XML::Parser and Scalar::Util

    Finally, for some optional features, XML::Twig depends on some additional modules. The complete
    list, which depends somewhat on the version of Perl that you are running, is given by running
    "t/zz_dump_config.t"

Simplifying XML processing
    Whitespaces
        Whitespaces that look non-significant are discarded, this behaviour can be controlled using
        the "keep_spaces ", "keep_spaces_in " and "discard_spaces_in " options.

    Encoding
        You can specify that you want the output in the same encoding as the input (provided you
        have valid XML, which means you have to specify the encoding either in the document or when
        you create the Twig object) using the "keep_encoding " option

        You can also use "output_encoding" to convert the internal UTF-8 format to the required
        encoding.

    Comments and Processing Instructions (PI)
        Comments and PI's can be hidden from the processing, but still appear in the output (they
        are carried by the "real" element closer to them)

    Pretty Printing
        XML::Twig can output the document pretty printed so it is easier to read for us humans.

    Surviving an untimely death
        XML parsers are supposed to react violently when fed improper XML. XML::Parser just dies.

        XML::Twig provides the "safe_parse " and the "safe_parsefile " methods which wrap the parse
        in an eval and return either the parsed twig or 0 in case of failure.

    Private attributes
        Attributes with a name starting with # (illegal in XML) will not be output, so you can
        safely use them to store temporary values during processing. Note that you can store
        anything in a private attribute, not just text, it's just a regular Perl variable, so a
        reference to an object or a huge data structure is perfectly fine.

CLASSES
    XML::Twig uses a very limited number of classes. The ones you are most likely to use are
    "XML::Twig" of course, which represents a complete XML document, including the document itself
    (the root of the document itself is "root"), its handlers, its input or output filters... The
    other main class is "XML::Twig::Elt", which models an XML element. Element here has a very wide
    definition: it can be a regular element, or but also text, with an element "tag" of "#PCDATA"
    (or "#CDATA"), an entity (tag is "#ENT"), a Processing Instruction ("#PI"), a comment
    ("#COMMENT").

    Those are the 2 commonly used classes.

    You might want to look the "elt_class" option if you want to subclass "XML::Twig::Elt".

    Attributes are just attached to their parent element, they are not objects per se. (Please use
    the provided methods "att" and "set_att" to access them, if you access them as a hash, then your
    code becomes implementation dependent and might break in the future).

    Other classes that are seldom used are "XML::Twig::Entity_list" and "XML::Twig::Entity".

    If you use "XML::Twig::XPath" instead of "XML::Twig", elements are then created as
    "XML::Twig::XPath::Elt"

METHODS
  XML::Twig
    A twig is a subclass of XML::Parser, so all XML::Parser methods can be called on a twig object,
    including parse and parsefile. "setHandlers" on the other hand cannot be used, see "BUGS "

    new This is a class method, the constructor for XML::Twig. Options are passed as keyword value
        pairs. Recognized options are the same as XML::Parser, plus some (in fact a lot!) XML::Twig
        specifics.

        New Options:

        twig_handlers
            This argument consists of a hash "{ expression =" \&handler}> where expression is a an
            *XPath-like expression* (+ some others).

            XPath expressions are limited to using the child and descendant axis (indeed you can't
            specify an axis), and predicates cannot be nested. You can use the "string", or
            "string(<tag>)" function (except in "twig_roots" triggers).

            Additionally you can use regexps (/ delimited) to match attribute and string values.

            Examples:

              foo
              foo/bar
              foo//bar
              /foo/bar
              /foo//bar
              /foo/bar[@att1 = "val1" and @att2 = "val2"]/baz[@a >= 1]
              foo[string()=~ /^duh!+/]
              /foo[string(bar)=~ /\d+/]/baz[@att != 3]

            #CDATA can be used to call a handler for a CDATA section. #COMMENT can be used to call a
            handler for comments

            Some additional (non-XPath) expressions are also provided for convenience:

            processing instructions
                '?' or '#PI' triggers the handler for any processing instruction, and '?<target>' or
                '#PI <target>' triggers a handler for processing instruction with the given target(
                ex: '#PI xml-stylesheet').

            level(<level>)
                Triggers the handler on any element at that level in the tree (root is level 1)

            _all_
                Triggers the handler for all elements in the tree

            _default_
                Triggers the handler for each element that does NOT have any other handler.

            Expressions are evaluated against the input document. Which means that even if you have
            changed the tag of an element (changing the tag of a parent element from a handler for
            example) the change will not impact the expression evaluation. There is an exception to
            this: "private" attributes (which name start with a '#', and can only be created during
            the parsing, as they are not valid XML) are checked against the current twig.

            Handlers are triggered in fixed order, sorted by their type (xpath expressions first,
            then regexps, then level), then by whether they specify a full path (starting at the
            root element) or not, then by number of steps in the expression, then number of
            predicates, then number of tests in predicates. Handlers where the last step does not
            specify a step ("foo/bar/*") are triggered after other XPath handlers. Finally "_all_"
            handlers are triggered last.

            Important: once a handler has been triggered if it returns 0 then no other handler is
            called, except a "_all_" handler which will be called anyway.

            If a handler returns a true value and other handlers apply, then the next applicable
            handler will be called. Repeat, rinse, lather..; The exception to that rule is when the
            "do_not_chain_handlers" option is set, in which case only the first handler will be
            called.

            Note that it might be a good idea to explicitly return a short true value (like 1) from
            handlers: this ensures that other applicable handlers are called even if the last
            statement for the handler happens to evaluate to false. This might also speedup the code
            by avoiding the result of the last statement of the code to be copied and passed to the
            code managing handlers. It can really pay to have 1 instead of a long string returned.

            When the closing tag for an element is parsed the corresponding handler is called, with
            2 arguments: the twig and the "Element ". The twig includes the document tree that has
            been built so far, the element is the complete sub-tree for the element. The fact that
            the handler is called only when the closing tag for the element is found means that
            handlers for inner elements are called before handlers for outer elements.

            $_ is also set to the element, so it is easy to write inline handlers like

              para => sub { $_->set_tag( 'p'); }

            Text is stored in elements whose tag name is #PCDATA (due to mixed content, text and
            sub-element in an element there is no way to store the text as just an attribute of the
            enclosing element, this is similar to the DOM model).

            Warning: if you have used purge or flush on the twig the element might not be complete,
            some of its children might have been entirely flushed or purged, and the start tag might
            even have been printed (by "flush") already, so changing its tag might not give the
            expected result.

        twig_roots
            This argument lets you build the tree only for those elements you are interested in.

              Example: my $t= XML::Twig->new( twig_roots => { title => 1, subtitle => 1});
                       $t->parsefile( file);
                       my $t= XML::Twig->new( twig_roots => { 'section/title' => 1});
                       $t->parsefile( file);

            return a twig containing a document including only "title" and "subtitle" elements, as
            children of the root element.

            You can use *generic_attribute_condition*, *attribute_condition*, *full_path*,
            *partial_path*, *tag*, *tag_regexp*, *_default_* and *_all_* to trigger the building of
            the twig. *string_condition* and *regexp_condition* cannot be used as the content of the
            element, and the string, have not yet been parsed when the condition is checked.

            WARNING: path are checked for the document. Even if the "twig_roots" option is used they
            will be checked against the full document tree, not the virtual tree created by
            XML::Twig

            WARNING: twig_roots elements should NOT be nested, that would hopelessly confuse
            XML::Twig ;--(

            Note: you can set handlers (twig_handlers) using twig_roots Example: my $t=
            XML::Twig->new( twig_roots => { title => sub { $_[1]->print;}, subtitle =>
            \&process_subtitle } ); $t->parsefile( file);

        twig_print_outside_roots
            To be used in conjunction with the "twig_roots" argument. When set to a true value this
            will print the document outside of the "twig_roots" elements.

             Example: my $t= XML::Twig->new( twig_roots => { title => \&number_title },
                                            twig_print_outside_roots => 1,
                                           );
                       $t->parsefile( file);
                       { my $nb;
                       sub number_title
                         { my( $twig, $title);
                           $nb++;
                           $title->prefix( "$nb ");
                           $title->print;
                         }
                       }

            This example prints the document outside of the title element, calls "number_title" for
            each "title" element, prints it, and then resumes printing the document. The twig is
            built only for the "title" elements.

            If the value is a reference to a file handle then the document outside the "twig_roots"
            elements will be output to this file handle:

              open( my $out, '>', 'out_file.xml') or die "cannot open out file.xml out_file:$!";
              my $t= XML::Twig->new( twig_roots => { title => \&number_title },
                                     # default output to $out
                                     twig_print_outside_roots => $out,
                                   );

                     { my $nb;
                       sub number_title
                         { my( $twig, $title);
                           $nb++;
                           $title->prefix( "$nb ");
                           $title->print( $out);    # you have to print to \*OUT here
                         }
                       }

        start_tag_handlers
            A hash "{ expression =" \&handler}>. Sets element handlers that are called when the
            element is open (at the end of the XML::Parser "Start" handler). The handlers are called
            with 2 params: the twig and the element. The element is empty at that point, its
            attributes are created though.

            You can use *generic_attribute_condition*, *attribute_condition*, *full_path*,
            *partial_path*, *tag*, *tag_regexp*, *_default_* and *_all_* to trigger the handler.

            *string_condition* and *regexp_condition* cannot be used as the content of the element,
            and the string, have not yet been parsed when the condition is checked.

            The main uses for those handlers are to change the tag name (you might have to do it as
            soon as you find the open tag if you plan to "flush" the twig at some point in the
            element, and to create temporary attributes that will be used when processing
            sub-element with "twig_hanlders".

            Note: "start_tag" handlers can be called outside of "twig_roots" if this argument is
            used. Since the element object is not built, in this case handlers are called with the
            following arguments: $t (the twig), $tag (the tag of the element) and %att (a hash of
            the attributes of the element).

            If the "twig_print_outside_roots" argument is also used, if the last handler called
            returns a "true" value, then the start tag will be output as it appeared in the original
            document, if the handler returns a "false" value then the start tag will not be printed
            (so you can print a modified string yourself for example).

            Note that you can use the ignore method in "start_tag_handlers" (and only there).

        end_tag_handlers
            A hash "{ expression =" \&handler}>. Sets element handlers that are called when the
            element is closed (at the end of the XML::Parser "End" handler). The handlers are called
            with 2 params: the twig and the tag of the element.

            *twig_handlers* are called when an element is completely parsed, so why have this
            redundant option? There is only one use for "end_tag_handlers": when using the
            "twig_roots" option, to trigger a handler for an element outside the roots. It is for
            example very useful to number titles in a document using nested sections:

              my @no= (0);
              my $no;
              my $t= XML::Twig->new(
                      start_tag_handlers =>
                       { section => sub { $no[$#no]++; $no= join '.', @no; push @no, 0; } },
                      twig_roots         =>
                       { title   => sub { $_->prefix( $no); $_->print; } },
                      end_tag_handlers   => { section => sub { pop @no;  } },
                      twig_print_outside_roots => 1
                                  );
               $t->parsefile( $file);

            Using the "end_tag_handlers" argument without "twig_roots" will result in an error.

        do_not_chain_handlers
            If this option is set to a true value, then only one handler will be called for each
            element, even if several satisfy the condition

            Note that the "_all_" handler will still be called regardless

        ignore_elts
            This option lets you ignore elements when building the twig. This is useful in cases
            where you cannot use "twig_roots" to ignore elements, for example if the element to
            ignore is a sibling of elements you are interested in.

            Example:

              my $twig= XML::Twig->new( ignore_elts => { elt => 'discard' });
              $twig->parsefile( 'doc.xml');

            This will build the complete twig for the document, except that all "elt" elements (and
            their children) will be left out.

            The keys in the hash are triggers, limited to the same subset as "start_tag_handlers".
            The values can be "discard", to discard the element, "print", to output the element
            as-is, "string" to store the text of the ignored element(s), including markup, in a
            field of the twig: "$t->{twig_buffered_string}" or a reference to a scalar, in which
            case the text of the ignored element(s), including markup, will be stored in the scalar.
            Any other value will be treated as "discard".

        char_handler
            A reference to a subroutine that will be called every time "PCDATA" is found.

            The subroutine receives the string as argument, and returns the modified string:

              # WE WANT ALL STRINGS IN UPPER CASE
              sub my_char_handler
                { my( $text)= @_;
                  $text= uc( $text);
                  return $text;
                }

        elt_class
            The name of a class used to store elements. this class should inherit from
            "XML::Twig::Elt" (and by default it is "XML::Twig::Elt"). This option is used to
            subclass the element class and extend it with new methods.

            This option is needed because during the parsing of the XML, elements are created by
            "XML::Twig", without any control from the user code.

        keep_atts_order
            Setting this option to a true value causes the attribute hash to be tied to a
            "Tie::IxHash" object. This means that "Tie::IxHash" needs to be installed for this
            option to be available. It also means that the hash keeps its order, so you will get the
            attributes in order. This allows outputting the attributes in the same order as they
            were in the original document.

        keep_encoding
            This is a (slightly?) evil option: if the XML document is not UTF-8 encoded and you want
            to keep it that way, then setting keep_encoding will use the"Expat" original_string
            method for character, thus keeping the original encoding, as well as the original
            entities in the strings.

            See the "t/test6.t" test file to see what results you can expect from the various
            encoding options.

            WARNING: if the original encoding is multi-byte then attribute parsing will be EXTREMELY
            unsafe under any Perl before 5.6, as it uses regular expressions which do not deal
            properly with multi-byte characters. You can specify an alternate function to parse the
            start tags with the "parse_start_tag" option (see below)

            WARNING: this option is NOT used when parsing with XML::Parser non-blocking parser
            ("parse_start", "parse_more", "parse_done" methods) which you probably should not use
            with XML::Twig anyway as they are totally untested!

        output_encoding
            This option generates an output_filter using "Encode", "Text::Iconv" or "Unicode::Map8"
            and "Unicode::Strings", and sets the encoding in the XML declaration. This is the
            easiest way to deal with encodings, if you need more sophisticated features, look at
            "output_filter" below

        output_filter
            This option is used to convert the character encoding of the output document. It is
            passed either a string corresponding to a predefined filter or a subroutine reference.
            The filter will be called every time a document or element is processed by the "print"
            functions ("print", "sprint", "flush").

