On 9/7/19 12:37 AM, Liam R. E. Quin wrote:Thanks for the BNF and the pointer to the specification. However, the fact remains that I don't control the text that I'm trying to parse, and I still need to parse it, even though it's not "well-formed".On Fri, 2019-09-06 at 01:57 -0400, Webb Scales wrote:The first issue is that the XML parser seems to balk entirely at the fact that the document is preceded by a comment before the XML declaration. (I'm less than shocked, but it is kind of disappointing.)I'd be sad if it accepte it - it's not allowed. I've got a stream of bytes; it contains text which is "XML-like". I would love to break it up into chunks which are well-formed (or otherwise acceptable) XML documents and then feed it to a LibXML2 function, but I need to do so without making too many assumptions about the input and without having to teach my code too much about XML (otherwise, there'd be no point using LibXML2).The next issue is that the XML parser reports an error near the end of the document, when it notices that the document is followed by an XML declaration. (I'm a little closer to shocked by this.)Feed the parser XML without errors and this won't happen. Or are you saying there are multiple documents in the same input stream? As it happens, there are newlines between the documents, so I tweaked my custom I/O handler to return only up to the next newline. However, after receiving the text for a complete document, the TextReader still calls my handler again and then issues an error because there is text after the closing tag for the root...if it hadn't made the extra call, it wouldn't have been prompted to fail like that! The point is that the TextReader is (I thought...) supposed to return the nodes or elements as they are parsed...so why does it report errors in text that is well beyond the current node (which, in fact, it had to issue an extra I/O request to get)??the offending text doesn't appear until after the closing tag for the root.)isn't that the point? Without that lookahead, I could have stopped the parse when it reached the end of the document, and started a new reader for the next document. But, instead, the current reader consumes some of the text which belongs to the next document, and then goes into an endless cycle where it returns errors without advancing to the next node. Yes, I'm trying to avoid reinventing the wheel: if I write code which is able to transform my input into well-formed XML, I won't need LibXML to parse it for me.Is there some other approach which is better for my situation than the xmlTextReader?XSLT 3 provides a streaming mode which does what it sounds like you might need, but libxml supports only XSLT 1. However, it, too, needs well-formed XML input without errors. There's also STX. Or use a SAX parser and keep only what you need, but again you need well-formed input. By the time you've written a program to fix the input, your program might well be able to do what you need anyway, no?? I was hoping that there was a way to handle the errors encountered by the TextReader, recover from them, and continue with the parse, but it sounds like that's not practical. Webb --
Webb Scales
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