NAME

XML::RAI - RSS Abstraction Interface.

SYNOPSIS

#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use XML::RAI;
my $doc = <<DOC;
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
<rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
    xmlns="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/">
    <channel>
        <title>tima thinking outloud</title>
        <link>http://www.timaoutloud.org/</link>
        <description></description>
        <dc:language>en-us</dc:language>
        <item>
            <title>His and Hers Weblogs.</title>
            <description>First it was his and hers Powerbooks. Now 
            its weblogs. There goes the neighborhood.</description>
            <link>http://www.timaoutloud.org/archives/000338.html</link>
            <dc:subject>Musings</dc:subject>
            <dc:creator>tima</dc:creator>
            <dc:date>2004-01-23T12:33:22-05:00</dc:date>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Commercial Music Again.</title>
            <description>Last year I made a post about music used 
            in TV commercials that I recognized and have been listening to. 
            For all the posts I made about technology and other bits of sagely
            wisdom the one on commercial music got the most traffic of any 
            each month. I need a new top post. Here are some more tunes that 
            have appeared in commercials.</description>
            <guid isPermaLink="true">
              http://www.timaoutloud.org/archives/000337.html
            </guid>
            <category>Musings</category>
            <author>tima</author>
            <pubDate>Sun, 18 Jan 2004 14:09:03 GMT</pubDate>
        </item>
    </channel>
</rss>
DOC

# The above is to demonstrate the value of RAI. It is not any 
# specific RSS format, nor does it exercise best practices.

my $rai = XML::RAI->parse($doc);
print $rai->channel->title."\n\n";
foreach my $item ( @{$rai->items} ) {
   print $item->title."\n";
   print $item->link."\n";
   print $item->content."\n";
   print $item->issued."\n\n";
}

DESCRIPTION

The RSS Abstraction Interface, or RAI (said "ray"), provides an object-oriented interface to XML::RSS::Parser trees that abstracts the user from handling namespaces, overlapping and alternate tag mappings.

It's rather well known that, while popular, the RSS syntax is a bit of a mess. Anyone who has attempted to write software that consumes RSS feeds "in the wild" can attest to the headaches in handling the many formats and interpretations that are in use. For instance, in "The myth of RSS compatibility" http://diveintomark.org/archives/2004/02/04/incompatible-rss Mark Pilgrim identifies 9 different versions of RSS (there are 10 actually[1]) and that is not without going into tags with overlapping purposes. Even the acronym RSS has multiple though similar meanings.

The XML::RSS::Parser alone attempts to help developers cope with these issues through a liberal interpretation of what is RSS and routines to normalize the parse tree into a more common and manageable form.

RAI takes this one step further. Its intent is to give a developer the means to not have to care about what tags the feed uses to present its meta data.

RAI provides a single simplified interface that maps one method call to various overlapping and alternate tags used in RSS feeds. The interface also abstracts developers from needing to deal with namespaces. Method names are based on Dublin Core terminology.

With the release of version 1.0, the XML::RSS::Parser distribution was folded into XML::RAI.

[1] When initially released, RSS 2.0 had a namespace. When it was reported a few days later that some XSLT-based systems were breaking because of the change in the RSS namespace from "" (none) to http://backend.userland.com/rss2, the namespace was removed, but the version number was not incremented making it incompatible with itself. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rss-dev/message/4113 This version was not counted in Mark's post.

METHODS

XML::RAI->new($rss_tree)

Returns a populated RAI instance based on the XML::RSS::Parser::Feed object passed in.

XML::RAI->parse($string_or_file_handle)

Passes through the string or file handle to the parse method in XML::RSS::Parser. Returns a populated RAI instance.

XML::RAI->parsefile(FILE_HANDLE)

Passes through the file handle to the parsefile method in XML::RSS::Parser. Returns a populated RAI instance.

$rai->document

Returns the XML::RSS::Parser parse tree being used as the source for the RAI object

$rai->channel

Returns the XML::RAI::Channel object.

$rai->items

Returns an array reference containing the XML::RAI::Item objects for the feed

$rai->item_count

Returns the number of items as an integer.

$rai->image

Returns the XML::RAI::Image object, if any. (Many feeds do not have an image block.)

$rai->time_format($timef)

Sets the timestamp normalization format. RAI will attempt to parse the string into a data value and will output timestamp (date) values in this format.

RAI implements a few constants with common RSS timestamp formatting strings:

W3CDTF     1999-09-01T22:10:40Z 
RFC8601    (other name for W3CDTF)
RFC822     Wed, 01 Sep 1999 22:10:40 GMT 
PASS_THRU  (does not normalize)

W3CDTF/RFC8601 is the default. For more detail on creating your own timestamp formats see the manpage for the strftime command.

DEPENDENCIES

XML::Elemental,POSIX, Date::Parse

TO DO

  • Expand and refine mappings. Incorporate link module.

  • Serialization module(s).

  • Ability retrieve the source object of a query.

  • Implement UNIX (Epoch) and DATETIME (DateTime object) constants and functionality for time_format.

  • Remove POSIX dependency. Switch to Date::Format.

  • FOAF and "brute force" regex person parser?

  • Range parser for valid?

LICENSE

The software is released under the Artistic License. The terms of the Artistic License are described at http://www.perl.com/language/misc/Artistic.html.

AUTHOR & COPYRIGHT

Except where otherwise noted, XML::RAI and XML::RSS::Parser is Copyright 2003-2004, Timothy Appnel, cpan@timaoutloud.org. All rights reserved.

4 POD Errors

The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:

Around line 61:

=begin without a target?

Around line 165:

'=item' outside of any '=over'

Around line 220:

You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'

Around line 259:

'=end' without a target?