|
|
| |
Text::BibTeX::Entry(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Text::BibTeX::Entry(3) |
Text::BibTeX::Entry - read and parse BibTeX files
use Text::BibTeX::Entry;
# ...assuming that $bibfile and $newbib are both objects of class
# Text::BibTeX::File, opened for reading and writing (respectively):
# Entry creation/parsing methods:
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new();
$entry->read ($bibfile);
$entry->parse ($filename, $filehandle);
$entry->parse_s ($entry_text);
# or:
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new( $bibfile );
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new( $filename, $filehandle );
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new( $entry_text );
# Entry query methods
warn "error in input" unless $entry->parse_ok;
$metatype = $entry->metatype;
$type = $entry->type;
# if metatype is BTE_REGULAR or BTE_MACRODEF:
$key = $entry->key; # only for BTE_REGULAR metatype
$num_fields = $entry->num_fields;
@fieldlist = $entry->fieldlist;
$has_title = $entry->exists ('title');
$title = $entry->get ('title');
# or:
($val1,$val2,...$valn) = $entry->get ($field1, $field2, ..., $fieldn);
# if metatype is BTE_COMMENT or BTE_PREAMBLE:
$value = $entry->value;
# Author name methods
@authors = $entry->split ('author');
($first_author) = $entry->names ('author');
# Entry modification methods
$entry->set_type ($new_type);
$entry->set_key ($new_key);
$entry->set ('title', $new_title);
# or:
$entry->set ($field1, $val1, $field2, $val2, ..., $fieldn, $valn);
$entry->delete (@fields);
$entry->set_fieldlist (\@fieldlist);
# Entry output methods
$entry->write ($newbib);
$entry->print ($filehandle);
$entry_text = $entry->print_s;
# Reset internal parser state:
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new();
$entry->parse ($filename, undef);
$entry->parse_s (undef);
# or:
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new( $filename, undef );
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new( undef );
# Miscellaneous methods
$entry->warn ($entry_warning);
# or:
$entry->warn ($field_warning, $field);
$entry->clone;
"Text::BibTeX::Entry" does all the real work
of reading and parsing BibTeX files. (Well, actually it just provides an
object-oriented Perl front-end to a C library that does all that. But that's
not important right now.)
BibTeX entries can be read either from
"Text::BibTeX::File" objects (using the
"read" method), or directly from a
filehandle (using the "parse" method), or
from a string (using "parse_s"). The first
is preferable, since you don't have to worry about supplying the filename,
and because of the extra functionality provided by the
"Text::BibTeX::File" class. Currently,
this means that you may specify the database structure to which
entries are expected to conform via the
"File" class. This lets you ensure that
entries follow the rules for required fields and mutually constrained fields
for a particular type of database, and also gives you access to all the
methods of the structured entry class for this database structure.
See Text::BibTeX::Structure for details on database structures.
Once you have the entry, you can query it or change it in a
variety of ways. The query methods are
"parse_ok",
"type",
"key",
"num_fields",
"fieldlist",
"exists", and
"get". Methods for changing the entry are
"set_type",
"set_key",
"set_fieldlist",
"delete", and
"set".
Finally, you can output BibTeX entries, again either to an open
"Text::BibTeX::File" object, a filehandle
or a string. (A filehandle or "File"
object must, of course, have been opened in write mode.) Output to a
"File" object is done with the
"write" method, to a filehandle via
"print", and to a string with
"print_s". Using the
"File" class is recommended for future
extensibility, although it currently doesn't offer anything extra.
- new ([OPTS ,] [SOURCE])
- Creates a new "Text::BibTeX::Entry"
object. If the SOURCE parameter is supplied, it must be one of the
following: a "Text::BibTeX::File" (or
descendant class) object, a filename/filehandle pair, or a string. Calls
"read" to read from a
"Text::BibTeX::File" object,
"parse" to read from a filehandle, and
"parse_s" to read from a string.
A filehandle can be specified as a GLOB reference, or as an
"IO::Handle" (or descendants) object,
or as a "FileHandle" (or descendants)
object. (But there's really no point in using
"FileHandle" objects, since
"Text::BibTeX" requires Perl 5.004,
which always includes the "IO"
modules.) You can not pass in the name of a filehandle as a
string, though, because
"Text::BibTeX::Entry" conforms to the
"use strict" pragma (which disallows
such symbolic references).