            Pre-defined filters:

            latin1
                uses either "Encode", "Text::Iconv" or "Unicode::Map8" and "Unicode::String" or a
                regexp (which works only with XML::Parser 2.27), in this order, to convert all
                characters to ISO-8859-15 (usually latin1 is synonym to ISO-8859-1, but in practice
                it seems that ISO-8859-15, which includes the euro sign, is more useful and probably
                what most people want).

            html
                does the same conversion as "latin1", plus encodes entities using "HTML::Entities"
                (oddly enough you will need to have HTML::Entities installed for it to be
                available). This should only be used if the tags and attribute names themselves are
                in US-ASCII, or they will be converted and the output will not be valid XML any more

            safe
                converts the output to ASCII (US) only plus *character entities* ("&#nnn;") this
                should be used only if the tags and attribute names themselves are in US-ASCII, or
                they will be converted and the output will not be valid XML any more

            safe_hex
                same as "safe" except that the character entities are in hex ("&#xnnn;")

            encode_convert ($encoding)
                Return a subref that can be used to convert utf8 strings to $encoding). Uses
                "Encode".

                   my $conv = XML::Twig::encode_convert( 'latin1');
                   my $t = XML::Twig->new(output_filter => $conv);

            iconv_convert ($encoding)
                this function is used to create a filter subroutine that will be used to convert the
                characters to the target encoding using "Text::Iconv" (which needs to be installed,
                look at the documentation for the module and for the "iconv" library to find out
                which encodings are available on your system, "iconv -l" should give you a list of
                available encodings)

                   my $conv = XML::Twig::iconv_convert( 'latin1');
                   my $t = XML::Twig->new(output_filter => $conv);

            unicode_convert ($encoding)
                this function is used to create a filter subroutine that will be used to convert the
                characters to the target encoding using "Unicode::Strings" and "Unicode::Map8"
                (which need to be installed, look at the documentation for the modules to find out
                which encodings are available on your system)

                   my $conv = XML::Twig::unicode_convert( 'latin1');
                   my $t = XML::Twig->new(output_filter => $conv);

            The "text" and "att" methods do not use the filter, so their result are always in
            unicode.

            Those predeclared filters are based on subroutines that can be used by themselves (as
            "XML::Twig::foo").

            html_encode ($string)
                Use "HTML::Entities" to encode a utf8 string

            safe_encode ($string)
                Use either a regexp (perl < 5.8) or "Encode" to encode non-ascii characters in the
                string in "&#<nnnn>;" format

            safe_encode_hex ($string)
                Use either a regexp (perl < 5.8) or "Encode" to encode non-ascii characters in the
                string in "&#x<nnnn>;" format

            regexp2latin1 ($string)
                Use a regexp to encode a utf8 string into latin 1 (ISO-8859-1). Does not work with
                Perl 5.8.0!

        output_text_filter
            same as output_filter, except it doesn't apply to the brackets and quotes around
            attribute values. This is useful for all filters that could change the tagging,
            basically anything that does not just change the encoding of the output. "html", "safe"
            and "safe_hex" are better used with this option.

        input_filter
            This option is similar to "output_filter" except the filter is applied to the characters
            before they are stored in the twig, at parsing time.

        remove_cdata
            Setting this option to a true value will force the twig to output CDATA sections as
            regular (escaped) PCDATA

        parse_start_tag
            If you use the "keep_encoding" option then this option can be used to replace the
            default parsing function. You should provide a coderef (a reference to a subroutine) as
            the argument, this subroutine takes the original tag (given by XML::Parser::Expat
            "original_string()" method) and returns a tag and the attributes in a hash (or in a list
            attribute_name/attribute value).

        no_xxe
            prevents external entities to be parsed.

            This is a security feature, in case the input XML cannot be trusted. With this option
            set to a true value defining external entities in the document will cause the parse to
            fail.

            This prevents an entity like "<!ENTITY xxe PUBLIC "bar" "/etc/passwd">" to make the
            password fiel available in the document.

        expand_external_ents
            When this option is used external entities (that are defined) are expanded when the
            document is output using "print" functions such as "print ", "sprint ", "flush " and
            "xml_string ". Note that in the twig the entity will be stored as an element with a tag
            '"#ENT"', the entity will not be expanded there, so you might want to process the
            entities before outputting it.

            If an external entity is not available, then the parse will fail.

            A special case is when the value of this option is -1. In that case a missing entity
            will not cause the parser to die, but its "name", "sysid" and "pubid" will be stored in
            the twig as "$twig->{twig_missing_system_entities}" (a reference to an array of hashes {
            name => <name>, sysid => <sysid>, pubid => <pubid> }). Yes, this is a bit of a hack, but
            it's useful in some cases.

            WARNING: setting expand_external_ents to 0 or -1 currently doesn't work as expected; cf.
            <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=118097>. To completelty turn off
            expanding external entities use "no_xxe".

        no_xxe
            If this argument is set to a true value, expanding of external entities is turned off.

        load_DTD
            If this argument is set to a true value, "parse" or "parsefile" on the twig will load
            the DTD information. This information can then be accessed through the twig, in a
            "DTD_handler" for example. This will load even an external DTD.

            Default and fixed values for attributes will also be filled, based on the DTD.

            Note that to do this the module will generate a temporary file in the current directory.
            If this is a problem let me know and I will add an option to specify an alternate
            directory.

            See "DTD Handling" for more information

        DTD_base <path_to_DTD_directory>
            If the DTD is in a different directory, looks for it there, useful to make up somewhat
            for the lack of catalog support in "expat". You still need a SYSTEM declaration

        DTD_handler
            Set a handler that will be called once the doctype (and the DTD) have been loaded, with
            2 arguments, the twig and the DTD.

        no_prolog
            Does not output a prolog (XML declaration and DTD)

        id  This optional argument gives the name of an attribute that can be used as an ID in the
            document. Elements whose ID is known can be accessed through the elt_id method. id
            defaults to 'id'. See "BUGS "

        discard_spaces
            If this optional argument is set to a true value then spaces are discarded when they
            look non-significant: strings containing only spaces and at least one line feed are
            discarded. This argument is set to true by default.

            The exact algorithm to drop spaces is: strings including only spaces (perl \s) and at
            least one \n right before an open or close tag are dropped.

        discard_all_spaces
            If this argument is set to a true value, spaces are discarded more aggressively than
            with "discard_spaces": strings not including a \n are also dropped. This option is
            appropriate for data-oriented XML.

        keep_spaces
            If this optional argument is set to a true value then all spaces in the document are
            kept, and stored as "PCDATA".

            Warning: adding this option can result in changes in the twig generated: space that was
            previously discarded might end up in a new text element. see the difference by calling
            the following code with 0 and 1 as arguments:

              perl -MXML::Twig -e'print XML::Twig->new( keep_spaces => shift)->parse( "<d> \n<e/></d>")->_dump'

            "keep_spaces" and "discard_spaces" cannot be both set.

        discard_spaces_in
            This argument sets "keep_spaces" to true but will cause the twig builder to discard
            spaces in the elements listed.

            The syntax for using this argument is:

              XML::Twig->new( discard_spaces_in => [ 'elt1', 'elt2']);

        keep_spaces_in
            This argument sets "discard_spaces" to true but will cause the twig builder to keep
            spaces in the elements listed.

            The syntax for using this argument is:

              XML::Twig->new( keep_spaces_in => [ 'elt1', 'elt2']);

            Warning: adding this option can result in changes in the twig generated: space that was
            previously discarded might end up in a new text element.

        pretty_print
            Set the pretty print method, amongst '"none"' (default), '"nsgmls"', '"nice"',
            '"indented"', '"indented_c"', '"indented_a"', '"indented_close_tag"', '"cvs"',
            '"wrapped"', '"record"' and '"record_c"'

            pretty_print formats:

            none
                The document is output as one ling string, with no line breaks except those found
                within text elements

            nsgmls
                Line breaks are inserted in safe places: that is within tags, between a tag and an
                attribute, between attributes and before the > at the end of a tag.

                This is quite ugly but better than "none", and it is very safe, the document will
                still be valid (conforming to its DTD).

                This is how the SGML parser "sgmls" splits documents, hence the name.

            nice
                This option inserts line breaks before any tag that does not contain text (so
                element with textual content are not broken as the \n is the significant).

                WARNING: this option leaves the document well-formed but might make it invalid (not
                conformant to its DTD). If you have elements declared as

                  <!ELEMENT foo (#PCDATA|bar)>

                then a "foo" element including a "bar" one will be printed as

                  <foo>
                  <bar>bar is just pcdata</bar>
                  </foo>

                This is invalid, as the parser will take the line break after the "foo" tag as a
                sign that the element contains PCDATA, it will then die when it finds the "bar" tag.
                This may or may not be important for you, but be aware of it!

            indented
                Same as "nice" (and with the same warning) but indents elements according to their
                level

            indented_c
                Same as "indented" but a little more compact: the closing tags are on the same line
                as the preceding text

            indented_close_tag
                Same as "indented" except that the closing tag is also indented, to line up with the
                tags within the element

            idented_a
                This formats XML files in a line-oriented version control friendly way. The format
                is described in <http://tinyurl.com/2kwscq> (that's an Oracle document with an
                insanely long URL).

                Note that to be totaly conformant to the "spec", the order of attributes should not
                be changed, so if they are not already in alphabetical order you will need to use
                the "keep_atts_order" option.

            cvs Same as "idented_a".

            wrapped
                Same as "indented_c" but lines are wrapped using Text::Wrap::wrap. The default
                length for lines is the default for $Text::Wrap::columns, and can be changed by
                changing that variable.

            record
                This is a record-oriented pretty print, that display data in records, one field per
                line (which looks a LOT like "indented")

            record_c
                Stands for record compact, one record per line

        empty_tags
            Set the empty tag display style ('"normal"', '"html"' or '"expand"').

            "normal" outputs an empty tag '"<tag/>"', "html" adds a space '"<tag />"' for elements
            that can be empty in XHTML and "expand" outputs '"<tag></tag>"'

        quote
            Set the quote character for attributes ('"single"' or '"double"').

        escape_gt
            By default XML::Twig does not escape the character > in its output, as it is not
            mandated by the XML spec. With this option on, > will be replaced by "&gt;"

        comments
            Set the way comments are processed: '"drop"' (default), '"keep"' or '"process"'

            Comments processing options:

            drop
                drops the comments, they are not read, nor printed to the output

            keep
                comments are loaded and will appear on the output, they are not accessible within
                the twig and will not interfere with processing though

                Note: comments in the middle of a text element such as

                  <p>text <!-- comment --> more text --></p>

                are kept at their original position in the text. Using "print" methods like "print"
                or "sprint" will return the comments in the text. Using "text" or "field" on the
                other hand will not.

                Any use of "set_pcdata" on the "#PCDATA" element (directly or through other methods
                like "set_content") will delete the comment(s).

            process
                comments are loaded in the twig and will be treated as regular elements (their "tag"
                is "#COMMENT") this can interfere with processing if you expect
                "$elt->{first_child}" to be an element but find a comment there. Validation will not
                protect you from this as comments can happen anywhere. You can use
                "$elt->first_child( 'tag')" (which is a good habit anyway) to get where you want.

                Consider using "process" if you are outputting SAX events from XML::Twig.

        pi  Set the way processing instructions are processed: '"drop"', '"keep"' (default) or
            '"process"'

            Note that you can also set PI handlers in the "twig_handlers" option:

              '?'       => \&handler
              '?target' => \&handler 2

            The handlers will be called with 2 parameters, the twig and the PI element if "pi" is
            set to "process", and with 3, the twig, the target and the data if "pi" is set to
            "keep". Of course they will not be called if "pi" is set to "drop".

            If "pi" is set to "keep" the handler should return a string that will be used as-is as
            the PI text (it should look like "" <?target data?" >" or '' if you want to remove the
            PI),

            Only one handler will be called, "?target" or "?" if no specific handler for that target
            is available.

        map_xmlns
            This option is passed a hashref that maps uri's to prefixes. The prefixes in the
            document will be replaced by the ones in the map. The mapped prefixes can (actually have
            to) be used to trigger handlers, navigate or query the document.

