GSP
Quick Navigator

Search Site

Unix VPS
A - Starter
B - Basic
C - Preferred
D - Commercial
MPS - Dedicated
Previous VPSs
* Sign Up! *

Support
Contact Us
Online Help
Handbooks
Domain Status
Man Pages

FAQ
Virtual Servers
Pricing
Billing
Technical

Network
Facilities
Connectivity
Topology Map

Miscellaneous
Server Agreement
Year 2038
Credits
 

USA Flag

 

 

Man Pages
OODoc::XPath(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation OODoc::XPath(3)

OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath - Low-level navigation in the documents

This module is a low-level class which uses OODoc::File (without inheriting anything from it) along with the classes defined in the XML::Twig module. It's a common basis for the other, more user- friendly, document-oriented modules. It uses XPath expressions in order to retrieve any document element (but it doesn't provide a full implementation of the XPath standard). In addition, while the most part of the provided methods are OpenDocument-aware, this module could be used against any other kind of XML documents, simply because it benefits from all the features of XML::Twig. Such a possibility may prove useful for applications that simultaneously process OpenDocument and non-OpenDocument XML files.

The OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath class should not be explicitly used in the applications, because all its features are available in more user-friendly classes such as OODoc::Text, OODoc::Styles, OODoc::Image, OODoc::Document and OODoc::Meta. The present manual page is provided to describe the common methods and properties that are available with all these classes.

This chapter can be skipped by programmers who are only interested in upper level methods provided by the OODoc::Text, ::Styles, ::Image and ::Meta modules. Understanding these modules is easier and using them requires less Perl and XML expertise. However, calling OODoc::XPath methods remains a good rescue option as it allows all kinds of operations on all types of XML elements contained in any OpenDocument-compliant file.

OODoc::XPath is the common foundation of OODoc::Meta, OODoc::Text, OODoc::Styles and OODoc::Image. It contains the lowest layer of navigation services for XML documents and handles the link with OODoc::File for file access. Its primary role is as an interface with the XML::Twig API.

In the present manual chapter, you will see "elements" often mentioned. When it says that a module expects a parameter or returns an element (either singly or as a list), it is referring to an XML element. It is important to distinguish elements from their content (elements being simply references to XML data structures). To read or modify the content of an element such as its text or XML attributes, use the accessors also available within OODoc::XPath.

In most cases where XPath methods require a reference to an element as an argument, there are two ways of proceeding:

- reference the element directly (obtained previously)

- or give an XPath expression and a position, being a string and an integer respectively; for example, the pair ('//office:body/text:p', 12) or ('//text:p', 12) represents the thirteenth occurrence of the 'text:p' element, i.e. the 13th paragraph (occurrences are numbered starting from 0).

The second way requires the knowledge of an appropriate XPath expression (according the OpenDocument XML format specification). And a given XPath expression is not necessarily the same with an OpenDocument as in an OpenOffice.org document. So you should preferently use high level accessors (provided by derivative classes such as OODoc::Document) and avoid XPath hardcoding. However, you know you can at any time reach any element with XPath.

Of course, you will never need to use XPath expressions in order to reach the most common text elements (such as paragraphs), because the OODoc::Text module provides more friendly accessors (for example, you will probably use the getParagraph() method and forget "//text:p").

Some methods accept both forms which means that if the first parameter is recognised as an element reference, the position does not need to be given. Therefore the number of arguments for certain OODoc::XPath methods can vary.

For those who really want to access all areas there are also OODoc::XPath methods which allow unrestricted access to every element or XML attribute via an access path in XPath syntax. If you are into this kind of thing, we recommend you obtain good syntax reference manuals for XPath and OpenDocument and a supply of aspirin.

Methods which may return several lines of text (e.g. getTextList) do so either in the form of an unique character string containing "\n" separators or in table form.

Unless otherwise stated, the word 'document' in this chapter only refers to XML documents contained within OODoc::XPath objects and not, say, OpenDocument files (as an end user would use).

Amongst the different methods which return elements, attributes or text, some are called getXxx, others selectXxx or findXxx. Read methods whose names start with "get" generally refer to an unfiltered object or list, whereas others return an object or list filtered according to a parameter value. In this latter case the search parameter is treated as a standard expression and not an exact value. This means that if the search criteria is "xyz", all text containing "xyz" will be considered a match. To restrict the search to text exactly equal to "xyz", use "^xyz$" as the search criteria (following Perl regular expression syntax).

Several methods allow you to place copies of or references to elements (from other documents or from other positions in the same document) in any position in the current document. This offers powerful manoeuvrability but only if these placements conform with the destination position's context.

For example, you can easily copy a paragraph from one document to another but only if you knowingly modify the paragraph's style attribute if that style is not already defined in the destination document. You can also copy the style but only if you are sure that this style is not already defined by another unknown style in the destination document (and so on).

For advanced users familiar with the XML::Twig API, it might be interesting to know that all the objects called "elements" in the following chapters are objects of the OpenOffice::OODoc::Element class, which is an XML::Twig::Elt derivative. So all methods associated with this class are directly applicable to these elements, on top of the functionality described in this manual. However, the knowledge of XML::Twig is not mandatory.

Important note: The applications should not explicitly work with this class. We recommend using OODoc::Meta and OODoc::Document (which are both OODoc::XPath derivatives). These two objects provide highest-level methods which are neater and more productive. Explicit use of OODoc::XPath methods (which sometimes require large numbers of parameters) should only be considered as a last resort in unexpected circumstances for access to any element or XML attribute not handled by more friendly methods. However, the present manual chapter could prove helpful because all the common features of OODoc::Meta and OODoc::Document are described here.

Constructor : OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath->new(<parameters>);

        Short Form: odfXPath(<parameters>)

        Returns a new OpenDocument connector, i.e. an interface which
        can be used for subsequent operations on a well-formed document.
        
        This constructor should not be called directly; it's implicitly
        triggered each time a Meta or Document object is created. So the
        following description apply to odfMeta() and odfDocument().

        The document is loaded and parsed according to various options.
        The most used option is 'file'; it simply allows the application
        to process an OpenDocument file selected by its path/name in the
        file system.
        
        Example:

                my $doc = odfXPath
                                (
                                file    => "myfile.ods",
                                part    => "content"
                                );
                # ... lot of processing ...
                $doc->save;

        Returns a new document connector. In the example above, the object
        is loaded from a regular OpenDocument file, that is the most current
        option, but there are other possibilities. It's possible to use
        flat XML (available as a string in memory, or loaded from a file).
        In addition, this constructor is able to create a new document
        from scratch.

        The value of the 'file' option may be an open IO::File object,
        that allows the application to use an application-provided file
        handle. However, you should prefer file paths/names when possible,
        and read the explanations about the constructor and the save() method
        in the OpenOffice::OODoc::File manual page before using open file
        handles. Remember that, as soon as the given file or handle is
        an ODF container, OODoc::XPath uses OODoc::File.

        Parameters are named (hash key => value). The constructor must get
        at least one parameter giving a means of obtaining the XML document
        that it will represent. Several options are available; each one is
        represented through the following examples:

            # option 1 (using an existing flat XML document)
            my $doc = odfXPath(xml => $xml_string);

            # option 2 (using a previously created ODF file interface)
            my $oofile = odfContainer('source.odt');
            my $doc = odfXPath(container => $oofile, part => 'meta');

            # option 3 (using a regular ODF file directly)
            my $doc = odfXPath(file => 'source.odt', part => 'content');
        
            # option 4 (multiple instances against a single file)
            my $content = odfXPath(file => 'source.odt', part => 'content');
            my $meta = odfXPath(file => $content, part => 'meta');
            my $styles = odfXPath(file => $content, part => 'styles');

        Remember "odfXPath()" represents "OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath->new()" 
        in the instructions above, and you can (and should) use this shortcut
        provided that you have loaded the main OpenOffice::OODoc module, and
        not only and explicitly the OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath module.

        The first form uses an XML string directly (previously loaded or
        created by the program). To be used for very specific applications
        working with flat XML documents exports and not with standard
        OOo/OpenDocument files.

        The second method links OODoc::XPath to an existing OODoc::File
        object (through the "container" option) and indicates which XML part it
        is to extract (metadata, content, styles, etc). The OODoc::File is an
        abstraction of an already open ODF container. It can be shared, i.e.
        several OODoc::XPath objects can be instantiated with the same
        OODoc::File object, and this possibility must be used when
        several OODoc::XPath objects have to bring consistent changes in
        a single file (see option 4 below). In order to create the
        required OODoc::File object, simply use odfFile() with a filename
        as argument (for advanced use, see OpenOffice::OODoc::File).

        The third method is the easiest, because the user just provide
        a filename and a member, and all the file interface is run silently
        (i.e. an invisible OODoc::File object is automatically created and
        used to get the content). It's probably the most used approach; its
        recommended when the user doesn't need to get more than one member
        in the same file.

        The 'part' option is a selector that tells what component is needed
        (content, styles, metadata, ...) knowing that an OODoc::XPath object
        can handle only one component. Its default value is 'content'.

        Note that the 'part' option replaces the deprecated 'member' option.
        However, for compatibility reasons, 'member' is supported yet (if
        both 'member' and 'part' are erroneously provided, 'member' prevails).
        
        If the application needs to process, say, the content and the styles
        in the same session, it must create two, or more, OODoc::XPath objects
        possibly associated with the same file interface. The appropriate way
        is shown in our last example above. The first instance is associated
        with a filename. Then the other instances are created with the first
        one, provided as the value of the 'file' option instead of a filename.
        The constructor tries to be user-friendly: if the 'file' value is
        a character string, it's regarded as a filename, but if this value,
        is an existing OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath object, the new object is
        automatically connected to the same file interface as the other one.
        The file interface is transparently provided by a common shared
        OpenOffice::OODoc::File object (you can safely ignore the features
        of this object, but a corresponding manual chapter is available for
        more details).
        
        Be careful: creating more than one OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath objects
        linked by their 'file' parameters to the same explicit filename (and
        not linked with each other) produces useless extra I/O operations and
        possible conflicts.
 
        Caution: being associated with a common interface via OODoc::File,
        none of these OODoc::XPath objects should be deleted before the final
        save() call for this archive. So by calling a save, the File object
        "calls up" all the XPath objects which were "connected" to it in order
        to "ask" each of them for the changes which were made to the XML
        (content, styles, meta, etc.). The results are unpredictable if any
        of them is absent when called.

        If the provided filename has a ".xml" or ".XML" suffix, or whatever
        the name if the 'flat_xml' option is set to 1, the file is processed
        as flat XML and not as a regular OOo file. No OODoc::File object is
        created, and the result of a subsequent call of the save() method
        produces a flat XML export (and not a regular OOo/OpenDocument file).

