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The primary entry point for the XML parser is read-xml
,
which reads characters from a port and returns an XML document
record. The character coding of the input is determined by reading some
of the input stream and looking for a byte order mark and/or an encoding
in the XML declaration. We support all ISO 8859
codings, as well as UTF-8, UTF-16, and
UTF-32.
When an XHTML document is read, the parser provides entity definitions for all of the named XHTML characters; for example, it defines ‘ ’ and ‘©’. In order for a document to be recognized as XHTML, it must contain an XHTML DTD, such as this:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
At present the parser recognizes XHTML Strict 1.0 and XHTML 1.1 documents.
Read an XML document from port and return the corresponding XML document record.
Pi-handlers, if specified, must be an association list. Each element of pi-handlers must be a list of two elements: a symbol and a procedure. When the parser encounters processing instructions with a name that appears in pi-handlers, the procedure is called with one argument, which is the text of the processing instructions. The procedure must return a list of XML structure records that are legal for the context of the processing instructions.
This convenience procedure simplifies reading XML from a file. It is roughly equivalent to
(define (read-xml-file pathname #!optional pi-handlers) (call-with-input-file pathname (lambda (port) (read-xml port pi-handlers))))
This convenience procedure simplifies reading XML from a string. The string argument may be a string or a wide string. It is roughly equivalent to
(define (string->xml string #!optional start end pi-handlers) (read-xml (open-input-string string start end) pi-handlers))
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