            Here is an example:

              my $t= XML::Twig->new( map_xmlns => {'http://www.w3.org/2000/svg' => "svg"},
                                     twig_handlers =>
                                       { 'svg:circle' => sub { $_->set_att( r => 20) } },
                                     pretty_print => 'indented',
                                   )
                              ->parse( '<doc xmlns:gr="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
                                          <gr:circle cx="10" cy="90" r="10"/>
                                       </doc>'
                                     )
                              ->print;

            This will output:

              <doc xmlns:svg="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
                 <svg:circle cx="10" cy="90" r="20"/>
              </doc>

        keep_original_prefix
            When used with "map_xmlns" this option will make "XML::Twig" use the original namespace
            prefixes when outputting a document. The mapped prefix will still be used for triggering
            handlers and in navigation and query methods.

              my $t= XML::Twig->new( map_xmlns => {'http://www.w3.org/2000/svg' => "svg"},
                                     twig_handlers =>
                                       { 'svg:circle' => sub { $_->set_att( r => 20) } },
                                     keep_original_prefix => 1,
                                     pretty_print => 'indented',
                                   )
                              ->parse( '<doc xmlns:gr="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
                                          <gr:circle cx="10" cy="90" r="10"/>
                                       </doc>'
                                     )
                              ->print;

            This will output:

              <doc xmlns:gr="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
                 <gr:circle cx="10" cy="90" r="20"/>
              </doc>

        original_uri ($prefix)
            called within a handler, this will return the uri bound to the namespace prefix in the
            original document.

        index ($arrayref or $hashref)
            This option creates lists of specific elements during the parsing of the XML. It takes a
            reference to either a list of triggering expressions or to a hash name => expression,
            and for each one generates the list of elements that match the expression. The list can
            be accessed through the "index" method.

            example:

              # using an array ref
              my $t= XML::Twig->new( index => [ 'div', 'table' ])
                              ->parsefile( "foo.xml");
              my $divs= $t->index( 'div');
              my $first_div= $divs->[0];
              my $last_table= $t->index( table => -1);

              # using a hashref to name the indexes
              my $t= XML::Twig->new( index => { email => 'a[@href=~/^ \s*mailto:/]'})
                              ->parsefile( "foo.xml");
              my $last_emails= $t->index( email => -1);

            Note that the index is not maintained after the parsing. If elements are deleted,
            renamed or otherwise hurt during processing, the index is NOT updated. (changing the id
            element OTOH will update the index)

        att_accessors <list of attribute names>
            creates methods that give direct access to attribute:

              my $t= XML::Twig->new( att_accessors => [ 'href', 'src'])
                              ->parsefile( $file);
              my $first_href= $t->first_elt( 'img')->src; # same as ->att( 'src')
              $t->first_elt( 'img')->src( 'new_logo.png') # changes the attribute value

        elt_accessors
            creates methods that give direct access to the first child element (in scalar context)
            or the list of elements (in list context):

            the list of accessors to create can be given 1 2 different ways: in an array, or in a
            hash alias => expression my $t= XML::Twig->new( elt_accessors => [ 'head']) ->parsefile(
            $file); my $title_text= $t->root->head->field( 'title'); # same as $title_text=
            $t->root->first_child( 'head')->field( 'title');

              my $t=  XML::Twig->new( elt_accessors => { warnings => 'p[@class="warning"]', d2 => 'div[2]'}, )
                              ->parsefile( $file);
              my $body= $t->first_elt( 'body');
              my @warnings= $body->warnings; # same as $body->children( 'p[@class="warning"]');
              my $s2= $body->d2;             # same as $body->first_child( 'div[2]')

        field_accessors
            creates methods that give direct access to the first child element text:

              my $t=  XML::Twig->new( field_accessors => [ 'h1'])
                              ->parsefile( $file);
              my $div_title_text= $t->first_elt( 'div')->title;
              # same as $title_text= $t->first_elt( 'div')->field( 'title');

        use_tidy
            set this option to use HTML::Tidy instead of HTML::TreeBuilder to convert HTML to XML.
            HTML, especially real (real "crap") HTML found in the wild, so depending on the data,
            one module or the other does a better job at the conversion. Also, HTML::Tidy can be a
            bit difficult to install, so XML::Twig offers both option. TIMTOWTDI

        output_html_doctype
            when using HTML::TreeBuilder to convert HTML, this option causes the DOCTYPE declaration
            to be output, which may be important for some legacy browsers. Without that option the
            DOCTYPE definition is NOT output. Also if the definition is completely wrong (ie not
            easily parsable), it is not output either.

        Note: I _HATE_ the Java-like name of arguments used by most XML modules. So in pure
        TIMTOWTDI fashion all arguments can be written either as "UglyJavaLikeName" or as
        "readable_perl_name": "twig_print_outside_roots" or "TwigPrintOutsideRoots" (or even
        "twigPrintOutsideRoots" {shudder}). XML::Twig normalizes them before processing them.

    parse ( $source)
        The $source parameter should either be a string containing the whole XML document, or it
        should be an open "IO::Handle" (aka a filehandle).

        A die call is thrown if a parse error occurs. Otherwise it will return the twig built by the
        parse. Use "safe_parse" if you want the parsing to return even when an error occurs.

        If this method is called as a class method ("XML::Twig->parse( $some_xml_or_html)") then an
        XML::Twig object is created, using the parameters except the last one (eg "XML::Twig->parse(
        pretty_print => 'indented', $some_xml_or_html)") and "xparse" is called on it.

        Note that when parsing a filehandle, the handle should NOT be open with an encoding (ie open
        with "open( my $in, '<', $filename)". The file will be parsed by "expat", so specifying the
        encoding actually causes problems for the parser (as in: it can crash it, see
        https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=78877). For parsing a file it is actually
        recommended to use "parsefile" on the file name, instead of <parse> on the open file.

    parsestring
        This is just an alias for "parse" for backwards compatibility.

    parsefile (FILE [, OPT => OPT_VALUE [...]])
        Open "FILE" for reading, then call "parse" with the open handle. The file is closed no
        matter how "parse" returns.

        A "die" call is thrown if a parse error occurs. Otherwise it will return the twig built by
        the parse. Use "safe_parsefile" if you want the parsing to return even when an error occurs.

    parsefile_inplace ( $file, $optional_extension)
        Parse and update a file "in place". It does this by creating a temp file, selecting it as
        the default for print() statements (and methods), then parsing the input file. If the
        parsing is successful, then the temp file is moved to replace the input file.

        If an extension is given then the original file is backed-up (the rules for the extension
        are the same as the rule for the -i option in perl).

    parsefile_html_inplace ( $file, $optional_extension)
        Same as parsefile_inplace, except that it parses HTML instead of XML

    parseurl ($url $optional_user_agent)
        Gets the data from $url and parse it. The data is piped to the parser in chunks the size of
        the XML::Parser::Expat buffer, so memory consumption and hopefully speed are optimal.

        For most (read "small") XML it is probably as efficient (and easier to debug) to just "get"
        the XML file and then parse it as a string.

          use XML::Twig;
          use LWP::Simple;
          my $twig= XML::Twig->new();
          $twig->parse( LWP::Simple::get( $URL ));

        or

          use XML::Twig;
          my $twig= XML::Twig->nparse( $URL);

        If the $optional_user_agent argument is used then it is used, otherwise a new one is
        created.

    safe_parse ( SOURCE [, OPT => OPT_VALUE [...]])
        This method is similar to "parse" except that it wraps the parsing in an "eval" block. It
        returns the twig on success and 0 on failure (the twig object also contains the parsed
        twig). $@ contains the error message on failure.

        Note that the parsing still stops as soon as an error is detected, there is no way to keep
        going after an error.

    safe_parsefile (FILE [, OPT => OPT_VALUE [...]])
        This method is similar to "parsefile" except that it wraps the parsing in an "eval" block.
        It returns the twig on success and 0 on failure (the twig object also contains the parsed
        twig) . $@ contains the error message on failure

        Note that the parsing still stops as soon as an error is detected, there is no way to keep
        going after an error.

    safe_parseurl ($url $optional_user_agent)
        Same as "parseurl" except that it wraps the parsing in an "eval" block. It returns the twig
        on success and 0 on failure (the twig object also contains the parsed twig) . $@ contains
        the error message on failure

    parse_html ($string_or_fh)
        parse an HTML string or file handle (by converting it to XML using HTML::TreeBuilder, which
        needs to be available).

        This works nicely, but some information gets lost in the process: newlines are removed, and
        (at least on the version I use), comments get an extra CDATA section inside ( <!-- foo -->
        becomes <!-- <![CDATA[ foo ]]> -->

    parsefile_html ($file)
        parse an HTML file (by converting it to XML using HTML::TreeBuilder, which needs to be
        available, or HTML::Tidy if the "use_tidy" option was used). The file is loaded completely
        in memory and converted to XML before being parsed.

        this method is to be used with caution though, as it doesn't know about the file encoding,
        it is usually better to use "parse_html", which gives you a chance to open the file with the
        proper encoding layer.

    parseurl_html ($url $optional_user_agent)
        parse an URL as html the same way "parse_html" does

    safe_parseurl_html ($url $optional_user_agent)
        Same as "parseurl_html"> except that it wraps the parsing in an "eval" block. It returns the
        twig on success and 0 on failure (the twig object also contains the parsed twig) . $@
        contains the error message on failure

    safe_parsefile_html ($file $optional_user_agent)
        Same as "parsefile_html"> except that it wraps the parsing in an "eval" block. It returns
        the twig on success and 0 on failure (the twig object also contains the parsed twig) . $@
        contains the error message on failure

    safe_parse_html ($string_or_fh)
        Same as "parse_html" except that it wraps the parsing in an "eval" block. It returns the
        twig on success and 0 on failure (the twig object also contains the parsed twig) . $@
        contains the error message on failure

    xparse ($thing_to_parse)
        parse the $thing_to_parse, whether it is a filehandle, a string, an HTML file, an HTML URL,
        an URL or a file.

        Note that this is mostly a convenience method for one-off scripts. For example files that
        end in '.htm' or '.html' are parsed first as XML, and if this fails as HTML. This is
        certainly not the most efficient way to do this in general.

    nparse ($optional_twig_options, $thing_to_parse)
        create a twig with the $optional_options, and parse the $thing_to_parse, whether it is a
        filehandle, a string, an HTML file, an HTML URL, an URL or a file.

        Examples:

           XML::Twig->nparse( "file.xml");
           XML::Twig->nparse( error_context => 1, "file://file.xml");

    nparse_pp ($optional_twig_options, $thing_to_parse)
        same as "nparse" but also sets the "pretty_print" option to "indented".

    nparse_e ($optional_twig_options, $thing_to_parse)
        same as "nparse" but also sets the "error_context" option to 1.

    nparse_ppe ($optional_twig_options, $thing_to_parse)
        same as "nparse" but also sets the "pretty_print" option to "indented" and the
        "error_context" option to 1.

    parser
        This method returns the "expat" object (actually the XML::Parser::Expat object) used during
        parsing. It is useful for example to call XML::Parser::Expat methods on it. To get the line
        of a tag for example use "$t->parser->current_line".

    setTwigHandlers ($handlers)
        Set the twig_handlers. $handlers is a reference to a hash similar to the one in the
        "twig_handlers" option of new. All previous handlers are unset. The method returns the
        reference to the previous handlers.

    setTwigHandler ($exp $handler)
        Set a single twig_handler for elements matching $exp. $handler is a reference to a
        subroutine. If the handler was previously set then the reference to the previous handler is
        returned.

    setStartTagHandlers ($handlers)
        Set the start_tag handlers. $handlers is a reference to a hash similar to the one in the
        "start_tag_handlers" option of new. All previous handlers are unset. The method returns the
        reference to the previous handlers.

    setStartTagHandler ($exp $handler)
        Set a single start_tag handlers for elements matching $exp. $handler is a reference to a
        subroutine. If the handler was previously set then the reference to the previous handler is
        returned.

    setEndTagHandlers ($handlers)
        Set the end_tag handlers. $handlers is a reference to a hash similar to the one in the
        "end_tag_handlers" option of new. All previous handlers are unset. The method returns the
        reference to the previous handlers.

    setEndTagHandler ($exp $handler)
        Set a single end_tag handlers for elements matching $exp. $handler is a reference to a
        subroutine. If the handler was previously set then the reference to the previous handler is
        returned.

    setTwigRoots ($handlers)
        Same as using the "twig_roots" option when creating the twig

    setCharHandler ($exp $handler)
        Set a "char_handler"

    setIgnoreEltsHandler ($exp)
        Set a "ignore_elt" handler (elements that match $exp will be ignored

    setIgnoreEltsHandlers ($exp)
        Set all "ignore_elt" handlers (previous handlers are replaced)

    dtd Return the dtd (an XML::Twig::DTD object) of a twig

    xmldecl
        Return the XML declaration for the document, or a default one if it doesn't have one

    doctype
        Return the doctype for the document

    doctype_name
        returns the doctype of the document from the doctype declaration

    system_id
        returns the system value of the DTD of the document from the doctype declaration

    public_id
        returns the public doctype of the document from the doctype declaration

    internal_subset
        returns the internal subset of the DTD

    dtd_text
        Return the DTD text

    dtd_print
        Print the DTD

    model ($tag)
        Return the model (in the DTD) for the element $tag

    root
        Return the root element of a twig

    set_root ($elt)
        Set the root of a twig

    first_elt ($optional_condition)
        Return the first element matching $optional_condition of a twig, if no condition is given
        then the root is returned

    last_elt ($optional_condition)
        Return the last element matching $optional_condition of a twig, if no condition is given
        then the last element of the twig is returned

    elt_id ($id)
        Return the element whose "id" attribute is $id

    getEltById
        Same as "elt_id"

    index ($index_name, $optional_index)
        If the $optional_index argument is present, return the corresponding element in the index
        (created using the "index" option for "XML::Twig-"new>)

        If the argument is not present, return an arrayref to the index

    normalize
        merge together all consecutive pcdata elements in the document (if for example you have
        turned some elements into pcdata using "erase", this will give you a "clean" document in
        which there all text elements are as long as possible).

    encoding
        This method returns the encoding of the XML document, as defined by the "encoding" attribute
        in the XML declaration (ie it is "undef" if the attribute is not defined)

    set_encoding
        This method sets the value of the "encoding" attribute in the XML declaration. Note that if
        the document did not have a declaration it is generated (with an XML version of 1.0)

    xml_version
        This method returns the XML version, as defined by the "version" attribute in the XML
        declaration (ie it is "undef" if the attribute is not defined)

    set_xml_version
        This method sets the value of the "version" attribute in the XML declaration. If the
        declaration did not exist it is created.

    standalone
        This method returns the value of the "standalone" declaration for the document

    set_standalone
        This method sets the value of the "standalone" attribute in the XML declaration. Note that
        if the document did not have a declaration it is generated (with an XML version of 1.0)

    set_output_encoding
        Set the "encoding" "attribute" in the XML declaration

    set_doctype ($name, $system, $public, $internal)
        Set the doctype of the element. If an argument is "undef" (or not present) then its former
        value is retained, if a false ('' or 0) value is passed then the former value is deleted;

    entity_list
        Return the entity list of a twig

    entity_names
        Return the list of all defined entities

    entity ($entity_name)
        Return the entity

    notation_list
        Return the notation list of a twig

    notation_names
        Return the list of all defined notations

    notation ($notation_name)
        Return the notation

    change_gi ($old_gi, $new_gi)
        Performs a (very fast) global change. All elements $old_gi are now $new_gi. This is a bit
        dangerous though and should be avoided if < possible, as the new tag might be ignored in
        subsequent processing.

        See "BUGS "

    flush ($optional_filehandle, %options)
        Flushes a twig up to (and including) the current element, then deletes all unnecessary
        elements from the tree that's kept in memory. "flush" keeps track of which elements need to
        be open/closed, so if you flush from handlers you don't have to worry about anything. Just
        keep flushing the twig every time you're done with a sub-tree and it will come out
        well-formed. After the whole parsing don't forget to"flush" one more time to print the end
        of the document. The doctype and entity declarations are also printed.

        flush take an optional filehandle as an argument.