        You can pass the optional parameter 'element' in any case where the
        constructor is called without the 'xml' parameter. Bearing in mind
        that an OODoc::XPath object will not necessarily handle an entire
        XML document, this extra parameter indicates the name of the XML
        element to be loaded and handled. If the 'element' parameter is not
        given for an OpenDocument file, a default element will be chosen
        according to the following table:

            'meta'      => 'office:document-meta'
            'content'   => 'office:document-content'
            'styles'    => 'office:document-styles'
            'settings'  => 'office:document-settings'
            'manifest'  => 'manifest:manifest'

        Conversely, the 'element' parameter becomes mandatory if the chosen
        XML element is not listed above. Through OODoc::File, OODoc::XPath
        can actually access archives which are not necessarily in
        OpenDocument format and may be, for example, "databases" of
        presentation and content templates.

        If the application needs to create a new document, and not process
        an existing one, an additional option must be passed:

                create          => "<class>"

        where "class" must be one of the following list: "text",
        "spreadsheet", "presentation" or "drawing", according to the needed
        content class. And, for very special needs, the user can pass an
        additional "template_path" to select an ad hoc directory of XML
        templates instead of the default one. This user-provided directory
        must have the same kind of structure and content as the "templates"
        subdirectory of the OpenOffice::OODoc installation.

        An additional 'opendocument' option can be provided and set to 'true'
        or 'false'. If this option is 'false', the new document is created
        according to the OpenOffice.org 1.0 format instead of the OASIS
        OpenDocument format. The default format is OpenDocument. The
        'opendocument' option works for new documents only and is ignored
        unless the 'create' option. This module can create and process either
        OpenOffice.org 1.0 documents or ODF documents but can't directly
        convert a document from one format to the other one.

        OODoc::XPath can process ODF documents provided through XML flat
        files as well as in the compressed (zip) format. The given file is
        automatically processed as flat XML if either it's name ends by ".xml"
        or the 'flat_xml' option is set to '1'. When processing a flat XML
        file, OODoc::XPath doesn't load the OODoc::File zip interface. So,
        a subsequent call of the save() method can only export the document
        as flat XML.

        An optional 'readable_XML' can be passed. If this option is provided
        and set to 'on' or 'true', the resulting XML will be smartly indented
        (and, of course, more space-consuming). This feature is intended for
        debugging purposes and should not be used in production.

        The 'local_encoding' option can be set with the appropriate value
        when a particular character set (and not the default one) must be
        used for a document.
        
        A 'read_only' can be provided and set to 'true' in order to prevent
        the current member from being written back to the physical ODF file
        when the save() method is called.

        Other optional parameters can also be passed to the constructor (see
        Properties below).

appendElement(path, position, name/xml, [options]);

appendElement(element, name/xml, [options]);

        Adds a new element or existing element to the list of child elements
        of an existing parent element given first (by [path, position] or by
        reference).

        The argument after the position argument can be an XML element name.

        Example:

            $content->appendElement
                (
                '//office:body', 0, 'text:p',
                text => "New text"
                );

        adds a paragraph containing the phrase "New text" to the end of the
        document body. (Remember that in the case of an OpenDocument text
        file (Writer), it would be better to use the appendParagraph method of
        OpenOffice::OODoc::Text as this requires fewer parameters.

        If the 'text' option is omitted, an empty element is created (in the
        above example it would be an empty paragraph or line feed).

        You can pass the 'attributes' option which is a hash whose keys are the
        XML attribute names and whose values are the XML attribute values. Use
        of these options depends on the type of document and the type of element
        and requires knowledge of OpenDocument conventions.

        Example:

            $my_style   =
                {
                'style:name'    => 'P1',
                'style:family   => 'paragraph'
                };

            $content->appendElement
                (
                '//office:automatic-styles', 0, 'style:style',
                attributes      => $my_style
                );

        creates a new paragraph style called 'P1' in the list of "automatic
        styles" ("automatic styles" are styles which are not explicitly
        indicated in the styles list as it appears to the end user).

        This method lets you add any kind of element into a document, even
        exotic ones. With the most common OpenDocument objects (e.g.
        paragraphs), though, it is easier to use the specialist methods
        contained in other modules.

        The 'name' argument can be replaced by an existing element in the
        same OODoc::XPath object or in another. In which case no element is
        created but the existing element is simply referenced with a new
        position even though it remains in its old position. Caution: any
        modification of an element which is referenced several times in one
        or more documents is made to all references. If you want to add a
        similar but separate element, you must use replicateElement which
        produces a new element from the content of an existing one.

        The 'name' argument can also be replaced by an XML string. This
        string must correspond to the correct XML description of a UTF-8
        encoded OpenDocument element. For example, it could be a
        string which had been previously exported using the exportXMLElement
        method of OODoc::XPath, or extracted from an OpenDocument file by
        some other application. If for any reason you absolutely have to
        use a non-UTF8 XML string which contains 8-bit characters (accented
        letters, etc.), you can always convert the string using the
        encode_text method before passing it to appendElement. Of course,
        the problem will not arise if you are absolutely sure that the string
        only contains ASCII (7 bit) characters. XML syntax is checked, but it
        is up to the user to verify that the element import conforms to
        OpenDocument XML grammar.

        The following piece of code produces the same result as the first
        example:

            $xml = '<text:p text:style-name="Standard">' .
                'New text' .
                '</text:p>';
            $content->appendElement
                (
                '//office:body', 0, $xml
                );

        Using this method, after one or more element creations by direct
        importation of XML strings, it might be useful to call the
        reorganize method (but not absolutely necessary).

appendBodyElement(element [, options])

        Copies an existing element of any type and appends it to the end of
        the document body. No new element is created.

appendLineBreak(element)

        Appends a line break to a text element. This method allows the user
        to create a single text element (ex: a paragraph) including one or
        more breaks, instead of separate elements.
        
        The example below appends a new text in a new line to the end of
        an existing paragraph:
        
            my $p = $doc->getElement('//text:p', 5);
            $doc->appendLineBreak($p);
            $doc->extendText($p, 'A new line in the same paragraph');

appendSpaces(element, length)

        Appends a sequence of multiple spaces to a text element, knowing that
        a string containing repeated spaces shouldn't be stored as is in a
        document (see setText() and spaces() for details about repeated
        spaces).

appendTabStop(element)

        Appends a tab stop ("\t") to a text element.

blankSpaces(length)

        See spaces().

cloneContent(oodoc_xpath_object)

        Cancels the entire document contents of the current instance and
        replaces it with a reference to the contents of another OODoc::XPath
        object.

        Example:

            $doc1       = OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath->new
                        (
                        file    => 'template.ods',
                        member  => 'styles'
                        );
            $doc2       = OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath->new
                        (
                        file    => 'sheet.ods',
                        member  => 'styles'
                        );
            $doc2->cloneContent($doc1);
            $doc2->save;

        This sequence replaces the styles and page layout of 'sheet.ods'
        with those of 'template.ods'.

        The above example could easily have been written without even using
        OODoc::XPath by acting directly on the files. For example, extract
        the 'styles.xml' member from 'template.ods' and insert it into
        'sheet.ods'. The use of OODoc::XPath and the cloneContent method
        guarantees that the transferred content corresponds to an
        OpenDocument document and allows reads/writes to it on the fly.

        Caution: the "cloned" content is not physically copied. Calling this
        method references one single physical content in two documents. Any
        modifications made to the content of either of these two documents
        applies equally to the other and vice-versa.

contentClass([class name])

        Accessor to get or set the class of the document content. If the
        current member is a document content, returns its class according
        to the OpenDocument terminology, i.e. one of the following values:
        "text", "spreadsheet", "presentation", or "drawing".

        Returns an empty string if the current member is not a document
        content (if it's, for example, the "meta" or "styles" member).

        This accessor is read-only.

createSpaces(length)

        See spaces().

createElement(name, text)

createElement(xml)

        Creates a new element without attributes which is not inserted in a
        document.

        Example:

            my $element =
                $doc->createElement
                        ('my_element', 'its content');

        creates a new XML element without attributes and returns its
        reference.

        Instead of a name, the first argument can be the full XML
        description of the element. Example:

            my $element = $doc->createElement
                        ('<text:p>My text</text:p>');

        This new element is temporary: it is not linked to any document. It
        is destined to be used later by another method.

        The name can contain a namespace prefix which would look like this:
        'namespace:name'.

        In its second form, a well-formed XML string can be supplied as a
        single argument. The recognition criteria is the presence of the "<"
        character at the beginning of the argument. See appendElement for
        comments on the direct insertion of XML.

        Explicit calls to createElement() should be rare. This method is
        normally called silently by higher-level methods which are capable
        of creating an element, inserting it in a document's XML tree and
        giving it attributes (see appendElement and insertElement).

createFrame(name => frame_name [, options])

        Creates an empty frame. A frame is an OpenDocument object which
        controls a rectangular area where a visible content is displayed.
        Possible contents for a frame are text boxes or images.
        
        This method works is not focused on a particular document class
        (for example, it works on text documents as well as on presentations),
        but the visible effects of some options are not always exactly the
        same.
        
        Possible options are:
        
                'name'          => unique name
                
        The 'name' is an identifier; if provided, it should be unique for
        the document.
                
                'attachment'    => existing container
                
        The value of this option, if provided, must be an existing element
        which can contain a text box according to the OpenDocument rules.
        Such an object may be, for example, a draw page if the current
        document class is 'presentation' or 'drawing', or a paragraph if
        this class is 'text'.
        
                'page'          => page number or name
                
        The effects of the 'page' option depends on the content class of the
        current document. If this option is used, it indicates that the frame
        will be anchored to a page, and the given value is a page number.
        It does not matter if, when createFrame() is called, this number is
        beyond the end of the document or not. If the content class of the
        document is "presentation" (Impress) or "drawing" (Draw), then the
        page option must be either the visible name or the object reference
        of an existing draw page. Caution: the 'page' option is ignored if
        'attachment' is provided; in the other hand, either 'page' or
        'attachment' nust be provided in order to really include the new frame
        in the document.
        