The corresponding filename should be supplied in order to
allow for accurate error messages; if you simply don't have the
filename, you can pass "undef" and
you'll get error messages without a filename. (It's probably better to
rearrange your code so that the filename is available, though.)
Thus, the following are equivalent to read from a file named
by $filename (error handling ignored):
# good ol' fashioned filehandle and GLOB ref
open (BIBFILE, $filename);
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new($filename, \*BIBFILE);
# newfangled IO::File thingy
$file = IO::File->new($filename);
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new($filename, $file);
But using a
"Text::BibTeX::File" object is simpler
and preferred:
$file = Text::BibTeX::File->new($filename);
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new($file);
Returns the new object, unless SOURCE is supplied and
reading/parsing the entry fails (e.g., due to end of file) -- then it
returns false.
You may supply a reference to an option hash as first
argument. Supported options are:
- BINMODE
- Set the way Text::BibTeX deals with strings. By default it manages strings
as bytes. You can set BINMODE to 'utf-8' to get NFC normalized
Text::BibTeX::Entry->new(
{ binmode => 'utf-8', normalization => 'NFD' },
$file });
- NORMALIZATION
- UTF-8 strings and you can customise the normalization with the
NORMALIZATION option.
- clone
- Clone a Text::BibTeX::Entry object, returning the clone. This re-uses the
reference to any Text::BibTeX::Structure or Text::BibTeX::File but copies
everything else, so that the clone can be modified apart from the
original.
- read (BIBFILE)
- Reads and parses an entry from BIBFILE, which must be a
"Text::BibTeX::File" object (or
descendant). The next entry will be read from the file associated with
that object.
Returns the same as "parse"
(or "parse_s"): false if no entry
found (e.g., at end-of-file), true otherwise. To see if the parse itself
failed (due to errors in the input), call the
"parse_ok" method.
- parse (FILENAME, FILEHANDLE)
- Reads and parses the next entry from FILEHANDLE. (That is, it scans the
input until an '@' sign is seen, and then slurps up to the next '@' sign.
Everything between the two '@' signs [including the first one, but not the
second one -- it's pushed back onto the input stream for the next entry]
is parsed as a BibTeX entry, with the simultaneous construction of an
abstract syntax tree [AST]. The AST is traversed to ferret out the most
interesting information, and this is stuffed into a Perl hash, which
coincidentally is the
"Text::BibTeX::Entry" object you've been
tossing around. But you don't need to know any of that -- I just figured
if you've read this far, you might want to know something about the inner
workings of this module.)
The success of the parse is stored internally so that you can
later query it with the "parse_ok"
method. Even in the presence of syntax errors, you'll usually get
something resembling your input, but it's usually not wise to try to do
anything with it. Just call
"parse_ok", and if it returns false
then silently skip to the next entry. (The error messages printed out by
the parser should be quite adequate for the user to figure out what's
wrong. And no, there's currently no way for you to capture or redirect
those error messages -- they're always printed to
"stderr" by the underlying C code.
That should change in future releases.)
If no '@' signs are seen on the input before reaching
end-of-file, then we've exhausted all the entries in the file, and
"parse" returns a false value.
Otherwise, it returns a true value -- even if there were syntax errors.
Hence, it's important to check
"parse_ok".
The FILENAME parameter is only used for generating error
messages, but anybody using your program will certainly appreciate your
setting it correctly!
Passing "undef" to
FILEHANDLE will reset the state of the underlying C parser, which is
required in order to parse multiple files.
- parse_s (TEXT)
- Parses a BibTeX entry (using the above rules) from the string TEXT. The
string is not modified; repeatedly calling
"parse_s" with the same string will give
you the same results each time. Thus, there's no point in putting multiple
entries in one string.
Passing "undef" to TEXT will
reset the state of the underlying C parser, which may be required in
order to parse multiple strings.
- parse_ok ()
- Returns false if there were any serious errors encountered while parsing
the entry. (A "serious" error is a lexical or syntax error;
currently, warnings such as "undefined macro" result in an error
message being printed to "stderr" for
the user's edification, but no notice is available to the calling
code.)
- type ()
- Returns the type of the entry. (The `type' is the word that follows the
'@' sign; e.g. `article', `book', `inproceedings', etc. for the standard
BibTeX styles.)