        If you use "flush" at any point during parsing, the document will be flushed one last time
        at the end of the parsing, to the proper filehandle.

        options: use the "update_DTD" option if you have updated the (internal) DTD and/or the
        entity list and you want the updated DTD to be output

        The "pretty_print" option sets the pretty printing of the document.

           Example: $t->flush( Update_DTD => 1);
                    $t->flush( $filehandle, pretty_print => 'indented');
                    $t->flush( \*FILE);

    flush_up_to ($elt, $optional_filehandle, %options)
        Flushes up to the $elt element. This allows you to keep part of the tree in memory when you
        "flush".

        options: see flush.

    purge
        Does the same as a "flush" except it does not print the twig. It just deletes all elements
        that have been completely parsed so far.

    purge_up_to ($elt)
        Purges up to the $elt element. This allows you to keep part of the tree in memory when you
        "purge".

    print ($optional_filehandle, %options)
        Prints the whole document associated with the twig. To be used only AFTER the parse.

        options: see "flush".

    print_to_file ($filename, %options)
        Prints the whole document associated with the twig to file $filename. To be used only AFTER
        the parse.

        options: see "flush".

    safe_print_to_file ($filename, %options)
        Prints the whole document associated with the twig to file $filename. This variant, which
        probably only works on *nix prints to a temp file, then move the temp file to overwrite the
        original file.

        This is a bit safer when 2 processes an potentiallywrite the same file: only the last one
        will succeed, but the file won't be corruted. I often use this for cron jobs, so testing the
        code doesn't interfere with the cron job running at the same time.

        options: see "flush".

    sprint
        Return the text of the whole document associated with the twig. To be used only AFTER the
        parse.

        options: see "flush".

    trim
        Trim the document: gets rid of initial and trailing spaces, and replaces multiple spaces by
        a single one.

    toSAX1 ($handler)
        Send SAX events for the twig to the SAX1 handler $handler

    toSAX2 ($handler)
        Send SAX events for the twig to the SAX2 handler $handler

    flush_toSAX1 ($handler)
        Same as flush, except that SAX events are sent to the SAX1 handler $handler instead of the
        twig being printed

    flush_toSAX2 ($handler)
        Same as flush, except that SAX events are sent to the SAX2 handler $handler instead of the
        twig being printed

    ignore
        This method should be called during parsing, usually in "start_tag_handlers". It causes the
        element to be skipped during the parsing: the twig is not built for this element, it will
        not be accessible during parsing or after it. The element will not take up any memory and
        parsing will be faster.

        Note that this method can also be called on an element. If the element is a parent of the
        current element then this element will be ignored (the twig will not be built any more for
        it and what has already been built will be deleted).

    set_pretty_print ($style)
        Set the pretty print method, amongst '"none"' (default), '"nsgmls"', '"nice"', '"indented"',
        "indented_c", '"wrapped"', '"record"' and '"record_c"'

        WARNING: the pretty print style is a GLOBAL variable, so once set it's applied to ALL
        "print"'s (and "sprint"'s). Same goes if you use XML::Twig with "mod_perl" . This should not
        be a problem as the XML that's generated is valid anyway, and XML processors (as well as
        HTML processors, including browsers) should not care. Let me know if this is a big problem,
        but at the moment the performance/cleanliness trade-off clearly favors the global approach.

    set_empty_tag_style ($style)
        Set the empty tag display style ('"normal"', '"html"' or '"expand"'). As with
        "set_pretty_print" this sets a global flag.

        "normal" outputs an empty tag '"<tag/>"', "html" adds a space '"<tag />"' for elements that
        can be empty in XHTML and "expand" outputs '"<tag></tag>"'

    set_remove_cdata ($flag)
        set (or unset) the flag that forces the twig to output CDATA sections as regular (escaped)
        PCDATA

    print_prolog ($optional_filehandle, %options)
        Prints the prolog (XML declaration + DTD + entity declarations) of a document.

        options: see "flush".

    prolog ($optional_filehandle, %options)
        Return the prolog (XML declaration + DTD + entity declarations) of a document.

        options: see "flush".

    finish
        Call Expat "finish" method. Unsets all handlers (including internal ones that set context),
        but expat continues parsing to the end of the document or until it finds an error. It should
        finish up a lot faster than with the handlers set.

    finish_print
        Stops twig processing, flush the twig and proceed to finish printing the document as fast as
        possible. Use this method when modifying a document and the modification is done.

    finish_now
        Stops twig processing, does not finish parsing the document (which could actually be not
        well-formed after the point where "finish_now" is called). Execution resumes after the
        "Lparse"> or "parsefile" call. The content of the twig is what has been parsed so far (all
        open elements at the time "finish_now" is called are considered closed).

    set_expand_external_entities
        Same as using the "expand_external_ents" option when creating the twig

    set_input_filter
        Same as using the "input_filter" option when creating the twig

    set_keep_atts_order
        Same as using the "keep_atts_order" option when creating the twig

    set_keep_encoding
        Same as using the "keep_encoding" option when creating the twig

    escape_gt
        usually XML::Twig does not escape > in its output. Using this option makes it replace > by
        &gt;

    do_not_escape_gt
        reverts XML::Twig behavior to its default of not escaping > in its output.

    set_output_filter
        Same as using the "output_filter" option when creating the twig

    set_output_text_filter
        Same as using the "output_text_filter" option when creating the twig

    add_stylesheet ($type, @options)
        Adds an external stylesheet to an XML document.

        Supported types and options:

        xsl option: the url of the stylesheet

            Example:

              $t->add_stylesheet( xsl => "xsl_style.xsl");

            will generate the following PI at the beginning of the document:

              <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="xsl_style.xsl"?>

        css option: the url of the stylesheet

        active_twig
            a class method that returns the last processed twig, so you don't necessarily need the
            object to call methods on it.

    Methods inherited from XML::Parser::Expat
        A twig inherits all the relevant methods from XML::Parser::Expat. These methods can only be
        used during the parsing phase (they will generate a fatal error otherwise).

        Inherited methods are:

        depth
            Returns the size of the context list.

        in_element
            Returns true if NAME is equal to the name of the innermost currently opened element. If
            namespace processing is being used and you want to check against a name that may be in a
            namespace, then use the generate_ns_name method to create the NAME argument.

        within_element
            Returns the number of times the given name appears in the context list. If namespace
            processing is being used and you want to check against a name that may be in a
            namespace, then use the generate_ns_name method to create the NAME argument.

        context
            Returns a list of element names that represent open elements, with the last one being
            the innermost. Inside start and end tag handlers, this will be the tag of the parent
            element.

        current_line
            Returns the line number of the current position of the parse.

        current_column
            Returns the column number of the current position of the parse.

        current_byte
            Returns the current position of the parse.

        position_in_context
            Returns a string that shows the current parse position. LINES should be an integer >= 0
            that represents the number of lines on either side of the current parse line to place
            into the returned string.

        base ([NEWBASE])
            Returns the current value of the base for resolving relative URIs. If NEWBASE is
            supplied, changes the base to that value.

        current_element
            Returns the name of the innermost currently opened element. Inside start or end
            handlers, returns the parent of the element associated with those tags.

        element_index
            Returns an integer that is the depth-first visit order of the current element. This will
            be zero outside of the root element. For example, this will return 1 when called from
            the start handler for the root element start tag.

        recognized_string
            Returns the string from the document that was recognized in order to call the current
            handler. For instance, when called from a start handler, it will give us the start-tag
            string. The string is encoded in UTF-8. This method doesn't return a meaningful string
            inside declaration handlers.

        original_string
            Returns the verbatim string from the document that was recognized in order to call the
            current handler. The string is in the original document encoding. This method doesn't
            return a meaningful string inside declaration handlers.

        xpcroak
            Concatenate onto the given message the current line number within the XML document plus
            the message implied by ErrorContext. Then croak with the formed message.

        xpcarp
            Concatenate onto the given message the current line number within the XML document plus
            the message implied by ErrorContext. Then carp with the formed message.

        xml_escape(TEXT [, CHAR [, CHAR ...]])
            Returns TEXT with markup characters turned into character entities. Any additional
            characters provided as arguments are also turned into character references where found
            in TEXT.

            (this method is broken on some versions of expat/XML::Parser)

    path ( $optional_tag)
        Return the element context in a form similar to XPath's short form: '"/root/tag1/../tag"'

    get_xpath ( $optional_array_ref, $xpath, $optional_offset)
        Performs a "get_xpath" on the document root (see <Elt|"Elt">)

        If the $optional_array_ref argument is used the array must contain elements. The $xpath
        expression is applied to each element in turn and the result is union of all results. This
        way a first query can be refined in further steps.

    find_nodes ( $optional_array_ref, $xpath, $optional_offset)
        same as "get_xpath"

    findnodes ( $optional_array_ref, $xpath, $optional_offset)
        same as "get_xpath" (similar to the XML::LibXML method)

    findvalue ( $optional_array_ref, $xpath, $optional_offset)
        Return the "join" of all texts of the results of applying "get_xpath" to the node (similar
        to the XML::LibXML method)

    findvalues ( $optional_array_ref, $xpath, $optional_offset)
        Return an array of all texts of the results of applying "get_xpath" to the node

    subs_text ($regexp, $replace)
        subs_text does text substitution on the whole document, similar to perl's " s///" operator.

    dispose
        Useful only if you don't have "Scalar::Util" or "WeakRef" installed.

        Reclaims properly the memory used by an XML::Twig object. As the object has circular
        references it never goes out of scope, so if you want to parse lots of XML documents then
        the memory leak becomes a problem. Use "$twig->dispose" to clear this problem.

    att_accessors (list_of_attribute_names)
        A convenience method that creates l-valued accessors for attributes. So
        "$twig->create_accessors( 'foo')" will create a "foo" method that can be called on elements:

          $elt->foo;         # equivalent to $elt->{'att'}->{'foo'};
          $elt->foo( 'bar'); # equivalent to $elt->set_att( foo => 'bar');

        The methods are l-valued only under those perl's that support this feature (5.6 and above)

    create_accessors (list_of_attribute_names)
        Same as att_accessors

    elt_accessors (list_of_attribute_names)
        A convenience method that creates accessors for elements. So "$twig->create_accessors(
        'foo')" will create a "foo" method that can be called on elements:

          $elt->foo;         # equivalent to $elt->first_child( 'foo');

    field_accessors (list_of_attribute_names)
        A convenience method that creates accessors for element values ("field"). So
        "$twig->create_accessors( 'foo')" will create a "foo" method that can be called on elements:

          $elt->foo;         # equivalent to $elt->field( 'foo');

    set_do_not_escape_amp_in_atts
        An evil method, that I only document because Test::Pod::Coverage complaints otherwise, but
        really, you don't want to know about it.

  XML::Twig::Elt
    new ($optional_tag, $optional_atts, @optional_content)
        The "tag" is optional (but then you can't have a content ), the $optional_atts argument is a
        reference to a hash of attributes, the content can be just a string or a list of strings and
        element. A content of '"#EMPTY"' creates an empty element;

         Examples: my $elt= XML::Twig::Elt->new();
                   my $elt= XML::Twig::Elt->new( para => { align => 'center' });
                   my $elt= XML::Twig::Elt->new( para => { align => 'center' }, 'foo');
                   my $elt= XML::Twig::Elt->new( br   => '#EMPTY');
                   my $elt= XML::Twig::Elt->new( 'para');
                   my $elt= XML::Twig::Elt->new( para => 'this is a para');
                   my $elt= XML::Twig::Elt->new( para => $elt3, 'another para');

        The strings are not parsed, the element is not attached to any twig.

        WARNING: if you rely on ID's then you will have to set the id yourself. At this point the
        element does not belong to a twig yet, so the ID attribute is not known so it won't be
        stored in the ID list.

        Note that "#COMMENT", "#PCDATA" or "#CDATA" are valid tag names, that will create text
        elements.

        To create an element "foo" containing a CDATA section:

                   my $foo= XML::Twig::Elt->new( '#CDATA' => "content of the CDATA section")
                                          ->wrap_in( 'foo');

        An attribute of '#CDATA', will create the content of the element as CDATA:

          my $elt= XML::Twig::Elt->new( 'p' => { '#CDATA' => 1}, 'foo < bar');

        creates an element

          <p><![CDATA[foo < bar]]></>

    parse ($string, %args)
        Creates an element from an XML string. The string is actually parsed as a new twig, then the
        root of that twig is returned. The arguments in %args are passed to the twig. As always if
        the parse fails the parser will die, so use an eval if you want to trap syntax errors.

        As obviously the element does not exist beforehand this method has to be called on the
        class:

          my $elt= parse XML::Twig::Elt( "<a> string to parse, with <sub/>
                                          <elements>, actually tons of </elements>
                          h</a>");

    set_inner_xml ($string)
        Sets the content of the element to be the tree created from the string

    set_inner_html ($string)
        Sets the content of the element, after parsing the string with an HTML parser (HTML::Parser)

    set_outer_xml ($string)
        Replaces the element with the tree created from the string

    print ($optional_filehandle, $optional_pretty_print_style)
        Prints an entire element, including the tags, optionally to a $optional_filehandle,
        optionally with a $pretty_print_style.

        The print outputs XML data so base entities are escaped.

    print_to_file ($filename, %options)
        Prints the element to file $filename.

        options: see "flush". =item sprint ($elt, $optional_no_enclosing_tag)

        Return the xml string for an entire element, including the tags. If the optional second
        argument is true then only the string inside the element is returned (the start and end tag
        for $elt are not). The text is XML-escaped: base entities (& and < in text, & < and " in
        attribute values) are turned into entities.

    gi  Return the gi of the element (the gi is the "generic identifier" the tag name in SGML
        parlance).

        "tag" and "name" are synonyms of "gi".

    tag Same as "gi"

    name
        Same as "tag"

    set_gi ($tag)
        Set the gi (tag) of an element

    set_tag ($tag)
        Set the tag (="tag") of an element

    set_name ($name)
        Set the name (="tag") of an element

    root
        Return the root of the twig in which the element is contained.

    twig
        Return the twig containing the element.

    parent ($optional_condition)
        Return the parent of the element, or the first ancestor matching the $optional_condition

    first_child ($optional_condition)
        Return the first child of the element, or the first child matching the $optional_condition

    has_child ($optional_condition)
        Return the first child of the element, or the first child matching the $optional_condition
        (same as first_child)

    has_children ($optional_condition)
        Return the first child of the element, or the first child matching the $optional_condition
        (same as first_child)

    first_child_text ($optional_condition)
        Return the text of the first child of the element, or the first child matching the
        $optional_condition If there is no first_child then returns ''. This avoids getting the
        child, checking for its existence then getting the text for trivial cases.