                'position'      => coordinates
                
        The coordinates are provided as a string. They go from left to right
        and top to bottom. Coordinates should be given here in the form of a
        string "x,y", and the default unit is centimeter. You can choose
        any other OpenDocument-supported unit instead by attaching the
        corresponding usual abbreviation, such as "12.5cm, 35mm" which is the
        same as "125mm, 3.5cm" or "12.5,3.5", etc. The point ("pt") unit is
        allowed as well. The default coordinates are "0, 0". By default,
        the coordinates are relative to the anchor point. So, the coordinates
        are directly page-related if a valid 'page' option is provided only,
        but if the box is attached to, say, a paragraph, the origin of the
        coordinates is the beginning of the paragraph. However, the real
        interpretation of the coordinates depends on the style. With some
        style definitions, the coordinates may just be ignored (ex: if the
        style says "the frame is centered", OpenOffice.org will center the
        frame whatever its stored coordinates). According to other possible
        style definitions, the coordinates could be counted from the right
        and/or from the bottom and not from the left/top.
        
                'size'          => the size of the box

        Provided using as a string using the same syntax and units as the
        position, the 'size' option is strongly recommended knowing that a
        sizeless frame couldn't be properly displayed. The width comes
        first in the string. The height is sometimes ignored, according to
        the style of the frame: by default, the display height of a text box
        (which is a particular frame) is automatically adjusted to the
        content.
                
                'style'         => style name
                
        The 'style' option allows the application to set the frame style.
        Caution, a text style can't be used as a frame style. A frame
        style controls the box properties only (border, background, shadow,
        and so on), and not the content properties. Reusing an existing frame
        style through this option is generally a good idea.

currentContext([context])

        Accessor allowing the application to change the context for some
        search methods (including getElement()).
        
        The default context is the root of the document. By setting the
        current context to a lower level object, the application can restrain
        the search to the descendants of this object.
        
        In the example below, the getElement() method retrieves a paragraph
        by order number in a previously selected section, and not in the whole
        document.
        
                my $section = $doc->getElement("//text:section", $s_number);
                $doc->currentContext($section);
                my $paragraph = $doc->getElement("//text:p", $p_number);
                
        Without argument, simply returns the previous current context.
        
        See also resetCurrentContext().

decode_text(utf8_string)

        Caution: this method is a non-exported class method. It must be used
        like this:

            OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath::decode_text($utf8_string);

        and not from an OODoc::XPath instance.

        Decodes a UTF-8 string and returns an 8 bit character translation
        of it out of the user's character set, as defined by the following
        variable:

            $OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath::LOCAL_CHARSET

        for which the default value is 'iso-8859-1'. See the Perl/Encode
        manual for the list of supported character sets.
        
        OpenDocument uses UTF-8 XML encoding.

        Explicit calls to this method should be rare. It is used internally
        by methods which return text extracted from document content (e.g.
        getText).

        Warning to contributors: any method which returns text extracted
        from ODF documents is based on decode_text; so any modification or
        improvement of the decoding logic should be made there.

encode_text(editable_string)

        Class method.

        Encodes "local" character strings (for writing to ODF documents).

        Example:

            $string = OpenOffice::OODoc::encode_text($local_string);

        The local character string is defined by the following global
        variable:

            $OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath::LOCAL_CHARSET

        for which the default value is 'iso-8859-1'.

        Explicit calls to this method should generally be avoided. It is
        used internally by methods which insert text or attribute values
        into documents (e.g. setText).

dispose()

        Deletes the calling document object. Recommended as soon as the
        object is no longer needed by the application, and sometimes
        mandatory to avoid memory leaks, especially in long-running processes.

exportXMLBody()

        Returns the XML string for use by another application representing
        the body of a document, without UTF8 decoding.

exportXMLContent()

        See getXMLContent()

exportXMLElement(path, position)

exportXMLElement(element)

        Returns the XML string which represents a particular document
        element (style definition, paragraph, table cell, object, etc.) for
        use by another application without UTF8 decoding.

        This method is principally designed to allow remote exchanges of
        elements between programs using any XML storage or transfer method.
        It acts as "sender" whilst the "receiver" can use appendElement or
        insertElement (for example) to insert any exported elements into a
        document. Example:

            # sender programme
            # ...
            open (EXPORT, "> transfer.xml");
            print EXPORT $doc->exportXMLElement('//text:p', 15);
            close EXPORT;

            # receiver programme
            # ...
            open (IMPORT, "< transfer.xml");
            $doc->appendElement('//office:body', 0, <IMPORT>);
            close (IMPORT);

        In this example, a paragraph is transferred but it could just as
        easily be any content, presentation or metadata element.

        Conversely, this method is not needed when transferring an element
        from one document to another in the same program (or from one
        document position to another). An element can be copied directly
        from within the same program by reference or replication without
        going via its XML (see appendElement(), insertElement() and
        replicateElement()).

extendText(path, position, text [, offset])

extendText(element, text [, offset])

        Appends the given text to the previous content of the given
        element. If the optional 'offset' element is provided, the
        new element is inserted at the given position.

        Example:

                $doc->setText($p, "Initial content");
                $doc->extendText($p, " extended");
        
        Assuming $p is a regular text element (ex: a paragraph), its
        content becomes "Initial content extended".
        
        If the second argument is an element itself, it's appended
        as is to the first element. This feature can be used, for
        example, in order to append sequences of repeated spaces:
        
                $doc->setText($p, "Begin");
                $spaces = $doc->spaces(6);
                $doc->extendText($p, $spaces);
                $doc->extendText($p, "End");
        
        After the code sequence above, the $p element contains:
        
                "Begin      End"
        
        knowing that a single string containing repeated spaces could
        not be properly processed by extendText(), even if the
        'multiple_spaces' property is set (this property affects the
        setText() method only).

        (See also setText()).

findElementList(element, filter [, replacement])

        Returns all the children of the given element whose content matches
        the given filter (regexp).

        If the third argument ('replacement') is given, every string which
        matches the filter in each child element will be replaced by this
        'replacement' value. This 'replacement' argument can be a character
        string or a function reference. (See replaceText() method below.)

        Filtering and possible replacement only affects an element's content
        and not its attributes.

        This method is mostly for internal use. We recommend using other
        methods for the selective extraction of elements.

flatten(element)

        Converts in place the content of the given element to a flat string,
        removing any structure. Same as $element->flatten() (see flatten()
        in the "Element methods" section below). If no element is provided,
        "flattens" the current context element, which is, by default, the
        root of the document (be careful !).

getAttribute(path, position, name)

getAttribute(element, attribute_name)

        Returns the value of a given attribute in a given element.
        
        The element is the first argument, the name of the attribute the second
        one. The return value is undef if the attribute is not defined in the
        given element.

        Example:

                my $element = $doc->getElement('//text:p', 15);
                my $style = $doc->getAttribute($element, 'text:style-name');

        returns the style for paragraph 15.
        
        If the given attribute name doesn't include a namespace prefix, the
        namespace of the attribute is automatically supposed to be the same as
        the namespace of the element. In addition, any blank space within the
        attribute name is regarded as a '-'. So, the same example could be
        be written more concisely as shown below:
        
                my $element = $doc->getElement('//text:p', 15);
                my $style = $doc->getAttribute($element, 'style name');

getAttributes(path, position)

getAttributes(element)

        Returns a list of the element's attributes in the form of a hash
        whose keys are the attributes' XML names.

getBody()

        Returns the root of the document body. The document body is the
        main container of all the displayable content not including page
        headers, page footers, and page backgrounds.

getDescendants(tag [, context])

        Returns the list of the descendants of the given context element
        matching the given tag. Example:
        
                my $section = $doc->getSection("SectionName");
                my @paragraphs = $doc->getDescendants('text:p', $section);
                
        Here, @paragraphs is the list of all the paragraphs which are the
        descendants (at every level) of a given section (the getSection()
        method is described in the OpenOffice::OODoc::Text chapter).
        
        If the second argument is not provided, the current context of the
        document is used (see currentContext()).

getElement(path [, position [, context]])

        This method is provided in order to allow the user to retrieve any
        element in any kind of XML document (ODF-compliant or not) using an
        application-provided XPath expression. It should be used with elements
        whose type is not explicitly supported by the more focused (and more
        user-friendly) methods, described in other manual chapters (::Text,
        ::Styles, ::Meta, and ::Document).
        
        This method returns an element's reference.

        The position argument is used to select a particular element, in the
        order of the document, knowing that the given XPath expression could
        select a set of elements. Without it, getElement() returns the first
        element matching the given XPath.
        
        The XPath expression applies in the current context, and not always
        in the whole document (see currentContext()). However, if the
        reference of a previously selected element is provided as a third
        argument, the given element is used as the context.

        Position indicators start at 0 just like in Perl tables (and some
        other programming languages).

        Example:

            my $p = $doc->getElement('//table:table', 0)

        indicates an element containing the first table of a text document
        or first sheet of a spreadsheet.

        Positions can also be counted backwards from the end by giving
        negative values, i.e. position -1 being the last element. Thus:

            my $h = $doc->getElement('//text:h', -2);

        indicates the second-last header of a text document.

        Note: None of the two examples above should be used in a real
        application, knowing that the ::Text module provides getTable() and
        getHeading() that do the job without XPath coding.
        
        When successful, this method ensures that the returned object is
        indeed an element and not another type of node (e.g. attribute,
        text, comment, etc.). Such an object is never a printable text; it's
        either a text container (whose content may be extracted using
        getText() or getFlatText()) or a non-text element (such as a style,
        a font declaration, a variable field, a document properties container,
        etc).
        
        Limit: getElement() doesn't implement the full XPath specification,
        while it supports a large subset (see the XML::Twig documentation for
        details about the current XPath coverage).

getElementByIdentifier(id [, options])

        Returns an element according to the given identifier, if any, or undef
        otherwise.
        
        Note that, according to the ODF 1.1 standard, some elements have
        identifiers (i.e. text:id attributes), while most haven't, so
        this method can't work with any object.
        
        Allowed options are:
        
            tag         => restricts the search to a given element tag
            
            context     => restricts the search to a given context
        
        Example:
        
            $section = $doc->getElement('//text:section', 0);
            $note = $doc->getElementByIdentifier(
                        "id004",
                        tag             => 'text:note',
                        context         => $section
                        );
        
        This sequence selects the note (i.e. footnote or endnote) identified by
        "id004" if such a note appear in the first section of the document.
        Without the 'context' option, the search space would be the current
        context (that is the whole document by default). Without the 'tag'
        option, the first object that owns the given identifier is selected,
        whatever its tag.
        
        See also getIdentifier(), setIdentifier(), identifier().

getElementList(path [, context])

        Returns a list of all elements at a specified path.

        Example:

            my @ref_summary = $doc->getElementList('//text:h');

        The above example returns a table containing all header elements of
        a text document.

        The path can of course be a more complex XPath expression
        stipulating, for example, a selection of attribute values. In most
        cases, you should avoid complicating things unnecessarily
        (especially in Text, Image and Styles modules), as there are methods
        for searching by element type, attribute and content which are much
        easier to use and avoid the need to supply XPath expressions.
        
