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Full Discussion: Proper Forum Etiquette
Contact Us Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators Proper Forum Etiquette Post 27994 by Neo on Tuesday 10th of September 2002 07:32:33 PM
Old 09-10-2002
I think that lots of people ask homework related problems and we don't know it is homework..... so, we are fooling ourselves if we think that no one is getting help related to homework here. Some people are just a bit more clever at it.


This is a difficult issue and there a no easy answers..... so for now, let's just keep the no-homework rule.... and perhaps someday a college professor teaching UNIX will read these posts and give us their opinion ! Perhaps they will help moderate and set or change the rules ...... until then Smilie

I do agree that we should not be too heavy handed with students and to help guide them to success so they will enjoy the UNIX environment. Sometimes busy moderators, including myself, simply enforce the rules without taking the time to be a bit more gentle and encouraging.

To be honest, I don't claim to have the right or only answer with regard to the homework issue. My gut feeling is that simply posting homework to the board, getting answers and doing it again is not in the best interest of the student or the teacher.
 

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Data::Grove::Visitor(3) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   Data::Grove::Visitor(3)

NAME
Data::Grove::Visitor - add visitor/callback methods to Data::Grove objects SYNOPSIS
use Data::Grove::Visitor; @results = $object->accept ($visitor, ...); @results = $object->accept_name ($visitor, ...); @results = $object->children_accept ($visitor, ...); @results = $object->children_accept_name ($visitor, ...); DESCRIPTION
Data::Grove::Visitor adds visitor methods (callbacks) to Data::Grove objects. A ``visitor'' is a class (a package) you write that has methods (subs) corresponding to the objects in the classes being visited. You use the visitor methods by creating an instance of your visitor class, and then calling `"accept($my_visitor)"' on the top-most object you want to visit, that object will in turn call your visitor back with `"visit_OBJECT"', where OBJECT is the type of object. There are several forms of `"accept"'. Simply calling `"accept"' calls your package back using the object type of the object you are visiting. Calling `"accept_name"' on an element object calls you back with `"visit_name_NAME"' where NAME is the tag name of the element, on all other objects it's as if you called `"accept"'. All of the forms of `"accept"' return a concatenated list of the result of all `"visit"' methods. `"children_accept"' calls `"accept"' on each of the children of the element. This is generally used in element callbacks to recurse down into the element's children, you don't need to get the element's contents and call `"accept"' on each item. `"children_accept_name"' does the same but calling `"accept_name"' on each of the children. `"attr_accept"' calls `"accept"' on each of the objects in the named attribute. Refer to the documentation of the classes you are visiting (XML::Grove, etc.) for the type names (`"element"', `"document"', etc.) of the objects it implements. RESERVED NAMES
The hash keys `"Contents"' and `"Name"' are used to indicate objects with children (for `"children_accept"') and named objects (for `"accept_name"'). NOTES
These are random ideas that haven't been implemented yet: o Several objects fall into subclasses, or you may want to be able to subclass a visited object and still be able to tell the difference. In SGML::Grove I had used the package name in the callback (`"visit_SGML_Element"') instead of a generic name (`"visit_element"'). The idea here would be to try calling `"visit_PACKAGE"' with the most specific class first, then try superclasses, and lastly to try the generic. AUTHOR
Ken MacLeod, ken@bitsko.slc.ut.us SEE ALSO
perl(1), Data::Grove Extensible Markup Language (XML) <http://www.w3c.org/XML> perl v5.12.1 2003-10-21 Data::Grove::Visitor(3)
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