        Similar methods are available for the other navigation methods:

        last_child_text
        prev_sibling_text
        next_sibling_text
        prev_elt_text
        next_elt_text
        child_text
        parent_text

        All this methods also exist in "trimmed" variant:

        first_child_trimmed_text
        last_child_trimmed_text
        prev_sibling_trimmed_text
        next_sibling_trimmed_text
        prev_elt_trimmed_text
        next_elt_trimmed_text
        child_trimmed_text
        parent_trimmed_text

    field ($condition)
        Same method as "first_child_text" with a different name

    fields ($condition_list)
        Return the list of field (text of first child matching the conditions), missing fields are
        returned as the empty string.

        Same method as "first_child_text" with a different name

    trimmed_field ($optional_condition)
        Same method as "first_child_trimmed_text" with a different name

    set_field ($condition, $optional_atts, @list_of_elt_and_strings)
        Set the content of the first child of the element that matches $condition, the rest of the
        arguments is the same as for "set_content"

        If no child matches $condition _and_ if $condition is a valid XML element name, then a new
        element by that name is created and inserted as the last child.

    first_child_matches ($optional_condition)
        Return the element if the first child of the element (if it exists) passes the
        $optional_condition "undef" otherwise

          if( $elt->first_child_matches( 'title')) ...

        is equivalent to

          if( $elt->{first_child} && $elt->{first_child}->passes( 'title'))

        "first_child_is" is another name for this method

        Similar methods are available for the other navigation methods:

        last_child_matches
        prev_sibling_matches
        next_sibling_matches
        prev_elt_matches
        next_elt_matches
        child_matches
        parent_matches

    is_first_child ($optional_condition)
        returns true (the element) if the element is the first child of its parent (optionally that
        satisfies the $optional_condition)

    is_last_child ($optional_condition)
        returns true (the element) if the element is the last child of its parent (optionally that
        satisfies the $optional_condition)

    prev_sibling ($optional_condition)
        Return the previous sibling of the element, or the previous sibling matching
        $optional_condition

    next_sibling ($optional_condition)
        Return the next sibling of the element, or the first one matching $optional_condition.

    next_elt ($optional_elt, $optional_condition)
        Return the next elt (optionally matching $optional_condition) of the element. This is
        defined as the next element which opens after the current element opens. Which usually means
        the first child of the element. Counter-intuitive as it might look this allows you to loop
        through the whole document by starting from the root.

        The $optional_elt is the root of a subtree. When the "next_elt" is out of the subtree then
        the method returns undef. You can then walk a sub-tree with:

          my $elt= $subtree_root;
          while( $elt= $elt->next_elt( $subtree_root))
            { # insert processing code here
            }

    prev_elt ($optional_condition)
        Return the previous elt (optionally matching $optional_condition) of the element. This is
        the first element which opens before the current one. It is usually either the last
        descendant of the previous sibling or simply the parent

    next_n_elt ($offset, $optional_condition)
        Return the $offset-th element that matches the $optional_condition

    following_elt
        Return the following element (as per the XPath following axis)

    preceding_elt
        Return the preceding element (as per the XPath preceding axis)

    following_elts
        Return the list of following elements (as per the XPath following axis)

    preceding_elts
        Return the list of preceding elements (as per the XPath preceding axis)

    children ($optional_condition)
        Return the list of children (optionally which matches $optional_condition) of the element.
        The list is in document order.

    children_count ($optional_condition)
        Return the number of children of the element (optionally which matches $optional_condition)

    children_text ($optional_condition)
        In array context, returns an array containing the text of children of the element
        (optionally which matches $optional_condition)

        In scalar context, returns the concatenation of the text of children of the element

    children_trimmed_text ($optional_condition)
        In array context, returns an array containing the trimmed text of children of the element
        (optionally which matches $optional_condition)

        In scalar context, returns the concatenation of the trimmed text of children of the element

    children_copy ($optional_condition)
        Return a list of elements that are copies of the children of the element, optionally which
        matches $optional_condition

    descendants ($optional_condition)
        Return the list of all descendants (optionally which matches $optional_condition) of the
        element. This is the equivalent of the "getElementsByTagName" of the DOM (by the way, if you
        are really a DOM addict, you can use "getElementsByTagName" instead)

    getElementsByTagName ($optional_condition)
        Same as "descendants"

    find_by_tag_name ($optional_condition)
        Same as "descendants"

    descendants_or_self ($optional_condition)
        Same as "descendants" except that the element itself is included in the list if it matches
        the $optional_condition

    first_descendant ($optional_condition)
        Return the first descendant of the element that matches the condition

    last_descendant ($optional_condition)
        Return the last descendant of the element that matches the condition

    ancestors ($optional_condition)
        Return the list of ancestors (optionally matching $optional_condition) of the element. The
        list is ordered from the innermost ancestor to the outermost one

        NOTE: the element itself is not part of the list, in order to include it you will have to
        use ancestors_or_self

    ancestors_or_self ($optional_condition)
        Return the list of ancestors (optionally matching $optional_condition) of the element,
        including the element (if it matches the condition>). The list is ordered from the innermost
        ancestor to the outermost one

    passes ($condition)
        Return the element if it passes the $condition

    att ($att)
        Return the value of attribute $att or "undef"

    latt ($att)
        Return the value of attribute $att or "undef"

        this method is an lvalue, so you can do "$elt->latt( 'foo')= 'bar'" or "$elt->latt(
        'foo')++;"

    set_att ($att, $att_value)
        Set the attribute of the element to the given value

        You can actually set several attributes this way:

          $elt->set_att( att1 => "val1", att2 => "val2");

    del_att ($att)
        Delete the attribute for the element

        You can actually delete several attributes at once:

          $elt->del_att( 'att1', 'att2', 'att3');

    att_exists ($att)
        Returns true if the attribute $att exists for the element, false otherwise

    cut Cut the element from the tree. The element still exists, it can be copied or pasted
        somewhere else, it is just not attached to the tree anymore.

        Note that the "old" links to the parent, previous and next siblings can still be accessed
        using the former_* methods

    former_next_sibling
        Returns the former next sibling of a cut node (or undef if the node has not been cut)

        This makes it easier to write loops where you cut elements:

            my $child= $parent->first_child( 'achild');
            while( $child->{'att'}->{'cut'})
              { $child->cut; $child= ($child->{former} && $child->{former}->{next_sibling}); }

    former_prev_sibling
        Returns the former previous sibling of a cut node (or undef if the node has not been cut)

    former_parent
        Returns the former parent of a cut node (or undef if the node has not been cut)

    cut_children ($optional_condition)
        Cut all the children of the element (or all of those which satisfy the $optional_condition).

        Return the list of children

    cut_descendants ($optional_condition)
        Cut all the descendants of the element (or all of those which satisfy the
        $optional_condition).

        Return the list of descendants

    copy ($elt)
        Return a copy of the element. The copy is a "deep" copy: all sub-elements of the element are
        duplicated.

    paste ($optional_position, $ref)
        Paste a (previously "cut" or newly generated) element. Die if the element already belongs to
        a tree.

        Note that the calling element is pasted:

          $child->paste( first_child => $existing_parent);
          $new_sibling->paste( after => $this_sibling_is_already_in_the_tree);

        or

          my $new_elt= XML::Twig::Elt->new( tag => $content);
          $new_elt->paste( $position => $existing_elt);

        Example:

          my $t= XML::Twig->new->parse( 'doc.xml')
          my $toc= $t->root->new( 'toc');
          $toc->paste( $t->root); # $toc is pasted as first child of the root
          foreach my $title ($t->findnodes( '/doc/section/title'))
            { my $title_toc= $title->copy;
              # paste $title_toc as the last child of toc
              $title_toc->paste( last_child => $toc)
            }

        Position options:

        first_child (default)
            The element is pasted as the first child of $ref

        last_child
            The element is pasted as the last child of $ref

        before
            The element is pasted before $ref, as its previous sibling.

        after
            The element is pasted after $ref, as its next sibling.

        within
            In this case an extra argument, $offset, should be supplied. The element will be pasted
            in the reference element (or in its first text child) at the given offset. To achieve
            this the reference element will be split at the offset.

        Note that you can call directly the underlying method:

        paste_before
        paste_after
        paste_first_child
        paste_last_child
        paste_within

    move ($optional_position, $ref)
        Move an element in the tree. This is just a "cut" then a "paste". The syntax is the same as
        "paste".

    replace ($ref)
        Replaces an element in the tree. Sometimes it is just not possible to"cut" an element then
        "paste" another in its place, so "replace" comes in handy. The calling element replaces
        $ref.

    replace_with (@elts)
        Replaces the calling element with one or more elements

    delete
        Cut the element and frees the memory.

    prefix ($text, $optional_option)
        Add a prefix to an element. If the element is a "PCDATA" element the text is added to the
        pcdata, if the elements first child is a "PCDATA" then the text is added to it's pcdata,
        otherwise a new "PCDATA" element is created and pasted as the first child of the element.

        If the option is "asis" then the prefix is added asis: it is created in a separate "PCDATA"
        element with an "asis" property. You can then write:

          $elt1->prefix( '<b>', 'asis');

        to create a "<b>" in the output of "print".

    suffix ($text, $optional_option)
        Add a suffix to an element. If the element is a "PCDATA" element the text is added to the
        pcdata, if the elements last child is a "PCDATA" then the text is added to it's pcdata,
        otherwise a new PCDATA element is created and pasted as the last child of the element.

        If the option is "asis" then the suffix is added asis: it is created in a separate "PCDATA"
        element with an "asis" property. You can then write:

          $elt2->suffix( '</b>', 'asis');

    trim
        Trim the element in-place: spaces at the beginning and at the end of the element are
        discarded and multiple spaces within the element (or its descendants) are replaced by a
        single space.

        Note that in some cases you can still end up with multiple spaces, if they are split between
        several elements:

          <doc>  text <b>  hah! </b>  yep</doc>

        gets trimmed to

          <doc>text <b> hah! </b> yep</doc>

        This is somewhere in between a bug and a feature.

    normalize
        merge together all consecutive pcdata elements in the element (if for example you have
        turned some elements into pcdata using "erase", this will give you a "clean" element in
        which there all text fragments are as long as possible).

    simplify (%options)
        Return a data structure suspiciously similar to XML::Simple's. Options are identical to
        XMLin options, see XML::Simple doc for more details (or use DATA::dumper or YAML to dump the
        data structure)

        Note: there is no magic here, if you write "$twig->parsefile( $file )->simplify();" then it
        will load the entire document in memory. I am afraid you will have to put some work into it
        to get just the bits you want and discard the rest. Look at the synopsis or the XML::Twig
        101 section at the top of the docs for more information.

        content_key
        forcearray
        keyattr
        noattr
        normalize_space
            aka normalise_space

        variables (%var_hash)
            %var_hash is a hash { name => value }

            This option allows variables in the XML to be expanded when the file is read. (there is
            no facility for putting the variable names back if you regenerate XML using XMLout).

            A 'variable' is any text of the form ${name} (or $name) which occurs in an attribute
            value or in the text content of an element. If 'name' matches a key in the supplied
            hashref, ${name} will be replaced with the corresponding value from the hashref. If no
            matching key is found, the variable will not be replaced.

        var_att ($attribute_name)
            This option gives the name of an attribute that will be used to create variables in the
            XML:

              <dirs>
                <dir name="prefix">/usr/local</dir>
                <dir name="exec_prefix">$prefix/bin</dir>
              </dirs>

            use "var => 'name'" to get $prefix replaced by /usr/local in the generated data
            structure

            By default variables are captured by the following regexp: /$(\w+)/

        var_regexp (regexp)
            This option changes the regexp used to capture variables. The variable name should be in
            $1

        group_tags { grouping tag => grouped tag, grouping tag 2 => grouped tag 2...}
            Option used to simplify the structure: elements listed will not be used. Their children
            will be, they will be considered children of the element parent.

            If the element is:

              <config host="laptop.xmltwig.org">
                <server>localhost</server>
                <dirs>
                  <dir name="base">/home/mrodrigu/standards</dir>
                  <dir name="tools">$base/tools</dir>
                </dirs>
                <templates>
                  <template name="std_def">std_def.templ</template>
                  <template name="dummy">dummy</template>
                </templates>
              </config>

            Then calling simplify with "group_tags => { dirs => 'dir', templates => 'template'}"
            makes the data structure be exactly as if the start and end tags for "dirs" and
            "templates" were not there.

            A YAML dump of the structure

              base: '/home/mrodrigu/standards'
              host: laptop.xmltwig.org
              server: localhost
              template:
                - std_def.templ
                - dummy.templ
              tools: '$base/tools'

    split_at ($offset)
        Split a text ("PCDATA" or "CDATA") element in 2 at $offset, the original element now holds
        the first part of the string and a new element holds the right part. The new element is
        returned

        If the element is not a text element then the first text child of the element is split

    split ( $optional_regexp, $tag1, $atts1, $tag2, $atts2...)
        Split the text descendants of an element in place, the text is split using the $regexp, if
        the regexp includes () then the matched separators will be wrapped in elements. $1 is
        wrapped in $tag1, with attributes $atts1 if $atts1 is given (as a hashref), $2 is wrapped in
        $tag2...

        if $elt is "<p>tati tata <b>tutu tati titi</b> tata tati tata</p>"

          $elt->split( qr/(ta)ti/, 'foo', {type => 'toto'} )

        will change $elt to

          <p><foo type="toto">ta</foo> tata <b>tutu <foo type="toto">ta</foo>
              titi</b> tata <foo type="toto">ta</foo> tata</p>

        The regexp can be passed either as a string or as "qr//" (perl 5.005 and later), it defaults
        to \s+ just as the "split" built-in (but this would be quite a useless behaviour without the
        $optional_tag parameter)

        $optional_tag defaults to PCDATA or CDATA, depending on the initial element type

        The list of descendants is returned (including un-touched original elements and newly
        created ones)

    mark ( $regexp, $optional_tag, $optional_attribute_ref)
        This method behaves exactly as split, except only the newly created elements are returned

    wrap_children ( $regexp_string, $tag, $optional_attribute_hashref)
        Wrap the children of the element that match the regexp in an element $tag. If
        $optional_attribute_hashref is passed then the new element will have these attributes.