        An optional context argument may be provided in order to restrict the
        search space.

        Note: the returned list contains elements in the sense of getElement()
        and not a list of element contents.

getFirstTextRun(path, position)

        Returns the first text segment of an element whose text content is
        segmented due to one or more child elements. In other words, returns
        the beginning of the text content up to the first child element, if
        any. If the given element just contains flat text, without any child
        element, returns the whole text, just like getText() introduced below.

getFlatText(path, position)

getFlatText(element)

        Like getText() below, but without rendering of possible tab stops,
        line breaks, repeated spaces, or any other markup. The returned text
        is just a decoded flat string.

getFrameElement(name/number)

        Selects the frame identified by the given name, or by the given order
        number in the document context.

getIdentifier(path, pos)

getIdentifier(element)

        Returns the identifier (text:id) of the given element, if any.
        
        See also identifier(), setIdentifier(), selectElementByIdentifier().

getNodeByXPath(xpath_expression)

getNodeByXPath(xpath_expression, context)

getNodeByXPath(context, xpath_expression)

        A low-level method which returns the node corresponding to the given
        XPath expression, if it exists in the document. This method (which
        gives unrestricted access to the entire content of a document) is
        designed for use with the unexpected. You will obviously need to be
        familiar with XPath syntax (not documented here) as well as
        OpenDocument structure. See also selectNodesByXPath().

getObjectCoordinates(object)

        Returns the coordinates (X, Y) of the target object, if any. This
        method makes sense with "positioned" objects, i.e. with frames and
        frame-like objects (images, text boxes).
        
        In an array context, the coordinates are returned as two distinct
        strings (horizontal, then vertical position). In a scalar context,
        the values are returned in a single string, and separated by a comma.
        
        See createFrameElement() for details about the coordinates and size
        units and notation.

getObjectDescription(object)

        Returns the litteral description of a visible object. This method
        makes sense for frames or frame-like objects (such as images or
        text boxes).

getObjectName(element)

        Returns the name of the given element, if any.

getObjectSize(object)

        Returns the size of the given object, if any. This method works with
        frames and other frame-based objects, such as images and text boxes.
        
        In the returned data, the width comes first, followed by the height.
        
        The size is returned in the same way as the coordinates with
        getObjectCoordinates().

getPartName()

        Returns the name of the document part, i.e. 'content', 'styles', 'meta',
        and so on.

getRoot()

        Returns the absolute root element of the document. The root element
        contains any other visible or non visible object, including the
        document body (see getBody) and style definitions.

getText(path, position)

getText(element)

        Returns text in the local character set, possibly UTF-8 decoded,
        contained in the element given as an argument (by path/position or
        by reference). See also getFlatText().

        Two equivalent examples:

        # version 1

        my $element     = $doc->getElement('//text:p', 4);

        my $text        = $doc->getText($element);

        # version 2

        my $text        = $doc->getText('//text:p', 4);

        Version 2 is better if the only aim is to get the text from
        paragraph 4. Version 1 is better, however, if during the course of
        the program you want to perform other operations on the same
        paragraph. Giving an element's reference will mean avoiding element
        handling methods having to recalculate a reference from the XPath
        path.

getTextList(path)

        Returns text from all elements in the specified path.

        Example:

            my $summary = $doc->getTextList('//text:h');

            my $report = $doc->getTextList('//text:span');

        The $summary variable contains a concatenation of all headers.
        $report contains all the words or character strings that "stand out"
        which the user has designated by their context, e.g. words in
        italics in a non-italic paragraph.

        In a list context, the returned data is a table, each of whose
        elements contains the text of an XML element. In a scalar context
        (as in our two examples), the returned value is a unique piece of
        editable text and each element's content is separated from that of
        the following element by a line feed.

getTextNodes(context [, filter])

        Returns the text nodes belonging (at any level) to the given context
        element. So-called text nodes are low-level text runs, without
        attributes, that populate text containers such as paragraphs, knowing
        that a paragraph may contain one or more text nodes. For an example,
        as soon as a bookmark is put within a pararaph, there is (at least) one
        text node before the bookmark and another one after the bookmark.
        
        The textnodes are returned as a list in the order of the context.
        
        Note that a text node is not an element, but that every text node in
        a regular document is a child of a text element (generally a paragraph,
        a heading or a text span). So, the node-based parent() method may be
        used to get the element that contains a given text node.
        
        The second argument (optional) specifies a search filter. If it's
        provided, only the matching text nodes are returned.
        
        The example below uses getTextNodes() in order to count the text nodes
        that contain "foo" and that belong to elements whose style is "bar" in
        the whole document body (beware, this examples uses methods which are
        introduced in the OpenOffice::OODoc::Text manual chapter):
        
                my $context = $doc->getBody;
                my @list = ();
                foreach my $tn ($doc->getTextNodes($context, "foo")) {
                        my $style = $doc->getAttribute
                                        ($tn->parent, 'style name');
                        next unless $style;
                        push @list, $tn if $style eq "bar";
                        }

getUserField(name [, context])

        Returns the element (if defined) representing a user-defined field,
        and corresponding to the given name. See also userFieldValue().
        
        By default, this method works with the first user field declaration
        matching the given name in the whole document. However, if the calling
        object is a 'styles' document part, the search is restricted to a given
        context (provided through an optional 2nd argument) or to the current
        context. This feature allows the applications to look for user fields
        whose declarations are associated to page styles.

getUserFields([context])

        Returns the list of the declared user-defined fields.
        
        The example below prints the names of all the user-defined fields:
        
                foreach my $field ($doc->getUserFields)
                        {
                        print $doc->getObjectName($field);
                        }

        By default, this method returns all the user fields at the document
        level. However, if the active document part is 'styles', the search is
        restricted to a given context (provided through an optional 2nd
        argument) or to the current context. This feature allows the
        applications to look for user fields whose declarations are associated
        to page styles.

getVariable(name)

        Returns the user-defined variable identified by the given name.

        [Contribution by Andrew Layton]

getVariableElement()

        See getVariable().

getXMLContent([filehandle])

        Without argument, returns a document's entire XML content.

        Exports the entire XML content of the current member to a flat file,
        if a file handle is provided.

        Note: the exported data are UTF8-encoded.

        Example:

                open my $fh, ">:utf8", "myfile.xml";
                $doc->getXMLContent($fh);
                close $fh;
        
        Synonym: exportXMLContent()

getXPathValue(xpath_expression)

getXPathValue(context, xpath_expression)

getXPathValue(xpath_expression, context)

        A low-level method which allows direct access to the value
        corresponding to the given XPath expression in a document. Character
        decoding is handled in the same way as with getText.

        Example:

            $expression =       '//office:automatic-styles'     .
                        '/style:style'                  .
                        '[@style:style-name="P1"]'      .
                        '/@style:parent-style-name';

            print $doc->getXPathValue($expression);

        This sequence displays the name of the parent style of automatic
        style "P1" (if it exists within the document). Remember that more
        simple methods in Text and/or Styles modules would indeed produce
        the same result.

        The optional element reference "context" can be given as an argument
        either in first or second place. In this case, the search is limited
        to the section of the document tree below this given element. The
        default search area is the entire document.

        Just as with other methods which require XPath paths, this one is
        primarily for internal use. It should not be used by the majority of
        applications.

identifier(path, pos [, value])

identifier(element [, value])

        Gets or sets the identifier of the given element.
        
        If the value argument is not provided, does the same as getIdentifier().
        If provided, the value argument replaces the previous element identifier
        or creates it if it was not set.
        
        This method can change the identifier, but can't remove it, unlike
        setIdentifier().
        
        See also getIdentifier(), setIdentifier(), getElementByIdentifier().

insertElement(path, position, name/xml [, options])

insertElement(element, name/xml [, options])

        Inserts a new element before or after the element specified by
        [path, position] or by reference.

        If the "name" argument is a literal, a new element with the name
        given is created and then inserted. If the same argument is a
        reference to an existing element, this element is then simply
        inserted at the position indicated. This method is useful either for
        adding new elements or for copying elements from one document to
        another or from one position to another within the same document.

        The position option allows you to choose the insertion point of the
        new element. Possible values are "before", "after" and "within" (the
        default is "before").
        
        If "position" is set to "within", the new element is inserted within
        the text of the target element, so an additional "offset" option (i.e.
        a numeric position in the string) is required.
        
        However, for insertion within a text container, setChildElement(),
        described later, is much more powerful.
        
        Other options are:

            text        => "text of element"

            attributes  => $attributes

        The "attributes" option is itself a hash reference containing one or
        more attributes in the form [name => value] as in appendElement.

        When successful, this method returns the inserted element's
        reference (else undef).

        Example:

            my $attributes      =
                {
                'text:style-name'       => 'Heading 2',
                'text:level'            => '2'
                };
            $doc->insertElement
                (
                '//text:p', 4, 'text:h',
                position        => 'after',
                text            => 'New section',
                attribute       => $attributes
                );

        This sequence (in a text document) inserts a level 2 header
        'New section' immediately after paragraph 4.

        The $name argument can be replaced by an existing element. In this
        case a new reference to the existing element is inserted, without
        creating a whole new element. In this way you can display an element
        at several locations or in several documents which is held in memory
        only once. See the appendElement section for the consequences of
        having multiple references to the same physical element. Better to
        use replicateElement to insert separate copies of an element.

        In the same conditions as in appendElement, the 'name' argument can
        be replaced by an XML string which describes the element.

        Note: to add an element to the end of a document, it would obviously
        be better to use appendElement(), and to insert an element at a selected
        position within an existing element, see setChildElement().

isOpenDocument()

        Returns 1 (true) if the current document is an OASIS Open Document.
        To be used every time the application  needs to know the format of
        the document, knowing that some differences between the two formats
        can't be completely hidden by the API.

lineBreak

        Returns a special line break element, available for insertion within
        an existing text element (knowing that "\n" is not recognized as a
        line break if stored "as is"). The returned element is free, so it
        could/should be inserted later within a text element.

makeXPath(expression)

makeXPath(context, expression)

        Low-level method allowing the creation or direct modification
        without restriction (almost) of any document element. It allows
        "query" expressions in a language similar to XPath. If the given
        XPath expression crosses several levels of hierarchy, intermediate
        nodes can be created or modified "on the fly" by creating the
        necessary path which in turn creates the final node.

        Example:

            $doc->makeXPath
             (
             '//office:body/text:p[4 @text:style-name="Text body"]'
             );

        This "query" applies the "Text body" style to paragraph 4 in the
        body of the document. (In reality you will probably never use it
        because the setStyle method of the Text module would do the same
        thing much more simply.)

