graft 0.2.0 → 0.2.1
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- data/README.rdoc +97 -3
- data/Rakefile +1 -1
- data/lib/graft/version.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/graft/xml.rb +9 -1
- data/lib/graft/xml/attribute.rb +4 -1
- metadata +4 -4
data/README.rdoc
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== Description
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Graft provides an easy way to map XML data onto your Ruby classes.
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Graft provides an easy way to map XML and JSON data onto your Ruby classes.
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== Installation
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Bleeding edge:
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$
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$ git clone git://github.com/reagent/graft.git
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$ cd graft && rake gem
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$ sudo gem install pkg/graft-<version>.gem
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== Usage
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When interacting with APIs, it's quite often the case that the data returned as
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part of the response is represented either as XML or JSON. The Graft library makes
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turning that data into Ruby objects pretty simple. This code was an extraction from
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my work on both the Fleakr[http://reagent.github.com/fleakr] and
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Etsy[http://github.com/reagent/etsy] gems.
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=== Mapping XML
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If you want to use Graft in XML mode, you'll need to include the right library:
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require 'rubygems'
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require 'graft/xml'
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Once that is set up, you can take an XML string like this:
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<rsp>
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<user nsid="3">reagent</user>
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<name>Patrick Reagan</name>
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</rsp>
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And map it onto a Ruby class:
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class User
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include Graft
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attribute :name
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attribute :username, :from => 'user'
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attribute :id, :from => 'user@nsid', :type => :integer
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end
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There are a couple of ways to pull this data into the +User+ object. The simplest
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is from the constructor:
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user = User.new(xml)
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There is also a +populate_from+ instance method that will do the same:
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user = User.new
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user.populate_from(xml)
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This second method is useful if the data you want in your Ruby object comes from 2
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separate XML files. Accessing it is simple:
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>> user.name # => "Patrick Reagan"
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>> user.username # => "reagent"
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>> user.id # => 3
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=== Mapping JSON
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The process of mapping JSON is similar to XML, except:
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* You don't need to declare the type of the attribute
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* You need to provide a full path to the JSON value
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To get started, include the correct library:
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require 'rubygems'
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require 'graft/json'
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Then for simple JSON data:
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{
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"rsp": {
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"user_id": 3,
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"username": "reagent",
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"name": "Patrick Reagan"
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}
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}
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You can map it in a similar way:
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class User
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include Graft
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attribute :name, :from => 'rsp/name'
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attribute :username, :from => 'rsp/username'
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attribute :id, :from => 'rsp/user_id'
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end
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Again, you can initialize the values from both the constructor:
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user = User.new(json)
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Or the +populate_from+ method:
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user = User.new
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user.populate_from(json)
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The results are the same:
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>> user.name # => "Patrick Reagan"
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>> user.username # => "reagent"
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>> user.id # => 3
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== License
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data/Rakefile
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s.has_rdoc = true
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s.extra_rdoc_files = %w(README.rdoc)
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s.rdoc_options = %w(--main README.rdoc)
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s.summary = "
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s.summary = "Graft provides an easy way to map XML and JSON data onto your Ruby classes"
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s.author = 'Patrick Reagan'
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s.email = 'reaganpr@gmail.com'
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s.homepage = 'http://sneaq.net/'
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data/lib/graft/version.rb
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data/lib/graft/xml.rb
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require 'hpricot'
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require 'builder'
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require 'tzinfo'
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begin
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# ActiveSupport < 2.3.5
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require 'active_support/core_ext/blank'
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rescue NameError
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# ActiveSupport >= 2.3.5 will raise a NameError exception
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require 'active_support/core_ext/object/blank'
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end
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require 'active_support/time_with_zone'
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require 'active_support/inflector'
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data/lib/graft/xml/attribute.rb
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def value_from(document)
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values = sources.map do |source|
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node = node_for(document, source)
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if !node.nil?
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possible_values = [node.attributes[attribute(source)], node.inner_text]
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possible_values.detect {|value| !value.blank? }
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end
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end
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type_class.new(values.compact.first).value
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metadata
CHANGED
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--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
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name: graft
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version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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version: 0.2.
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version: 0.2.1
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platform: ruby
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authors:
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- Patrick Reagan
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bindir: bin
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cert_chain: []
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date:
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date: 2010-01-25 00:00:00 -05:00
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default_executable:
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dependencies:
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- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
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requirements: []
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rubyforge_project:
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rubygems_version: 1.3.
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rubygems_version: 1.3.5
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signing_key:
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specification_version: 3
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summary:
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summary: Graft provides an easy way to map XML and JSON data onto your Ruby classes
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test_files: []
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