        The $regexp_string includes tags, within pointy brackets, as in "<title><para>+" and the
        usual Perl modifiers (+*?...). Tags can be further qualified with attributes: "<para
        type="warning" classif="cosmic_secret">+". The values for attributes should be xml-escaped:
        "<candy type="M&amp;Ms">*" ("<", "&" ">" and """ should be escaped).

        Note that elements might get extra "id" attributes in the process. See add_id. Use strip_att
        to remove unwanted id's.

        Here is an example:

        If the element $elt has the following content:

          <elt>
           <p>para 1</p>
           <l_l1_1>list 1 item 1 para 1</l_l1_1>
             <l_l1>list 1 item 1 para 2</l_l1>
           <l_l1_n>list 1 item 2 para 1 (only para)</l_l1_n>
           <l_l1_n>list 1 item 3 para 1</l_l1_n>
             <l_l1>list 1 item 3 para 2</l_l1>
             <l_l1>list 1 item 3 para 3</l_l1>
           <l_l1_1>list 2 item 1 para 1</l_l1_1>
             <l_l1>list 2 item 1 para 2</l_l1>
           <l_l1_n>list 2 item 2 para 1 (only para)</l_l1_n>
           <l_l1_n>list 2 item 3 para 1</l_l1_n>
             <l_l1>list 2 item 3 para 2</l_l1>
             <l_l1>list 2 item 3 para 3</l_l1>
          </elt>

        Then the code

          $elt->wrap_children( q{<l_l1_1><l_l1>*} , li => { type => "ul1" });
          $elt->wrap_children( q{<l_l1_n><l_l1>*} , li => { type => "ul" });

          $elt->wrap_children( q{<li type="ul1"><li type="ul">+}, "ul");
          $elt->strip_att( 'id');
          $elt->strip_att( 'type');
          $elt->print;

        will output:

          <elt>
             <p>para 1</p>
             <ul>
               <li>
                 <l_l1_1>list 1 item 1 para 1</l_l1_1>
                 <l_l1>list 1 item 1 para 2</l_l1>
               </li>
               <li>
                 <l_l1_n>list 1 item 2 para 1 (only para)</l_l1_n>
               </li>
               <li>
                 <l_l1_n>list 1 item 3 para 1</l_l1_n>
                 <l_l1>list 1 item 3 para 2</l_l1>
                 <l_l1>list 1 item 3 para 3</l_l1>
               </li>
             </ul>
             <ul>
               <li>
                 <l_l1_1>list 2 item 1 para 1</l_l1_1>
                 <l_l1>list 2 item 1 para 2</l_l1>
               </li>
               <li>
                 <l_l1_n>list 2 item 2 para 1 (only para)</l_l1_n>
               </li>
               <li>
                 <l_l1_n>list 2 item 3 para 1</l_l1_n>
                 <l_l1>list 2 item 3 para 2</l_l1>
                 <l_l1>list 2 item 3 para 3</l_l1>
               </li>
             </ul>
          </elt>

    subs_text ($regexp, $replace)
        subs_text does text substitution, similar to perl's " s///" operator.

        $regexp must be a perl regexp, created with the "qr" operator.

        $replace can include "$1, $2"... from the $regexp. It can also be used to create element and
        entities, by using "&elt( tag => { att => val }, text)" (similar syntax as "new") and "&ent(
        name)".

        Here is a rather complex example:

          $elt->subs_text( qr{(?<!do not )link to (http://([^\s,]*))},
                           'see &elt( a =>{ href => $1 }, $2)'
                         );

        This will replace text like *link to http://www.xmltwig.org* by *see <a
        href="www.xmltwig.org">www.xmltwig.org</a>*, but not *do not link to...*

        Generating entities (here replacing spaces with &nbsp;):

          $elt->subs_text( qr{ }, '&ent( "&nbsp;")');

        or, using a variable:

          my $ent="&nbsp;";
          $elt->subs_text( qr{ }, "&ent( '$ent')");

        Note that the substitution is always global, as in using the "g" modifier in a perl
        substitution, and that it is performed on all text descendants of the element.

        Bug: in the $regexp, you can only use "\1", "\2"... if the replacement expression does not
        include elements or attributes. eg

          $t->subs_text( qr/((t[aiou])\2)/, '$2');             # ok, replaces toto, tata, titi, tutu by to, ta, ti, tu
          $t->subs_text( qr/((t[aiou])\2)/, '&elt(p => $1)' ); # NOK, does not find toto...

    add_id ($optional_coderef)
        Add an id to the element.

        The id is an attribute, "id" by default, see the "id" option for XML::Twig "new" to change
        it. Use an id starting with "#" to get an id that's not output by print, flush or sprint,
        yet that allows you to use the elt_id method to get the element easily.

        If the element already has an id, no new id is generated.

        By default the method create an id of the form "twig_id_<nnnn>", where "<nnnn>" is a number,
        incremented each time the method is called successfully.

    set_id_seed ($prefix)
        by default the id generated by "add_id" is "twig_id_<nnnn>", "set_id_seed" changes the
        prefix to $prefix and resets the number to 1

    strip_att ($att)
        Remove the attribute $att from all descendants of the element (including the element)

        Return the element

    change_att_name ($old_name, $new_name)
        Change the name of the attribute from $old_name to $new_name. If there is no attribute
        $old_name nothing happens.

    lc_attnames
        Lower cases the name all the attributes of the element.

    sort_children_on_value( %options)
        Sort the children of the element in place according to their text. All children are sorted.

        Return the element, with its children sorted.

        %options are

          type  : numeric |  alpha     (default: alpha)
          order : normal  |  reverse   (default: normal)

        Return the element, with its children sorted

    sort_children_on_att ($att, %options)
        Sort the children of the element in place according to attribute $att. %options are the same
        as for "sort_children_on_value"

        Return the element.

    sort_children_on_field ($tag, %options)
        Sort the children of the element in place, according to the field $tag (the text of the
        first child of the child with this tag). %options are the same as for
        "sort_children_on_value".

        Return the element, with its children sorted

    sort_children( $get_key, %options)
        Sort the children of the element in place. The $get_key argument is a reference to a
        function that returns the sort key when passed an element.

        For example:

          $elt->sort_children( sub { $_[0]->{'att'}->{"nb"} + $_[0]->text },
                               type => 'numeric', order => 'reverse'
                             );

    field_to_att ($cond, $att)
        Turn the text of the first sub-element matched by $cond into the value of attribute $att of
        the element. If $att is omitted then $cond is used as the name of the attribute, which makes
        sense only if $cond is a valid element (and attribute) name.

        The sub-element is then cut.

    att_to_field ($att, $tag)
        Take the value of attribute $att and create a sub-element $tag as first child of the
        element. If $tag is omitted then $att is used as the name of the sub-element.

    get_xpath ($xpath, $optional_offset)
        Return a list of elements satisfying the $xpath. $xpath is an XPATH-like expression.

        A subset of the XPATH abbreviated syntax is covered:

          tag
          tag[1] (or any other positive number)
          tag[last()]
          tag[@att] (the attribute exists for the element)
          tag[@att="val"]
          tag[@att=~ /regexp/]
          tag[att1="val1" and att2="val2"]
          tag[att1="val1" or att2="val2"]
          tag[string()="toto"] (returns tag elements which text (as per the text method)
                               is toto)
          tag[string()=~/regexp/] (returns tag elements which text (as per the text
                                  method) matches regexp)
          expressions can start with / (search starts at the document root)
          expressions can start with . (search starts at the current element)
          // can be used to get all descendants instead of just direct children
          * matches any tag

        So the following examples from the XPath
        recommendation<http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath.html#path-abbrev> work:

          para selects the para element children of the context node
          * selects all element children of the context node
          para[1] selects the first para child of the context node
          para[last()] selects the last para child of the context node
          */para selects all para grandchildren of the context node
          /doc/chapter[5]/section[2] selects the second section of the fifth chapter
             of the doc
          chapter//para selects the para element descendants of the chapter element
             children of the context node
          //para selects all the para descendants of the document root and thus selects
             all para elements in the same document as the context node
          //olist/item selects all the item elements in the same document as the
             context node that have an olist parent
          .//para selects the para element descendants of the context node
          .. selects the parent of the context node
          para[@type="warning"] selects all para children of the context node that have
             a type attribute with value warning
          employee[@secretary and @assistant] selects all the employee children of the
             context node that have both a secretary attribute and an assistant
             attribute

        The elements will be returned in the document order.

        If $optional_offset is used then only one element will be returned, the one with the
        appropriate offset in the list, starting at 0

        Quoting and interpolating variables can be a pain when the Perl syntax and the XPATH syntax
        collide, so use alternate quoting mechanisms like q or qq (I like q{} and qq{} myself).

        Here are some more examples to get you started:

          my $p1= "p1";
          my $p2= "p2";
          my @res= $t->get_xpath( qq{p[string( "$p1") or string( "$p2")]});

          my $a= "a1";
          my @res= $t->get_xpath( qq{//*[@att="$a"]});

          my $val= "a1";
          my $exp= qq{//p[ \@att='$val']}; # you need to use \@ or you will get a warning
          my @res= $t->get_xpath( $exp);

        Note that the only supported regexps delimiters are / and that you must backslash all / in
        regexps AND in regular strings.

        XML::Twig does not provide natively full XPATH support, but you can use "XML::Twig::XPath"
        to get "findnodes" to use "XML::XPath" as the XPath engine, with full coverage of the spec.

        "XML::Twig::XPath" to get "findnodes" to use "XML::XPath" as the XPath engine, with full
        coverage of the spec.

    find_nodes
        same as"get_xpath"

    findnodes
        same as "get_xpath"

    text @optional_options
        Return a string consisting of all the "PCDATA" and "CDATA" in an element, without any tags.
        The text is not XML-escaped: base entities such as "&" and "<" are not escaped.

        The '"no_recurse"' option will only return the text of the element, not of any included
        sub-elements (same as "text_only").

    text_only
        Same as "text" except that the text returned doesn't include the text of sub-elements.

    trimmed_text
        Same as "text" except that the text is trimmed: leading and trailing spaces are discarded,
        consecutive spaces are collapsed

    set_text ($string)
        Set the text for the element: if the element is a "PCDATA", just set its text, otherwise cut
        all the children of the element and create a single "PCDATA" child for it, which holds the
        text.

    merge ($elt2)
        Move the content of $elt2 within the element

    insert ($tag1, [$optional_atts1], $tag2, [$optional_atts2],...)
        For each tag in the list inserts an element $tag as the only child of the element. The
        element gets the optional attributes in"$optional_atts<n>." All children of the element are
        set as children of the new element. The upper level element is returned.

          $p->insert( table => { border=> 1}, 'tr', 'td')

        put $p in a table with a visible border, a single "tr" and a single "td" and return the
        "table" element:

          <p><table border="1"><tr><td>original content of p</td></tr></table></p>

    wrap_in (@tag)
        Wrap elements in @tag as the successive ancestors of the element, returns the new element.
        "$elt->wrap_in( 'td', 'tr', 'table')" wraps the element as a single cell in a table for
        example.

        Optionally each tag can be followed by a hashref of attributes, that will be set on the
        wrapping element:

          $elt->wrap_in( p => { class => "advisory" }, div => { class => "intro", id => "div_intro" });

    insert_new_elt ($opt_position, $tag, $opt_atts_hashref, @opt_content)
        Combines a "new " and a "paste ": creates a new element using $tag, $opt_atts_hashref and
        @opt_content which are arguments similar to those for "new", then paste it, using
        $opt_position or 'first_child', relative to $elt.

        Return the newly created element

    erase
        Erase the element: the element is deleted and all of its children are pasted in its place.

    set_content ( $optional_atts, @list_of_elt_and_strings) ( $optional_atts, '#EMPTY')
        Set the content for the element, from a list of strings and elements. Cuts all the element
        children, then pastes the list elements as the children. This method will create a "PCDATA"
        element for any strings in the list.

        The $optional_atts argument is the ref of a hash of attributes. If this argument is used
        then the previous attributes are deleted, otherwise they are left untouched.

        WARNING: if you rely on ID's then you will have to set the id yourself. At this point the
        element does not belong to a twig yet, so the ID attribute is not known so it won't be
        stored in the ID list.

        A content of '"#EMPTY"' creates an empty element;

    namespace ($optional_prefix)
        Return the URI of the namespace that $optional_prefix or the element name belongs to. If the
        name doesn't belong to any namespace, "undef" is returned.

    local_name
        Return the local name (without the prefix) for the element

    ns_prefix
        Return the namespace prefix for the element

    current_ns_prefixes
        Return a list of namespace prefixes valid for the element. The order of the prefixes in the
        list has no meaning. If the default namespace is currently bound, '' appears in the list.

    inherit_att ($att, @optional_tag_list)
        Return the value of an attribute inherited from parent tags. The value returned is found by
        looking for the attribute in the element then in turn in each of its ancestors. If the
        @optional_tag_list is supplied only those ancestors whose tag is in the list will be
        checked.

    all_children_are ($optional_condition)
        return 1 if all children of the element pass the $optional_condition, 0 otherwise

    level ($optional_condition)
        Return the depth of the element in the twig (root is 0). If $optional_condition is given
        then only ancestors that match the condition are counted.