        If, as in the above example, a node is accompanied by a position
        indicator, it cannot be created but must simply act as a mandatory
        "passage". This method cannot therefore be used to create, for
        example, an Nth paragraph if there is already an N-1.

        The only restrictions apply to namespaces which are given as
        prefixes to element and attribute names. They must be defined in the
        document i.e. conform to OpenDocument specifications. For the rest,
        this method allows the creation of almost anything anywhere within a
        document. Its use is reserved for OpenDocument XML specialists.

        In its second form, a context node can be given as the first
        argument. If present, the path is sought (and if necessary created)
        starting from its position. By default, the path begins from the
        root.

        The returned value is the final node's reference (found or created).

        The full "query language" syntax used in this method is not
        documented here. makeXPath is designed to act more as a base for
        other OpenOffice::OODoc methods than to be used in applications.

moveElements(target_element, element_list)

        Moves a list of existing elements to a new attachment.
        
        One more elements are cut from their previous place and appended
        as children of the target element.
        
        This method can be used to move elements from one place to another
        place in the same document, as well as from one document to another
        one (caution, the elements are moved, not copied).

newTextNode(text)

        Creates a free text node (to be inserted later within a text element).
        
        A text node is a piece of flat text, without any attribute, that may be
        a part or the text content of an element.
        
        Note that it's a low level method for special uses; there are various
        text-oriented methods in the API (mainly described is the ::Text manual
        page), and the explicit use of text nodes should be avoided.

objectName(element [, name])

        Returns the name of the given element. Changes this name is a new name
        is provided as the 2nd argument.

odfLocaltime()

        Class method.

        Converts the numeric time given in argument to an OpenOffice-compliant
        date (ISO-8601). The argument type is the same as for the standard
        Perl localtime() function, i.e. a number of seconds since the "epoch".
        It can be, for example, a value previously returned by a time() call.

        Without argument, returns the current local time in ISO-8601 format.

        The result of this function can be used as is in order to set the
        value of an ODF-compliant date-time element or attribute.

odfTimelocal()

        Class method.

        Translates an ODF-formatted date (ISO-8601) into a regular Perl
        numeric time format, i.e. a number of seconds since the "epoch". So,
        the returned value can be processed with any Perl date formatting or
        calculation function.

        Example:

                my $date_created = odfTimelocal($meta->creation_date());
                $lt = localtime($date_created);
                $elapsed = time() - $date_created;
                print "This document has been created $date_created\n";
                print "$elapsed seconds ago";
        
        This sequence prints the creation date of a document in local time
        string format, then prints the number of seconds between the creation
        date and now. Note that the creation_date() method used here works
        with the meta-data document part only (see OpenOffice::OODoc::Meta for
        details about this method).

        Note: This function requires the Time::Local Perl module.

odfVersion([new_version])

        See openDocumentVersion()

ooLocaltime([$time_value])

        Class method.

        See odfLocaltime()

ooTimelocal($oodate)

        Class method.

        See odfTimelocal()

openDocumentVersion([new_version])

        Returns the version of the Open Document Format (ODF) in use in the
        current document. If an argument is provided, it's used to set a
        new version identifier.

        Beware, this method doesn't really check the conformance of the
        document to any version of the ODF standard. It just retrieves the
        value of the version number attribute as it has been set by the
        application which created or modified the document.

        If openDocumentVersion() is used to set a new version number
        declaration, the given value is not checked. So, this value could
        be the number of a real or future ODF version (1.0, 1.1, 1.2, etc),
        as well as any other arbitrary value (ex: 99, -1, ...).

raw_import(member, source)

        Physically imports an external file into an OpenDocument archive
        associated with an XPath object, if it exists i.e. if the object was
        created using file or archive parameters. This method only transmits
        the command to the OODoc::File's raw_import method. Caution: it must
        not be used with an "active" element i.e. an XML member to which the
        current XPath object or another XPath object is already associated.
        Remember too that the import is not actually carried out by
        OODoc::File until a save and the imported data is therefore not
        immediately available.

raw_export(member, target)

        Physically exports a member from an OpenDocument archive associated
        with an XPath object, if it exists i.e. if the object was created
        using file or archive parameters. This method only transmits the
        command to the OODoc::File's raw_import method.

removeAttribute(path, position, attribute)

removeAttribute(element, attribute)

        Deletes the "attribute" attribute (if found) of the given element by
        [path, position] or by reference and returns "true". Has no physical
        effect and returns undef if the attribute has not been defined or if
        the element does not exist.

removeElement(path, position)

removeElement(element)

        Deletes the given element (if found) by [path, position] or by
        reference and returns "true". Returns undef if the element does not
        exist.

removeIdentifier(path, pos)

removeIdentifier(element)

        Deletes the identifier attribute ('text:id') of the given element.
        
        Be careful, this method should be used in order to delete temporary
        element identifiers that don't comply with the ODF specification;
        remember that the identifier is mandatory for some elements.
        
        See also getIdentifier(), setIdentifier(), identifier().

replaceElement(path, position, replacement [, options])

replaceElement(old_element, new_element [, options])

        Deletes the given element by [path, position] or by reference and
        inserts another element in its place, either from another location
        in the same document or from another document.

        A new element can be supplied under the same conditions as for
        insertElement.

        By default or by using the mode => 'copy' option, it is a copy of
        the new element which is inserted. With the mode => 'reference'
        option, it is only a reference which is inserted. See the section on
        appendElement for comments on the subject of multiple references to
        a single physical element.

replicateElement(original_element, position_object [, options]])

        Makes a copy of the first given element and inserts it into the
        current document at a position which depends on the second argument
        and an optional parameter.

        If the second argument is an existing object in the document, then
        the copy is inserted according to an optional 'position' parameter:
        
        - if no 'position' option is provided, then the copy is appended
        as the last child of the position object;
        
        - if 'position' => 'before' or 'after', then the copy is inserted at
        the same hierarchical level as the position object, according to the
        same logic as for insertElement().
                
        If the second argument is not an object, but simply 'end', then the
        new element is appended as the very last child of the physical root
        of the document. See getRoot(). This option should generally be
        avoided.

        If the second argument is given as 'body', then the new element
        is appended at the end of the document body (see getBody), as it was
        created through appendElement().

        Example:

            my $template = $doc_source->selectElementByAttribute
                        (
                        '//style::style',
                        'style:name',
                        'Text body'
                        );
            my $position = $doc_target->getElement
                        ('//office:styles', 0);
            $doc_target->replicateElement($template, $position);

        This sequence adds a style 'Text body' to the style set of $doc_target
        which copies exactly the style of the same name in $doc_source.
        Obviously, the section of code dealing with the search for the element
        to copy and its position is the most laborious. (In a real application,
        thanks to OODoc::Styles, a more user-friendly coding would be allowed
        for style replication.)

        This method creates a new element which is an exact copy of the given
        element, but which is physically separate from it.

        This method is slower than simply modifying an existing element or
        inserting an element reference.

        If the user needs only a "free" copy of the element (out of the
        document structure, to be later attached), the XML::Twig::Elt copy()
        method should be preferred:
        
            my $new_element = $old_element->copy;

resetCurrentContext()

        Resets the search context to its default value, which is the root of
        the document. See currentContext().

save([filename|filehandle])

        Saves the content of the current document through a physical
        output, that is either a regular file specified by path/name, or
        an open, application-provided IO::Handle. If no argument is
        provided, the document which had been used as the source (if any)
        is used as the default target.
        
        Technically, as soon as the document container is a regular ODF
        file, this method is a stub for the save() method of the associated
        OpenOffice::OODoc::File object, so all the related explanations and
        recommendations given in the OpenOffice::OODoc::File manual chapter
        apply. So, for example, be careful if the target is an open IO::Handle
        instead of a file path/name.

        The behaviour of this method depends on the way the current
        OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath object has been created.
        
        If the document is explicitly linked (through the 'file' option
        of it's constructor) to a regular OOo or OpenDocument file, the
        document is saved either in the source file, or (if a filename
        is provided as an argument) in a new file.
        
        If the document is linked to the same file interface as one or
        more other OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath objects, the behaviour is
        the same as in the previous case, but all the changes made by
        all the linked objects are automatically saved in the target
        file. Example:
        
                my $content     = odfXPath
                                (
                                file            => 'source.odt',
                                part            => 'content'
                                );
                my $styles      = odfXPath
                                (
                                container       => $content,
                                part            => 'styles'
                                )
                my $meta        = odfXPath
                                (
                                container       => $content,
                                part            => 'meta'
                                );
                # ... a lot of content processing
                # ... a lot of style processing
                # ... a lot of metadata processing
                $content->save('target.odt');
        
        At the end of the sequence above, all the changes made through
        the $content, $styles and $meta objects are saved in 'target.odt'
        because these objects share a common file interface. Note that
        in such a situation, the save() method can be issued from anyone
        of the objects sharing the file interface (i.e. $content->save
        could be replaced by $styles->save or $meta->save).
        
        However, any XML part (content, styles, meta, ...) whose
        'read_only' property is set to "true" is not saved. In the example
        above, if, say, the $meta object is created (through odfXPath())
        with a "read_only" option set to "true", only $content and $styles
        are really saved by the last instruction.
                        
        If the document is not associated with a regular OpenDocument
        compressed file (used through an OODoc::File object), it's saved
        as "flat XML" to the given file. In such a situation, if the file name
        is not provided, the source XML file (if any) is used as the target.
        If the file is "flat XML", OODoc::XPath really effects the physical
        output, without using any OODoc::File connector.

        Note: if you need to save a document as flat XML while it's associated
        with an OpenDocument file, you should use exportXMLContent() with an
        application-provided file handle.

selectChildElementByName(path, position [, filter])

selectChildElementByName(element [, filter])

        Returns the first (or only) element whose name matches "filter" from
        within the child elements of the given element indicated by [path,
        position] or by reference.

        "filter" is taken to be a regular expression. If several values
        match the filter, the first of these is returned (in the XML's
        physical order which is not necessarily the logical order of the
        document). See the comments about selectElementByAttribute if
        wanting to select an exact name.

        Returns undef if no elements match the condition.

        Returns the first (or only) child (if there are more than one)
        without anything else if no filter is given or if the filter uses
        wildcards (".*").

selectChildElementsByName(path, position [, filter])

selectChildElementsByName(element [, filter])

        Like selectChildElementByName, but returns a list of all elements
        which match the condition.

