11-12-2019
Great.
OBTW, I don't have the exact JSON API output in front of me and your JS code which calls the API, so this might be way off base; but this code seems overly complex to me; but then again, I don't have the JS code which calls the API or example JSON data from the API.
If you want me to take a closer look; please post your JS code which calls the API and some sample JSON output from the API.
Either way, glad you have it working now.
Cheers.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
xmlparsing
xmlparsing(3) Coin xmlparsing(3)
NAME
xmlparsing - XML Parsing with Coin For Coin 3.0, we added an XML parser to Coin. This document describes how it can be used for generic
purposes.
Why another XML parser, you might ask? First of all, the XML parser is actually a third-party parser, expat. Coin needed one, and many
Coin-dependent projects needed one as well. We therefore needed to expose an API for it. However, integrating a 3rd-party parser into Coin,
we can not expose its API directly, or other projects also using Expat would get conflicts. We therefore needed to expose the XML API with
a unique API, hence the API you see here. It is based on a XML DOM API we use(d) in a couple of other projects, but it has been tweaked to
fit into Coin and to be wrapped over Expat (the original implementation just used flex).
The XML parser is both a streaming parser and a DOM parser. Being a streaming parser means that documents can be read in without having to
be fully contained in memory. When used as a DOM parser, the whole document is fully parsed in first, and then inspected by client code by
traversing the DOM. The two modes can actually be mixed arbitrarily if ending up with a partial DOM sounds useful.
The XML parser has both a C API and a C++ API. The C++ API is just a wrapper around the C API, and only serves as convenience if you prefer
to read/write C++ code (which is tighter) over more verbose C code.
The C API naming convention may look a bit strange, unless you have written libraries to be wrapped for scheme/lisp-like languages before.
Then you might be familiar with the convention of suffixing your functions based on their behaviour/usage meaning. Mutating functions are
suffixed with '!', or '_x' for (eXclamation point), and predicates are suffixed with '?', or '_p' in C.
The simplest way to use the XML parser is to just call cc_xml_read_file(filename) and then traverse the DOM model through using
cc_xml_doc_get_root(), cc_xml_elt_get_child(), and cc_xml_elt_get_attr().
See also:
XML related functions and objects, cc_xml_doc, cc_xml_elt, cc_xml_attr
Version 3.1.3 Wed May 23 2012 xmlparsing(3)