        WARNING: in a tree created using the "twig_roots" option this will not return the level in
        the document tree, level 0 will be the document root, level 1 will be the "twig_roots"
        elements. During the parsing (in a "twig_handler") you can use the "depth" method on the
        twig object to get the real parsing depth.

    in ($potential_parent)
        Return true if the element is in the potential_parent ($potential_parent is an element)

    in_context ($cond, $optional_level)
        Return true if the element is included in an element which passes $cond optionally within
        $optional_level levels. The returned value is the including element.

    pcdata
        Return the text of a "PCDATA" element or "undef" if the element is not "PCDATA".

    pcdata_xml_string
        Return the text of a "PCDATA" element or undef if the element is not "PCDATA". The text is
        "XML-escaped" ('&' and '<' are replaced by '&amp;' and '&lt;')

    set_pcdata ($text)
        Set the text of a "PCDATA" element. This method does not check that the element is indeed a
        "PCDATA" so usually you should use "set_text" instead.

    append_pcdata ($text)
        Add the text at the end of a "PCDATA" element.

    is_cdata
        Return 1 if the element is a "CDATA" element, returns 0 otherwise.

    is_text
        Return 1 if the element is a "CDATA" or "PCDATA" element, returns 0 otherwise.

    cdata
        Return the text of a "CDATA" element or "undef" if the element is not "CDATA".

    cdata_string
        Return the XML string of a "CDATA" element, including the opening and closing markers.

    set_cdata ($text)
        Set the text of a "CDATA" element.

    append_cdata ($text)
        Add the text at the end of a "CDATA" element.

    remove_cdata
        Turns all "CDATA" sections in the element into regular "PCDATA" elements. This is useful
        when converting XML to HTML, as browsers do not support CDATA sections.

    extra_data
        Return the extra_data (comments and PI's) attached to an element

    set_extra_data ($extra_data)
        Set the extra_data (comments and PI's) attached to an element

    append_extra_data ($extra_data)
        Append extra_data to the existing extra_data before the element (if no previous extra_data
        exists then it is created)

    set_asis
        Set a property of the element that causes it to be output without being XML escaped by the
        print functions: if it contains "a < b" it will be output as such and not as "a &lt; b".
        This can be useful to create text elements that will be output as markup. Note that all
        "PCDATA" descendants of the element are also marked as having the property (they are the
        ones that are actually impacted by the change).

        If the element is a "CDATA" element it will also be output asis, without the "CDATA"
        markers. The same goes for any "CDATA" descendant of the element

    set_not_asis
        Unsets the "asis" property for the element and its text descendants.

    is_asis
        Return the "asis" property status of the element ( 1 or "undef")

    closed
        Return true if the element has been closed. Might be useful if you are somewhere in the
        tree, during the parse, and have no idea whether a parent element is completely loaded or
        not.

    get_type
        Return the type of the element: '"#ELT"' for "real" elements, or '"#PCDATA"', '"#CDATA"',
        '"#COMMENT"', '"#ENT"', '"#PI"'

    is_elt
        Return the tag if the element is a "real" element, or 0 if it is "PCDATA", "CDATA"...

    contains_only_text
        Return 1 if the element does not contain any other "real" element

    contains_only ($exp)
        Return the list of children if all children of the element match the expression $exp

          if( $para->contains_only( 'tt')) { ... }

    contains_a_single ($exp)
        If the element contains a single child that matches the expression $exp returns that
        element. Otherwise returns 0.

    is_field
        same as "contains_only_text"

    is_pcdata
        Return 1 if the element is a "PCDATA" element, returns 0 otherwise.

    is_ent
        Return 1 if the element is an entity (an unexpanded entity) element, return 0 otherwise.

    is_empty
        Return 1 if the element is empty, 0 otherwise

    set_empty
        Flags the element as empty. No further check is made, so if the element is actually not
        empty the output will be messed. The only effect of this method is that the output will be
        "<tag att="value""/>".

    set_not_empty
        Flags the element as not empty. if it is actually empty then the element will be output as
        "<tag att="value""></tag>"

    is_pi
        Return 1 if the element is a processing instruction ("#PI") element, return 0 otherwise.

    target
        Return the target of a processing instruction

    set_target ($target)
        Set the target of a processing instruction

    data
        Return the data part of a processing instruction

    set_data ($data)
        Set the data of a processing instruction

    set_pi ($target, $data)
        Set the target and data of a processing instruction

    pi_string
        Return the string form of a processing instruction ("<?target data?>")

    is_comment
        Return 1 if the element is a comment ("#COMMENT") element, return 0 otherwise.

    set_comment ($comment_text)
        Set the text for a comment

    comment
        Return the content of a comment (just the text, not the "<!--" and "-->")

    comment_string
        Return the XML string for a comment ("<!-- comment -->")

        Note that an XML comment cannot start or end with a '-', or include '--'
        (http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xml-20081126/#sec-comments), if that is the case (because you
        have created the comment yourself presumably, as it could not be in the input XML), then a
        space will be inserted before an initial '-', after a trailing one or between two '-' in the
        comment (which could presumably mangle javascript "hidden" in an XHTML comment);

    set_ent ($entity)
        Set an (non-expanded) entity ("#ENT"). $entity) is the entity text ("&ent;")

    ent Return the entity for an entity ("#ENT") element ("&ent;")

    ent_name
        Return the entity name for an entity ("#ENT") element ("ent")

    ent_string
        Return the entity, either expanded if the expanded version is available, or non-expanded
        ("&ent;") otherwise

    child ($offset, $optional_condition)
        Return the $offset-th child of the element, optionally the $offset-th child that matches
        $optional_condition. The children are treated as a list, so "$elt->child( 0)" is the first
        child, while "$elt->child( -1)" is the last child.

    child_text ($offset, $optional_condition)
        Return the text of a child or "undef" if the sibling does not exist. Arguments are the same
        as child.

    last_child ($optional_condition)
        Return the last child of the element, or the last child matching $optional_condition (ie the
        last of the element children matching the condition).

    last_child_text ($optional_condition)
        Same as "first_child_text" but for the last child.

    sibling ($offset, $optional_condition)
        Return the next or previous $offset-th sibling of the element, or the $offset-th one
        matching $optional_condition. If $offset is negative then a previous sibling is returned, if
        $offset is positive then a next sibling is returned. "$offset=0" returns the element if
        there is no condition or if the element matches the condition>, "undef" otherwise.

    sibling_text ($offset, $optional_condition)
        Return the text of a sibling or "undef" if the sibling does not exist. Arguments are the
        same as "sibling".

    prev_siblings ($optional_condition)
        Return the list of previous siblings (optionally matching $optional_condition) for the
        element. The elements are ordered in document order.

    next_siblings ($optional_condition)
        Return the list of siblings (optionally matching $optional_condition) following the element.
        The elements are ordered in document order.

    siblings ($optional_condition)
        Return the list of siblings (optionally matching $optional_condition) of the element
        (excluding the element itself). The elements are ordered in document order.

    pos ($optional_condition)
        Return the position of the element in the children list. The first child has a position of 1
        (as in XPath).

        If the $optional_condition is given then only siblings that match the condition are counted.
        If the element itself does not match the condition then 0 is returned.

    atts
        Return a hash ref containing the element attributes

    set_atts ({ att1=>$att1_val, att2=> $att2_val... })
        Set the element attributes with the hash ref supplied as the argument. The previous
        attributes are lost (ie the attributes set by "set_atts" replace all of the attributes of
        the element).

        You can also pass a list instead of a hashref: "$elt->set_atts( att1 => 'val1',...)"

    del_atts
        Deletes all the element attributes.

    att_nb
        Return the number of attributes for the element

    has_atts
        Return true if the element has attributes (in fact return the number of attributes, thus
        being an alias to "att_nb"

    has_no_atts
        Return true if the element has no attributes, false (0) otherwise

    att_names
        return a list of the attribute names for the element

    att_xml_string ($att, $options)
        Return the attribute value, where '&', '<' and quote (" or the value of the quote option at
        twig creation) are XML-escaped.

        The options are passed as a hashref, setting "escape_gt" to a true value will also escape
        '>' ($elt( 'myatt', { escape_gt => 1 });

    set_id ($id)
        Set the "id" attribute of the element to the value. See "elt_id " to change the id attribute
        name

    id  Gets the id attribute value

    del_id ($id)
        Deletes the "id" attribute of the element and remove it from the id list for the document

    class
        Return the "class" attribute for the element (methods on the "class" attribute are quite
        convenient when dealing with XHTML, or plain XML that will eventually be displayed using
        CSS)

    lclass
        same as class, except that this method is an lvalue, so you can do "$elt->lclass= "foo""

    set_class ($class)
        Set the "class" attribute for the element to $class

    add_class ($class)
        Add $class to the element "class" attribute: the new class is added only if it is not
        already present.

        Note that classes are then sorted alphabetically, so the "class" attribute can be changed
        even if the class is already there

    remove_class ($class)
        Remove $class from the element "class" attribute.

        Note that classes are then sorted alphabetically, so the "class" attribute can be changed
        even if the class is already there

    add_to_class ($class)
        alias for add_class

    att_to_class ($att)
        Set the "class" attribute to the value of attribute $att

    add_att_to_class ($att)
        Add the value of attribute $att to the "class" attribute of the element

    move_att_to_class ($att)
        Add the value of attribute $att to the "class" attribute of the element and delete the
        attribute

    tag_to_class
        Set the "class" attribute of the element to the element tag

    add_tag_to_class
        Add the element tag to its "class" attribute

    set_tag_class ($new_tag)
        Add the element tag to its "class" attribute and sets the tag to $new_tag

    in_class ($class)
        Return true (1) if the element is in the class $class (if $class is one of the tokens in the
        element "class" attribute)

    tag_to_span
        Change the element tag tp "span" and set its class to the old tag

    tag_to_div
        Change the element tag tp "div" and set its class to the old tag

    DESTROY
        Frees the element from memory.

    start_tag
        Return the string for the start tag for the element, including the "/>" at the end of an
        empty element tag

    end_tag
        Return the string for the end tag of an element. For an empty element, this returns the
        empty string ('').

    xml_string @optional_options
        Equivalent to "$elt->sprint( 1)", returns the string for the entire element, excluding the
        element's tags (but nested element tags are present)

        The '"no_recurse"' option will only return the text of the element, not of any included
        sub-elements (same as "xml_text_only").

    inner_xml
        Another synonym for xml_string

    outer_xml
        Another synonym for sprint

    xml_text
        Return the text of the element, encoded (and processed by the current "output_filter" or
        "output_encoding" options, without any tag.

    xml_text_only
        Same as "xml_text" except that the text returned doesn't include the text of sub-elements.

    set_pretty_print ($style)
        Set the pretty print method, amongst '"none"' (default), '"nsgmls"', '"nice"', '"indented"',
        '"record"' and '"record_c"'

        pretty_print styles:

        none
            the default, no "\n" is used

        nsgmls
            nsgmls style, with "\n" added within tags

        nice
            adds "\n" wherever possible (NOT SAFE, can lead to invalid XML)

        indented
            same as "nice" plus indents elements (NOT SAFE, can lead to invalid XML)

        record
            table-oriented pretty print, one field per line

        record_c
            table-oriented pretty print, more compact than "record", one record per line

    set_empty_tag_style ($style)
        Set the method to output empty tags, amongst '"normal"' (default), '"html"', and '"expand"',

        "normal" outputs an empty tag '"<tag/>"', "html" adds a space '"<tag />"' for elements that
        can be empty in XHTML and "expand" outputs '"<tag></tag>"'

    set_remove_cdata ($flag)
        set (or unset) the flag that forces the twig to output CDATA sections as regular (escaped)
        PCDATA

    set_indent ($string)
        Set the indentation for the indented pretty print style (default is 2 spaces)

    set_quote ($quote)
        Set the quotes used for attributes. can be '"double"' (default) or '"single"'

    cmp ($elt)
          Compare the order of the 2 elements in a twig.

          C<$a> is the <A>..</A> element, C<$b> is the <B>...</B> element

          document                        $a->cmp( $b)
          <A> ... </A> ... <B>  ... </B>     -1
          <A> ... <B>  ... </B> ... </A>     -1
          <B> ... </B> ... <A>  ... </A>      1
          <B> ... <A>  ... </A> ... </B>      1
           $a == $b                           0
           $a and $b not in the same tree   undef

    before ($elt)
        Return 1 if $elt starts before the element, 0 otherwise. If the 2 elements are not in the
        same twig then return "undef".

            if( $a->cmp( $b) == -1) { return 1; } else { return 0; }

    after ($elt)
        Return 1 if $elt starts after the element, 0 otherwise. If the 2 elements are not in the
        same twig then return "undef".

            if( $a->cmp( $b) == -1) { return 1; } else { return 0; }

    other comparison methods

        lt
        le
        gt
        ge

    path
        Return the element context in a form similar to XPath's short form: '"/root/tag1/../tag"'

    xpath
        Return a unique XPath expression that can be used to find the element again.

        It looks like "/doc/sect[3]/title": unique elements do not have an index, the others do.

    flush
        flushes the twig up to the current element (strictly equivalent to "$elt->root->flush")

    private methods
        Low-level methods on the twig:

        set_parent ($parent)
        set_first_child ($first_child)
        set_last_child ($last_child)
        set_prev_sibling ($prev_sibling)
        set_next_sibling ($next_sibling)
        set_twig_current
        del_twig_current
        twig_current
        contains_text

        Those methods should not be used, unless of course you find some creative and interesting,
        not to mention useful, ways to do it.

  cond
    Most of the navigation functions accept a condition as an optional argument The first element
    (or all elements for "children " or "ancestors ") that passes the condition is returned.

    The condition is a single step of an XPath expression using the XPath subset defined by
    "get_xpath". Additional conditions are:

    The condition can be

    #ELT
        return a "real" element (not a PCDATA, CDATA, comment or pi element)

    #TEXT
        return a PCDATA or CDATA element

    regular expression
        return an element whose tag matches the regexp. The regexp has to be created with "qr//"
        (hence this is available only on perl 5.005 and above)

    code reference
        applies the code, passing the current element as argument, if the code returns true then the
        element is returned, if it returns false then the code is applied to the next candidate.

  XML::Twig::XPath
    XML::Twig implements a subset of XPath through the "get_xpath" method.

    If you want to use the whole XPath power, then you can use "XML::Twig::XPath" instead. In this
    case "XML::Twig" uses "XML::XPath" to execute XPath queries. You will of course need
    "XML::XPath" installed to be able to use "XML::Twig::XPath".

    See XML::XPath for more information.