        Example:

            my @search_words =
                $doc->selectChildElementsByName
                        ('//text:p', 4, 'text:span');

        returns a list of elements from paragraph 4 which correspond to text
        which has particular attributes which distinguish it from the rest
        of the paragraph (colour, font, etc.)

selectElements([context,] path, filter)

selectElements([context,] path, filter, replacement)

selectElements([context,] path, filter, action [, arg1, ...])

        Returns a list of elements corresponding to a given XPath path and
        whose text matches the filter (regular expression). The "context"
        argument, if given, is an element reference which limits the search
        to its own child elements. The search is carried out in the entire
        document by default.

        An element is selected if the search string is found in its own text
        or in the text of any element descended from it. E.g. An image
        element (draw:image) can be selected from the value of its attached
        "description" field.

        You can replace all strings matching the search criteria with the
        'replacement' string, on the fly, if the latter is given as an
        argument after the filter.

        Lastly, instead of a replacement string, you can pass a subroutine's
        reference which will run (in call back mode) each time the search
        string is matched. If this subroutine returns a defined value, this
        value is used as the replacement string. The subroutine will
        automatically receive the rest of the arguments, in this order:

        Caution: this method can't retrieve a character string which is
        split into more than one text element or text span. So, for example,
        it will never retrieve "My String" as long as "My" and "String" are
        presented with different styles, even if the two parts of the string
        belong to the same paragraph.
        
        If, as is generally the case, you are working exclusively with text
        elements (paragraphs, headers, etc.), you would be better to use
        selectElementsByContent() of the Text module which is easier to use
        and does not require an XPath expression.

        Here is an example which returns the list of images whose
        descriptors contain the word "landscape" and displays the name of
        each selected image:

            sub printMessage
                {
                my $doc         = shift;
                my $element     = shift;
                my $image = $element->parentNode;
                print "Name: " . $image->find('@draw:name') . "\n";
                }
            my @list = $doc->selectElements
                (
                '//draw:image/svg:desc',
                'landscape',
                \&printMessage,
                $doc
                );

        Never use this example of code in a real application as it is both
        purely for demonstration and unnecessarily complex. You can perform
        the same operation much more simply using the OODoc::Image module.

selectElementByAttribute(path, attribute [, value [, context [, pos]]])

        Like selectElementsByAttribute in a scalar context. By default, returns
        the first element at the given path which has the given attribute
        containing the given value. If the value is omitted, then returns the
        first (or only) element that owns the attribute whatever the value.
        
        The context optional argument allows to restrict the search space to
        a given container. The last optional argument, if set, is a positive
        integer that specifies the index of the required element if more than
        one element match the other conditions (beware: if the specified
        position is out of range, the result is undef).
        
        The following example (that apply with the "styles" part of an ODF
        document) prints a message if the "Time New Roman" font face is
        declared:
        
                print "The Time New Roman font is defined !"
                        if $styles->selectElementByAttribute (
                                        'style:font-face',
                                        'style:name',
                                        "Times New Roman"
                                        );

        Returns undef if no element matches the conditions.
        
        See also selectElementsByAttribute().

selectElementsByAttribute(path, attribute [, value [, context]])

        Like selectElementByAttribute(), but for an array context. Returns
        all the elements that match the path/attribute/value/context conditions
        as a list.
        
        The following example selects a document section whose name is
        "Foreword" then selects the list of all the level 3 headings in this
        section (note that $section is used as the optional context argument
        in the second instruction):

                my $section = $doc->selectElementByAttribute
                        ('text:section', 'text:name', "Foreword");
                my @headings3 =
                        $doc->selectElementsByAttribute
                                ('text:h', 'text:outline-level', 3, $section);

        (But remember that the same result could be got without knowledge of the
        XML tags and attributes using more user-friendly methods introduced in
        other manual chapters !) 
        
        See also selectElementByAttribute().

selectFrameElementByName(name)

        Selects the first frame element whose name is exactly the given
        argument. A frame is an OpenDocument container which can host a
        rectangular object, such as an image or a text box.

selectNodesByXPath(xpath_expression)

        This low-level method returns a list of nodes (which are not
        necessarily elements) which match the give XPath expression. See
        getNodeByXPath() for options and comments.

setAttribute(path, position, attribute, value)

setAttribute(element, attribute, value)

        Modifies or adds an attribute to an element.

        The element is indicated by reference or by [path, position].

        The following arguments are the attribute name and the value.
        
        If the name is provided without namespace prefix, it's automatically
        concatenated to the element's namespace prefix. Every space in the
        attribute name, if any, is automatically replaced by a '-'.
        
        If the value is undef, the corresponding attribute is deleted if it
        exists in the element; nothing is done otherwise.

setAttributes(path, position, attributes_table)

setAttributes(element, attributes_table)

        Modifies or adds one or more attributes to an element.

        The element is indicated by reference or by [path, position].

        The list of attributes is given in the form of a hash name => value.

        Example:

            my $h = $doc->getElement('//text:h', 12);
            $doc->setAttributes(
                    $h,
                    'text:style-name'   => 'My Header',
                    'text:level'        => 3
                    );

        This sequence gives the 'My Header' style and level 3 to the 13th
        "header" element in the document.
        
        Any attribute name provided without namespace prefix is automatically
        concatenated with the namespace prefix of the target element. So, the
        "text:" prefix could have been omitted in the attribute hash of the
        example above. In addition, every space in an attribute name is
        automatically replaced by a '-'. So the code below produces the same
        result as the previous example:
        
            my $h = $doc->getElement('//text:h', 12);
            $doc->setAttributes(
                    $h,
                    'style name'        => 'My Header',
                    'level'             => 3
                    );

        An attribute provided as undef is deleted, if it exists.

setChildElement(context, tag/element [, options])

        Creates a new child element within the text content of an existing one.
        The context element may be provided like with insertElement(), either
        by [path, position] or directly as the 1st argument. The next argument
        is the XML tag of the element to be created, or an existing free
        element.
        
        The given context may be any element, including the whole document body;
        however, it should be a simple text container in most cases.
        
        If the provided tag doesn't include a namespace prefix, it's
        automatically concatenated with the namespace prefix of the context
        element (provided as 1st argument). In addition, every space (" ") is
        regarded as a "-". For example, knowing that the ODF names of a line
        break and a tab stop are respectively 'text:line-break' and 'text:tab',
        they may be specified as 'line break' and 'tab' when they are inserted
        in a regular text paragraph (that is their right place).
        
        For alternative and very specific purposes, the tag argument may be
        replaced by a function reference. If so, the corresponding application-
        provided function will be triggered with the following arguments: the
        containing document, a text node, a position, and possibly a string
        (this last argument will be provided if setChildElement() is called with
        a 'replace', 'after', 'before' or 'capture' argument introduced below
        and will contain the matching substring). The application-provided
        function is supposed to insert one or more contiguous new elements in
        the text node at the given position (optionally using the given
        substring); it must return an element. However, most users may safely
        forget this feature...

        Allowed options are
        
                attributes      => attribute/value hash for the new element
                text            => text content for the new element
                offset          => position
                after           => search string (regexp)
                before          => search string (regexp)
                replace         => search string (regexp)
                capture         => search string (regexp)
                way             => search way ('forward' or 'backward')
                start_mark      => element
                end_mark        => element
        
        Some of them are mutually exclusive. They work according to the
        following logic.
        
        By default, the new element is created without text and attributes.
        However, an initial content may be provided through a 'text' optional
        parameter. In addition, a 'attributes' option  allows to provide a set
        of attributes for the new element as a hash reference; note that every
        attribute name provided without namespace prefix is automatically
        concatenated with the same namespace prefix as the given element name.
        
        The child element may be inserted at the beginning, at the end, or at a
        position within the text content. In the last case, the position may be
        specified by a given numeric argument, or looked for according a given
        expression.
        
        By default, the new element is inserted at the beginning of the target
        element. An arbitrary other position may be specified with the 'offset'
        argument, that is either an integer (positive or negative) value, or one
        of the 'start' and 'end' special indicators. If 'offset' is set to
        'start' or 'end', the new element is inserted at the start or at the
        end, and the other position options are ignored. If 'offset' is a
        negative integer, the position is counted backward from the end.
        Caution: if the text of the target container includes tab stops and/or
        multiple contiguous spaces, the effective offset will be larger than
        the given one (because ODF tab stops and multiple spaces are special
        markup elements and not characters).
        
        Whatever the value of 'offset', a 'way' option, whose possible values
        are 'forward' (the default) or 'backward', specifies the search way.
        If 'offset' is negative, the 'way' option is ignored because the
        way is always backward. If 'offset' is positive and 'way' is 'backward',
        then the result is the same as if 'offset' was negative. If 'offset'
        is 0 or not set and 'way' is 'backward', then the search is done
        backward from the end.
        
        A search string may be provided instead of or in combination with an
        offset. If so, the insert point will depend on the position of the first
        substring that matches the given optional search expression (if any).
        The search expression may be provided through the 'after', 'before',
        'replace' or 'capture' option. An expression provided with 'after' or
        'before' means that the insert point is immediately after or before the
        first matching substring. If the search string is provided through
        'replace' or 'capture', the matching string will be replaced by the new
        element. If the option is 'replace' the matching string is just deleted
        while if 'capture' the same matching string is moved in the new element. 
        Of course, these search string options are mutually exclusive; if more
        than one of them are wrongly set, only one is considered, and the
        priority order is 'after', 'before', 'replace', and 'capture'. If both
        'capture' and 'text' are set, the result is the same as with 'replace'
        and 'text'.
        
        If the insertion point depends on a search string (i.e. if 'after',
        'before', 'replace' or 'capture' is used), it's selected according to
        the first match. However, it's possible to reverse the search way using
        the 'way' option. In addition, the search area may be restricted by the
        'offset' parameter: if 'offset' is used in combination with any search
        string option, it specifies the limit of the search area instead of
        a insertion point; if 'offset' is positive and 'way' is 'forward' (or
        not set), the search is done from 'offset' to the end; if 'offset' is
        negative or 'way' is 'backward', the search is done backward from the
        given offset to the beginning.

        The 'start_mark' optional parameter is a child element that already
        exists within the context element. If this parameter is set, it 
        specifies that the search will start from the position of this child
        element and not from the beginning of the end of the context element.
        If the search way is forward, the insert point (in case of success)
        will be located after the start mark, but if the search way is backward
        the insert point will be before the start mark. And if an offset is
        provided, it's counted from the position of the start mark.
        
        Another existing child element may be used in order to restrict the
        search area, through a 'end_mark' parameter. If this parameter is set,
        no search will be done beyond it. If both 'start_mark' and 'end_mark'
        are provided, the search will run from the first one to the second one
        Of course, if the start mark is located after the end mark, nothing
        will be done if the search way is not backward, and vice-versa.
        