    The methods you can use are:

    findnodes ($path)
        return a list of nodes found by $path.

    findnodes_as_string ($path)
        return the nodes found reproduced as XML. The result is not guaranteed to be valid XML
        though.

    findvalue ($path)
        return the concatenation of the text content of the result nodes

    In order for "XML::XPath" to be used as the XPath engine the following methods are included in
    "XML::Twig":

    in XML::Twig

    getRootNode
    getParentNode
    getChildNodes

    in XML::Twig::Elt

    string_value
    toString
    getName
    getRootNode
    getNextSibling
    getPreviousSibling
    isElementNode
    isTextNode
    isPI
    isPINode
    isProcessingInstructionNode
    isComment
    isCommentNode
    getTarget
    getChildNodes
    getElementById

  XML::Twig::XPath::Elt
    The methods you can use are the same as on "XML::Twig::XPath" elements:

    findnodes ($path)
        return a list of nodes found by $path.

    findnodes_as_string ($path)
        return the nodes found reproduced as XML. The result is not guaranteed to be valid XML
        though.

    findvalue ($path)
        return the concatenation of the text content of the result nodes

  XML::Twig::Entity_list
    new Create an entity list.

    add ($ent)
        Add an entity to an entity list.

    add_new_ent ($name, $val, $sysid, $pubid, $ndata, $param)
        Create a new entity and add it to the entity list

    delete ($ent or $tag).
        Delete an entity (defined by its name or by the Entity object) from the list.

    print ($optional_filehandle)
        Print the entity list.

    list
        Return the list as an array

  XML::Twig::Entity
    new ($name, $val, $sysid, $pubid, $ndata, $param)
        Same arguments as the Entity handler for XML::Parser.

    print ($optional_filehandle)
        Print an entity declaration.

    name
        Return the name of the entity

    val Return the value of the entity

    sysid
        Return the system id for the entity (for NDATA entities)

    pubid
        Return the public id for the entity (for NDATA entities)

    ndata
        Return true if the entity is an NDATA entity

    param
        Return true if the entity is a parameter entity

    text
        Return the entity declaration text.

  XML::Twig::Notation_list
    new Create an notation list.

    add ($notation)
        Add an notation to an notation list.

    add_new_notation ($name, $base, $sysid, $pubid)
        Create a new notation and add it to the notation list

    delete ($notation or $tag).
        Delete an notation (defined by its name or by the Notation object) from the list.

    print ($optional_filehandle)
        Print the notation list.

    list
        Return the list as an array

  XML::Twig::Notation
    new ($name, $base, $sysid, $pubid)
        Same argumnotations as the Notation handler for XML::Parser.

    print ($optional_filehandle)
        Print an notation declaration.

    name
        Return the name of the notation

    base
        Return the base to be used for resolving a relative URI

    sysid
        Return the system id for the notation

    pubid
        Return the public id for the notation

    text
        Return the notation declaration text.

EXAMPLES
    Additional examples (and a complete tutorial) can be found on the XML::Twig
    Page<http://www.xmltwig.org/xmltwig/>

    To figure out what flush does call the following script with an XML file and an element name as
    arguments

      use XML::Twig;

      my ($file, $elt)= @ARGV;
      my $t= XML::Twig->new( twig_handlers =>
          { $elt => sub {$_[0]->flush; print "\n[flushed here]\n";} });
      $t->parsefile( $file, ErrorContext => 2);
      $t->flush;
      print "\n";

NOTES
  Subclassing XML::Twig
    Useful methods:

    elt_class
        In order to subclass "XML::Twig" you will probably need to subclass also "XML::Twig::Elt".
        Use the "elt_class" option when you create the "XML::Twig" object to get the elements
        created in a different class (which should be a subclass of "XML::Twig::Elt".

    add_options
        If you inherit "XML::Twig" new method but want to add more options to it you can use this
        method to prevent XML::Twig to issue warnings for those additional options.

  DTD Handling
    There are 3 possibilities here. They are:

    No DTD
        No doctype, no DTD information, no entity information, the world is simple...

    Internal DTD
        The XML document includes an internal DTD, and maybe entity declarations.

        If you use the load_DTD option when creating the twig the DTD information and the entity
        declarations can be accessed.

        The DTD and the entity declarations will be "flush"'ed (or "print"'ed) either as is (if they
        have not been modified) or as reconstructed (poorly, comments are lost, order is not kept,
        due to it's content this DTD should not be viewed by anyone) if they have been modified. You
        can also modify them directly by changing the "$twig->{twig_doctype}->{internal}" field
        (straight from XML::Parser, see the "Doctype" handler doc)

    External DTD
        The XML document includes a reference to an external DTD, and maybe entity declarations.

        If you use the "load_DTD" when creating the twig the DTD information and the entity
        declarations can be accessed. The entity declarations will be "flush"'ed (or "print"'ed)
        either as is (if they have not been modified) or as reconstructed (badly, comments are lost,
        order is not kept).

        You can change the doctype through the "$twig->set_doctype" method and print the dtd through
        the "$twig->dtd_text" or "$twig->dtd_print" methods.

        If you need to modify the entity list this is probably the easiest way to do it.

  Flush
    Remember that element handlers are called when the element is CLOSED, so if you have handlers
    for nested elements the inner handlers will be called first. It makes it for example trickier
    than it would seem to number nested sections (or clauses, or divs), as the titles in the inner
    sections are handled before the outer sections.

BUGS
    segfault during parsing
        This happens when parsing huge documents, or lots of small ones, with a version of Perl
        before 5.16.

        This is due to a bug in the way weak references are handled in Perl itself.

        The fix is either to upgrade to Perl 5.16 or later ("perlbrew" is a great tool to manage
        several installations of perl on the same machine).

        Another, NOT RECOMMENDED, way of fixing the problem, is to switch off weak references by
        writing "XML::Twig::_set_weakrefs( 0);" at the top of the code. This is totally unsupported,
        and may lead to other problems though,

    entity handling
        Due to XML::Parser behaviour, non-base entities in attribute values disappear if they are
        not declared in the document: "att="val&ent;"" will be turned into "att => val", unless you
        use the "keep_encoding" argument to "XML::Twig->new"

    DTD handling
        The DTD handling methods are quite bugged. No one uses them and it seems very difficult to
        get them to work in all cases, including with several slightly incompatible versions of
        XML::Parser and of libexpat.

        Basically you can read the DTD, output it back properly, and update entities, but not much
        more.

        So use XML::Twig with standalone documents, or with documents referring to an external DTD,
        but don't expect it to properly parse and even output back the DTD.

    memory leak
        If you use a REALLY old Perl (5.005!) and a lot of twigs you might find that you leak quite
        a lot of memory (about 2Ks per twig). You can use the "dispose " method to free that memory
        after you are done.

        If you create elements the same thing might happen, use the "delete" method to get rid of
        them.

        Alternatively installing the "Scalar::Util" (or "WeakRef") module on a version of Perl that
        supports it (>5.6.0) will get rid of the memory leaks automagically.

    ID list
        The ID list is NOT updated when elements are cut or deleted.

    change_gi
        This method will not function properly if you do:

             $twig->change_gi( $old1, $new);
             $twig->change_gi( $old2, $new);
             $twig->change_gi( $new, $even_newer);

    sanity check on XML::Parser method calls
        XML::Twig should really prevent calls to some XML::Parser methods, especially the
        "setHandlers" method.

    pretty printing
        Pretty printing (at least using the '"indented"' style) is hard to get right! Only elements
        that belong to the document will be properly indented. Printing elements that do not belong
        to the twig makes it impossible for XML::Twig to figure out their depth, and thus their
        indentation level.

        Also there is an unavoidable bug when using "flush" and pretty printing for elements with
        mixed content that start with an embedded element:

          <elt><b>b</b>toto<b>bold</b></elt>

          will be output as

          <elt>
            <b>b</b>toto<b>bold</b></elt>

        if you flush the twig when you find the "<b>" element

Globals
    These are the things that can mess up calling code, especially if threaded. They might also
    cause problem under mod_perl.

    Exported constants
        Whether you want them or not you get them! These are subroutines to use as constant when
        creating or testing elements

          PCDATA  return '#PCDATA'
          CDATA   return '#CDATA'
          PI      return '#PI', I had the choice between PROC and PI :--(

    Module scoped values: constants
        these should cause no trouble:

          %base_ent= ( '>' => '&gt;',
                       '<' => '&lt;',
                       '&' => '&amp;',
                       "'" => '&apos;',
                       '"' => '&quot;',
                     );
          CDATA_START   = "<![CDATA[";
          CDATA_END     = "]]>";
          PI_START      = "<?";
          PI_END        = "?>";
          COMMENT_START = "<!--";
          COMMENT_END   = "-->";

        pretty print styles

          ( $NSGMLS, $NICE, $INDENTED, $INDENTED_C, $WRAPPED, $RECORD1, $RECORD2)= (1..7);

        empty tag output style

          ( $HTML, $EXPAND)= (1..2);

    Module scoped values: might be changed
        Most of these deal with pretty printing, so the worst that can happen is probably that XML
        output does not look right, but is still valid and processed identically by XML processors.

        $empty_tag_style can mess up HTML bowsers though and changing $ID would most likely create
        problems.

          $pretty=0;           # pretty print style
          $quote='"';          # quote for attributes
          $INDENT= '  ';       # indent for indented pretty print
          $empty_tag_style= 0; # how to display empty tags
          $ID                  # attribute used as an id ('id' by default)

    Module scoped values: definitely changed
        These 2 variables are used to replace tags by an index, thus saving some space when creating
        a twig. If they really cause you too much trouble, let me know, it is probably possible to
        create either a switch or at least a version of XML::Twig that does not perform this
        optimization.

          %gi2index;     # tag => index
          @index2gi;     # list of tags

    If you need to manipulate all those values, you can use the following methods on the XML::Twig
    object:

    global_state
        Return a hashref with all the global variables used by XML::Twig

        The hash has the following fields: "pretty", "quote", "indent", "empty_tag_style",
        "keep_encoding", "expand_external_entities", "output_filter", "output_text_filter",
        "keep_atts_order"

    set_global_state ($state)
        Set the global state, $state is a hashref

    save_global_state
        Save the current global state

    restore_global_state
        Restore the previously saved (using "Lsave_global_state"> state

TODO
    SAX handlers
        Allowing XML::Twig to work on top of any SAX parser

    multiple twigs are not well supported
        A number of twig features are just global at the moment. These include the ID list and the
        "tag pool" (if you use "change_gi" then you change the tag for ALL twigs).

        A future version will try to support this while trying not to be to hard on performance (at
        least when a single twig is used!).

AUTHOR
    Michel Rodriguez <mirod AT cpan.org>

LICENSE
    This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
    Perl itself.

    Bug reports should be sent using: RT <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=XML-Twig>

    Comments can be sent to mirod AT cpan.org

    The XML::Twig page is at <http://www.xmltwig.org/xmltwig/> It includes the development version
    of the module, a slightly better version of the documentation, examples, a tutorial and a:
    Processing XML efficiently with Perl and XML::Twig:
    <http://www.xmltwig.org/xmltwig/tutorial/index.html>

SEE ALSO
    Complete docs, including a tutorial, examples, an easier to use HTML version of the docs, a
    quick reference card and a FAQ are available at <http://www.xmltwig.org/xmltwig/>

    git repository at <http://github.com/mirod/xmltwig>

    XML::Parser, XML::Parser::Expat, XML::XPath, Encode, Text::Iconv, Scalar::Utils

  Alternative Modules
    XML::Twig is not the only XML::Processing module available on CPAN (far from it!).

    The main alternative I would recommend is XML::LibXML.

    Here is a quick comparison of the 2 modules:

    XML::LibXML, actually "libxml2" on which it is based, sticks to the standards, and implements a
    good number of them in a rather strict way: XML, XPath, DOM, RelaxNG, I must be forgetting a
    couple (XInclude?). It is fast and rather frugal memory-wise.

    XML::Twig is older: when I started writing it XML::Parser/expat was the only game in town. It
    implements XML and that's about it (plus a subset of XPath, and you can use XML::Twig::XPath if
    you have XML::XPathEngine installed for full support). It is slower and requires more memory for
    a full tree than XML::LibXML. On the plus side (yes, there is a plus side!) it lets you process
    a big document in chunks, and thus let you tackle documents that couldn't be loaded in memory by
    XML::LibXML, and it offers a lot (and I mean a LOT!) of higher-level methods, for everything,
    from adding structure to "low-level" XML, to shortcuts for XHTML conversions and more. It also
    DWIMs quite a bit, getting comments and non-significant whitespaces out of the way but
    preserving them in the output for example. As it does not stick to the DOM, is also usually
    leads to shorter code than in XML::LibXML.

    Beyond the pure features of the 2 modules, XML::LibXML seems to be preferred by "XML-purists",
    while XML::Twig seems to be more used by Perl Hackers who have to deal with XML. As you have
    noted, XML::Twig also comes with quite a lot of docs, but I am sure if you ask for help about
    XML::LibXML here or on Perlmonks you will get answers.

    Note that it is actually quite hard for me to compare the 2 modules: on one hand I know
    XML::Twig inside-out and I can get it to do pretty much anything I need to (or I improve it
    ;--), while I have a very basic knowledge of XML::LibXML. So feature-wise, I'd rather use
    XML::Twig ;--). On the other hand, I am painfully aware of some of the deficiencies, potential
    bugs and plain ugly code that lurk in XML::Twig, even though you are unlikely to be affected by
    them (unless for example you need to change the DTD of a document programmatically), while I
    haven't looked much into XML::LibXML so it still looks shinny and clean to me.

    That said, if you need to process a document that is too big to fit memory and XML::Twig is too
    slow for you, my reluctant advice would be to use "bare" XML::Parser. It won't be as easy to use
    as XML::Twig: basically with XML::Twig you trade some speed (depending on what you do from a
    factor 3 to... none) for ease-of-use, but it will be easier IMHO than using SAX (albeit not
    standard), and at this point a LOT faster (see the last test in
    <http://www.xmltwig.org/article/simple_benchmark/>).

XML::Twig
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION TOOLS
Loading an XML document and processing it Processing an XML document chunk by chunk Processing just parts of an XML document Building an XML filter
Simplifying XML processing CLASSES METHODS
sort_children_on_value( %options) sort_children( $get_key, %options)
EXAMPLES NOTES
Flush
BUGS Globals TODO AUTHOR LICENSE SEE ALSO
Alternative Modules

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