        The following example inserts a new 'text:time' element (i.e. an ODF
        time field) immediately after the first "Clock:" substring appearing
        between the 20th character and the end of a given paragraph (specified
        by the 1st argument). The new element will be a 'text:time', knowing
        that the namespace prefix of a paragraph element (text:p) is "text".
        According to the given attributes, the field will display the current
        time increased by 15 minutes:

            $doc->setChildElement(
                $paragraph, 'time',
                offset          => 20,
                after           => "Clock:",
                attributes      => {
                        'time-value' => odfLocaltime()
                        } 
                );
        
        The variant below creates a the same 'time' field after each occurrence
        of "Clock:" (probably not very useful, but the aim is to illustrate the
        use of 'start_mark' in order to ensure that every field but the first
        one will be inserted after the previous field):

            my $field = undef;
            while   (
                $field = $doc->setChildElement(
                        $paragraph, 'time',
                        after           => "Clock:",
                        start_mark      => $field,
                        attributes      => {
                                'time-value' => odfLocaltime()
                                }
                ) {}
     
        Note that the loop body is empty; the start mark, which is undef at the
        first round, is then the previously inserted child element.
        Caution: without carefully designed offset and/or search option, such
        a construct may produce a long or infinite loop (until memory fault);
        in addition, the setChildElements() method (see below) is generally
        more appropriate for such repetitive element insertions.
     
        The next example creates a text span (i.e. a text area with a special
        character style) for the last "ODF" substring of a given paragraph:
        
            $doc->setChildElement(
                $paragraph, 'span',
                capture         => "ODF",
                way             => 'backward'
                attributes      => {
                        'style-name'    => "My Style"
                        }
                );
        
        These examples are shown to illustrate the general logic, not
        necessarily to be reproduced in real applications, knowing that
        setChildElement() is a common basis for more specialized methods
        (mainly introduced in the OODoc::Text man page).

        See also splitContent().

setChildElements(context, tag/element [, options])

        Like setChildElement() but with a repetitive effect that depends on the
        options.
        
        If 'offset' is the only one option, it's used at a regular interval
        between insert points. If one of the search string options ('after',
        'before', 'capture', or 'replace') is set, 'offset' is used once for all
        to exclude an area from the search space, and not as an interval between
        the new elements. The other options work like with setChildElement().
        
        The example below inserts a line break after every ";" in a given
        paragraph (remember that an ODF line break is an element; it's neither
        an end of paragraph nor a "\n" character):
        
                $doc->setChildElements(
                        $paragraph, 'line break',
                        after   => ";"
                        );

setFlatText(path, position, text)

setFlatText(element, text)

        Like setText() described below, but without translation of "\t"
        and "\n".
        
        For exceptional use only. Allows, for example, the use of the OODoc
        API with non-OpenDocument XML files.

setIdentifier(path, pos, value)

setIdentifier(element, value)

        Sets (or resets) the identifier of the given element. The identifier is
        namely the 'text:id' attribute, that is allowed for some elements and
        not for other elements by the ODF standard. OpenOffice::OODoc allows it
        with any kind of element, and doesn't check its uniqueness, so it may be
        used with care. A non-conformant element identifier is not an issue if,
        for example, it's removed before editing or processing the resulting
        documents through another application.
        
        This method removes the identifier if the value argument is undef;
        however the removeIdentifier() method produces the same result in a
        more self-documented way).

setObjectCoordinates(object, coordinates)

        Updates or creates the coordinates (X, Y) attributes of a visible
        object (ex: image, text box, frame). See createFrameElement() for the
        coordinates units and notation.

setObjectDescription(object, description)

        Updates or creates the litteral description of the given object.
        
        Should be used for frames, images or text boxes. Caution: the
        description is not the same as the printable content of a text
        box.

setObjectName(element, name)

        Sets or changes the name of the given element according to the given
        new name. Deletes the name if the given name is undef.

setObjectSize(object, size)

        Updates or creates the width and height attributes of a given object.
        
        This method makes sense for visible, rectangular objects only, such
        as the frames, images or text boxes.
        
        See createFrameElement() for details about the size units and
        notation.

setRangeMark(type, identifier, parameters)

        Creates a pair of corresponding delimiting markup elements in place, in
        order to set up an identified text range (such as a range bookmark,
        an index mark or a table of content mark).
        
        The first argument specifies the type of range; it's mandatory but its
        value is not checked. Examples of legal types are 'bookmark',
        'toc-mark', 'alphabetical-index-mark'. If the provided type doesn't
        contain a semicolon, it's automatically prefixed according to the
        content of the 'prefix' parameter (whose default is 'text').
        
        The identifier argument id mandatory; it's an arbitrary (preferently
        unique) identifier for the pair. While this identifier is generally
        invisible for the end-user, it's sometimes an explicit name (for
        example in a range bookmark).
        
        The 'prefix' optional parameter allows the applications to specify a
        particular XML prefix; the default prefix for range marks is 'text'.
        
        An arbitrary set of attributes may be provided as a hash through an
        optional 'attributes' parameter. This hash will be processed according
        to the same logic as with the common setAttributes() method.
        
        The 'context' optional parameter, if provided, specifies the element
        (which should be a text container, such as a paragraph, a heading or a
        text span) containing the text range to be delimited. However, if
        the covered text range is spread across two or more text containers,
        this parameter must not be set, and a separate 'context' parameter must
        be provided for the start mark and the end mark (see below).
        
        If (and only if) the 'context' parameter is set (meaning that the whole
        text content between the marks belongs to the same element), a
        'content' optional parameter allows to provide an expression; if so,
        the setRangeMark() will look for the first substring that matches this
        expression in the target element, and in case of success the range marks
        will be inserted at the beginning and the end of this substring. The
        search space of the substring may be restricted using the 'offset' and
        'way' parameters, according to the same rules as setChildElement().
        Note that the 'replace', 'before' and 'after' parameters don't apply
        with setRangeMark().
        
        Unless 'context' and 'content' are defined, there are two mandatory
        parameters, namely 'start' and 'end'; each one is a hash of parameters
        that apply to the start mark and the end mark, respectively. Each one
        allows the same options as the option hash of setChildElement(), i.e.
        'offset', 'before', 'after', 'replace' and/or 'way' as described above.
        Note that the 'start' and 'end' structures are ignored as soon as
        the 'context' and 'content' parameters are set at the first level.
        
        In addition, if the start and end marks are not contained in the same
        text element, separate 'context' parameters must be provided with each
        one of the 'start' hash and the 'end' hash. However, if the 'end' hash
        doesn't contain any 'context' parameter, the end mark is supposed to
        be in the same container as the start mark.
        
        The method returns the new start and end marks as a list of elements
        in array context, or the start mark only in scalar context.
        In case of failure (due to wrong parameters), both are undef, knowing
        than setRangeMark() creates the full pair of marks or nothing. Note
        that the optional attributes (provided through the 'attributes'
        parameter) are stored in the start mark element only.
        
        By default, nothing prevents the applications from creating a range mark
        whose start point is (temporarily or not) located after the end point,
        so introducing an inconsistency. However, it's possible to set a 'check'
        boolean option; if this option is 'true', an order check is done and, if
        something is wrong, the range mark creation is cancelled and the method
        fails. On the other hand, as long as the application may ensure that it
        the start will always be set before the end, the order check should be
        avoided for performance reasons. 
        
        Caution: The relative positions of the two marks are not checked, so
        nothing prevents the users from creating a range whose start point
        is (temporarily or not) located after the end point in the document.
        The applications should ensure that the 'start' and 'end' options
        really specify two locations in the right order.
        
        The following instruction creates an index mark covering a
        text area within a single paragraph (previously selected); the range
        starts before the "abc" substring and ends after the "xyz" substring;
        the mark identifier is 'ind1234'. Nothing is done if one of these
        substrings is not present in the target element:
        
            $doc->setRangeMark(
                'alphabetical-index-mark', 'ind1234',
                element => $paragraph,
                start   => { before => "abc" },
                end     => { after  => "xyz" }
                );
        
        The next example creates a range bookmark (i.e. a bookmark covering
        a text area) that starts before the "abc" substring in a paragraph
        and ends at the end of another paragraph:
        
            $doc->setRangeMark(
                'bookmark', 'bm0001',
                start   => { element => $p1, before => "abc" },
                end     => { element => $p2, offset => 'end' }
                );

setText(path, position, text)

setText(element, text)

        Uses the given text as the content of the given element.

        Any previous content (including formatting markup, bookmarks,
        notes, references, etc) is replaced by the given text.
        
        If the given text includes tab stops ("\t") or line breaks ("\n"),
        they are replaced by the appropriate OpenDocument tags. If this
        translation must be avoided, use setFlatText() instead.
        
        Note: The strings containing repeated whitespaces are not properly
        processed by default. A sequence of repeated spaces, whatever its
        length, is replaced by a single space in the target document. So

                $doc->setText($p, "Begin        End");
        
        produces the same visible result as
        
                $doc->setText($p, "Begin End");

        It's possible to override this default behaviour using the
        'multiple_spaces' document property. If 'multiple_spaces' is
        set to 'on', the repeated spaces in the example above are properly
        recorded. However, this optional feature is a the price of some
        other features and, above all, it have a negative impact on the
        performances (due to an additional processing of *every* space).
        Of course, a temporary activation of the 'multiple_spaces'
        feature is allowed, like in the following example, which sets
        a content including multiples whitespaces:

                $doc->{'multiple_spaces'} = 'on';
                $doc->setText($p, "Begin        End");
                $doc->{'multiple_spaces'} = undef;

        See spaces() and extendText() for a workaround if you
        need to insert repeated spaces without using the 'multiple_spaces'
        property.

setUserFieldDeclaration(name [, options])

        Creates a new user field declaration in the document.
        
        The optional parameter are:
        
                'type'          => data type (default 'string')
                
                'value'         => initial value (default "")
                
                'currency'      => a 3-letter currency code (ex: EUR, USD...)

        See also setTextField() in OpenOffice::OODoc::Text.

spaces(length)

        Returns a special element, available for insertion within a text
        element, representing repeated contiguous blank spaces (knowing
        that repeated spaces can't be properly displayed by an OpenDocument-
        compliant application if stored as a flat string). The returned
        element is free, so it could/should be inserted later within a text
        element. See extendText() for an example of use.

splitContent(path, pos, tag, expression [, attributes])

splitContent(element, tag, expression [, attributes])

        Moves some parts of the text content of the given element and its
        descendants in new child elements.
        
        The tag argument specifies the XML tag of the child elements to be
        created. Unless this tag is provided with a namespace prefix (or more
        precisely unless it contains a semicolon), it's automatically
        concatenated with the namespace prefix of the host element.
        
        The following argument is a regular expression that specifies the text
        substrings to wrap in the new elements. An element is created for every
        match in the context element and, if any, in its existing children.
        
        After these arguments, additional attribute/value pairs may be
        optionally provided; each one will become an attribute for every created
        child element (the same name and attributes apply to all). Every
        attribute name provided without namespace prefix is automatically
        concatenated to the same namespace prefix as the new elements.
        
        This method returns the new child elements as a list.
        
        Note that splitContent() is a simplified interface for the mark()
        method provided by XML::Twig, which may be directly used as an element
        method for more advanced uses.

splitElement(element, offset)

        Splits a text element at a given offset. This method is a wrapper
        of the XML::Twig::Elt split_at() method, so, as said by Michel
        Rodriguez in his documentation, it splits "a text element in 2" at
        the given offset so "the original element now holds the first part
        of the string and a new element holds the right part".
        
        In addition, the new element is created with the same attributes (ex:
        the style or the heading level, if any) as the original one.
        
        The new element is inserted immediately after the old one.
        
        The method returns both the original and the new elements in a list
        context. In a scalar context, the new element only is returned.
        
        Caution: splitElement() works properly on elements containing "flat
        text" only. It's a bit complicated to use and probably doesn't
        produce the right effects on elements containing line breaks, tab
        stops, "styled spans" or any kind of structure. If it's used with an
        element containing more that one text segment, it works with the first
        one only.

tabStop

        Returns a special tabulation mark element, available for insertion
        within an existing text element (knowing that "\t" is not recognized
        as a tab stop if stored "as is"). The returned element is free, so
        it could/should be inserted later within a text element.

userFieldValue(user_field [, value])

        Reads the stored value of a given user field or changes it if a
        value is provided. The 1st argument can be either the name of the
        field (as it appears for the end-user) or a previously loaded
        user field element. See also getUserField().

        This method doesn't create any new user field. It can only read or
        update an existing one.

        If the given user field is numeric (ex: date, currency) the returned
        and/or provided value is the internally stored value, and not the
        displayed one.

        Warning: the changes made in a document using userFieldValue() don't
        necessarily produce visible changes for the end-user. This method
        can update the internal value of a field, but the displayable
        representations of this field are not automatically refreshed (it
        depends on a later field update).

variableValue(name/element [, newvalue])

        Returns the current value of the given user-defined variable or, if
        a new value is provided as the second argument, updates the variable
        accordingly.

        [Contribution by Andrew Layton]

        Every document element is an OpenOffice::OODoc::Element object,
        and OpenOffice::OODoc::Element inherits all the rich features of
        XML::Twig::Elt, including the very powerful copy(), cut(), paste(),
        move() and replace() methods (look at the XML::Twig documentation
        for details). Some additional methods, provided in the ::Element
        package, are described below.
        
        The "element methods" should be regarded as reserved for advanced
        uses, possibly in combination with native XML::Twig::Elt methods
        (not documented here, but the XML::Twig package itself is well
        documented).
        
        Remember these methods belong to the element and not to the
        document...!

appendChild(newnode)

        Appends a node as the last child of the calling node.
        
        If the argument is an existing node, it's appended as is.
        If the argument is a string, a new node is created, with the
        given string as the XML tag name.

appendTextChild(text)

        Appends a text node (PCDATA) as the last child of the calling
        element.

flatten()

        Converts in place the content of the calling element to a flat string,
        removing any structure. All the children of the calling element are
        removed and their text content is concatenated. The resulting string
        becomes the only content of the element. For example, if the calling
        element is a table, the tabular structure disappears and is replaced
        by the concatenated contents of all the cells. Any possible internal
        tab stop or line break element is removed, as well as any "styled"
        text span (see setSpan() and removeSpan() is the OODoc::Text chapter
        for information about styled text spans).
        
        Be careful, a lot of elements are not displayed by the OpenDocument
        compliant software. For example, a section element becomes invisible
        if it directly contains its text, without structure elements such as
        paragraphs, headings, tables, and so on. In order to make visible the
        "flattened" content of a previously complex element, the XML tag
        should be replaced by the tag of a "displayable" element. In the
        following example, a section is flattened, then tagged as a
        paragraph, so its content remains visible:
        
                my $s = $doc->getSection("AnySection");
                $s->flatten;
                $s->set_tag('text:p');
                
        Note: getSection() belongs to OpenOffice::OODoc::Text and set_tag()
        is provided by the underlying XML::Twig::Elt package.
        
        The text flattening is sometimes required in order to allow the
        applications to retrieve strings which are split into more than one
        text container. For example, a string such as "OpenDocument" can't
        be retrieved using selectElements() or any other string search method
        of the API if, say, "Open" and "Office" don't belong to the same text
        span (i.e. if they have different styles; look at setSpan() in
        OpenOffice::OODoc::Text to know more about text spans). In such a
        situation, flatten() removes any text span markup, so the whole text
        content of the element can be processed as a regular character string.
        
        Caution, this method can produce terrific results when misused.

getLocalPosition([regexp])

        Returns the position of the current element in the list of all
        the children of the same parent with the same type.

        Example:

                $cell->getLocalPosition();

        Assuming $cell is a table cell, this example returns the position
        of the cell in the row without counting the covered cells (if any).

        If a regular expression is provided as the optional argument, all
        the siblings matching the expression are counted; but the method
        returns zero if the calling element itself doesn't match the
        expression.

        Example:

                $cell->getLocalPosition(qr'table:(covered-|)table-cell');

        returns the position of the cell among all the cells (covered or not)
        in the row.

        Note: This method is a wrapper of the pos() method of XML::Twig::Elt,
        but the returned values are zero-based in order to be consistent
        with the other element addressing features of OpenOffice::OODoc.

insertNewNode(xml_tag, position_flag [, offset])

        Creates a new XML element, whose tag is passed as the 1st argument,
        before, after or within the calling element. The 2nd argument
        must be set to 'before', 'after', 'within', or any other value
        accepted by the paste() method of XML::Twig. If the 2nd argument
        is 'within', a 3rd one must be provided and indicate the offset.

replicateNode(count, position)

        Produces one or more copies of the calling element and inserts
        the copies before or after it. The position argument should be
        'before' or 'after'; its default is 'after'. Technically, the
        position argument could be anyone of the position options of
        the XML::Twig::Elt->paste method, including 'first_child',
        'last_child' or 'within'; but any other than 'before' and 'after'
        probably don't make sense in an OpenDocument-compliant data
        structure.

        Without any argument, the calling element is replicated once.
        But if the count argument is provided and set to zero or a
        negative value, nothing is done.
        
        Example :
        
                my $row = $doc->getTableRow("Table1", -1);
                $row->replicateNode(5);
                
        This sequence appends 5 more rows to a table; each new row is a
        copy of the last original row, including each individual cell
        and its content.

selectChildElement(filter)

        Like selectChildElements() below, but returns only the first node
        matching the filter.
        
        Note: the first_child() method of XML::Twig::Elt should be preferred
        when the filter is the exact tag name of the needed element.

selectChildElements(filter)

        Selects the children with XML tag names matching a given filter.
        The filter is processed as a regexp.
        
        Note: the children() method of XML::Twig::Elt should be preferred
        if the filter is the exact tag name of the needed elements.

textLength()

        Works with text nodes. In array context, returns the length of the text
        and the text itself; in scalar context, returns the length only.

        No class variables are exported; the applications, if needed,
        must access them using their full name ($OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath:XXX)

        The following names should be prefixed explicitly with
        "$OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath::"

            CHARS_TO_ESCAPE

        contains the list of reserved characters which, in XML, should be
        replaced by escape sequences.

            OO_CHARSET

        indicates the character set used for OpenDocument document
        encoding and whose default value is 'utf8' (it should not be changed).

            LOCAL_CHARSET

        indicates the user's character set, by default 'iso-8859-1'; it must
        be changed according to the real user's needs (warning: there is no
        kind of automatic adaptation to the user's locales, so the application
        must explicitly load the right value in this variable); it should be
        done using the odfLocalEncoding() accessor (see the OpenOffice::OODoc
        man page and, for the list of supported character sets, the Encode
        module's documentation).

        The content of these three variables should not normally be directly
        modified by the applications.

        Instance hash variables are :

            'container'         => <oodoc_file_object>
            'file'              => <OpenDocument file>
            'part'              => <name of the XML part in the ODF package>
            'readable_XML'      => <'true' or 'false'>
            'local_encoding'    => <user's output encoding>
            'multiple_spaces'   => <'on' or undef, see setText()>
            'element'           => <name of loaded XML element>
            'xpath'             => <XML::Twig, XPath-capable object>
            'twig_options'      => <XML::Twig options as a hash reference>
            'opendocument'      => <'true' or 'false'>

        However, the 'xml' variable is cleared almost immediately after a
        successful constructor call, in order to save memory. As soon as the
        corresponding XPath object has been created, the XML source is no
        longer required.

        The 'xpath' variable of an OODoc::XPath object contains a reference
        to the document structure as it's made available through XML::Twig
        (see CPAN documentation). This object encompasses the entire current
        XML tree. Each access to XML using OODoc::XPath objects is done via
        XML::Twig. So, after having run the following command:

            my $xp = $doc->{'xpath'};

        the experienced programmer will be able to use $xp to access all the
        functionality of the XML::Twig API, bearing in mind that all
        operations using this interface will have a direct effect on the
        content of the $doc object.
        
        'twig_options' allows the user to provide a hash reference of
        additional options to XML::Twig. These options can modify the way the
        document is parsed during the execution of odfXPath(). For special
        applications only (see the XML::Twig reference manual).

        The 'opendocument' property, if true, means that the document is
        declared as an OASIS Open Document. If this property is false or
        undef, the document format is OpenOffice.org version 1. This property
        should not be changed (as long as OpenOffice::OODoc can't change the
        format of an existing document).

Developer/Maintainer: Jean-Marie Gouarne <http://jean.marie.gouarne.online.fr>

Contact: jmgdoc@cpan.org

Copyright 2004-2010 by Genicorp, S.A. <http://www.genicorp.com>

Initial English version of the reference manual by Graeme A. Hunter (graeme.hunter@zen.co.uk).

License: GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1

Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained below:
Around line 971:
Unknown directive: =hread3
2010-03-31 perl v5.32.1

Search for    or go to Top of page |  Section 3 |  Main Index

Powered by GSP Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface.
Output converted with ManDoc.