- metatype ()
- Returns the metatype of the entry. (The `metatype' is a numeric value used
to classify entry types into four groups: comment, preamble, macro
definition (@string entries), and regular (all
other entry types). "Text::BibTeX"
exports four constants for these metatypes:
"BTE_COMMENT",
"BTE_PREAMBLE",
"BTE_MACRODEF", and
"BTE_REGULAR".)
- key ()
- Returns the key of the entry. (The key is the token immediately following
the opening `{' or `(' in "regular" entries. Returns
"undef" for entries that don't have a
key, such as macro definition (@string)
entries.)
- num_fields ()
- Returns the number of fields in the entry. (Note that, currently, this is
not equivalent to putting
"scalar" in front of a call to
"fieldlist". See below for the
consequences of calling "fieldlist" in a
scalar context.)
- fieldlist ()
- Returns the list of fields in the entry.
WARNING In scalar context, it no longer returns a
reference to the object's own list of fields.
- exists (FIELD)
- Returns true if a field named FIELD is present in the entry, false
otherwise.
- get (FIELD, ...)
- Returns the value of one or more FIELDs, as a list of values. For example:
$author = $entry->get ('author');
($author, $editor) = $entry->get ('author', 'editor');
If a FIELD is not present in the entry,
"undef" will be returned at its place
in the return list. However, you can't completely trust this as a test
for presence or absence of a field; it is possible for a field to be
present but undefined. Currently this can only happen due to certain
syntax errors in the input, or if you pass an undefined value to
"set", or if you create a new field
with "set_fieldlist" (the new field's
value is implicitly set to
"undef").
Normally, the field value is what the input looks like after
"maximal processing"--quote characters are removed, whitespace
is collapsed (the same way that BibTeX itself does it), macros are
expanded, and multiple tokens are pasted together. (See bt_postprocess
for details on the post-processing performed by btparse.)
For example, if your input file has the following:
@string{of = "of"}
@string{foobars = "Foobars"}
@article{foobar,
title = { The Mating Habits } # of # " Adult " # foobars
}
then using "get" to query
the value of the "title" field from
the "foobar" entry would give the
string "The Mating Habits of Adult Foobars".
However, in certain circumstances you may wish to preserve the
values as they appear in the input. This is done by setting a
"preserve_values" flag at some point;
then, "get" will return not strings
but "Text::BibTeX::Value" objects.
Each "Value" object is a list of
"Text::BibTeX::SimpleValue" objects,
which in turn consists of a simple value type (string, macro, or number)
and the text of the simple value. Various ways to set the
"preserve_values" flag and the
interface to both "Value" and
"SimpleValue" objects are described in
Text::BibTeX::Value.
- value ()
- Returns the single string associated with @comment
and @preamble entries. For instance, the entry
@preamble{" This is a preamble" #
{---the concatenation of several strings}}
would return a value of "This is a preamble---the
concatenation of several strings".
If this entry was parsed in "value preservation"
mode, then "value" acts like
"get", and returns a
"Value" object rather than a simple
string.
This is the only part of the module that makes any assumption about the nature
of the data, namely that certain fields are lists delimited by a simple word
such as "and", and that the delimited sub-strings are human names of
the "First von Last" or "von Last, Jr., First" style used
by BibTeX. If you are using this module for anything other than bibliographic
data, you can most likely forget about these two methods. However, if you are
in fact hacking on BibTeX-style bibliographic data, these could come in very
handy -- the name-parsing done by BibTeX is not trivial, and the
list-splitting would also be a pain to implement in Perl because you have to
pay attention to brace-depth. (Not that it wasn't a pain to implement in C --
it's just a lot more efficient than a Perl implementation would be.)
Incidentally, both of these methods assume that the strings being
split have already been "collapsed" in the BibTeX way, i.e. all
leading and trailing whitespace removed and internal whitespace reduced to
single spaces. This should always be the case when using these two methods
on a "Text::BibTeX::Entry" object, but
these are actually just front ends to more general functions in
"Text::BibTeX". (More general in that you
supply the string to be parsed, rather than supplying the name of an entry
field.) Should you ever use those more general functions directly, you might
have to worry about collapsing whitespace; see Text::BibTeX (the
"split_list" and
"split_name" functions in particular) for
more information.
Please note that the interface to author name parsing is
experimental, subject to change, and open to discussion. Please let me know
if you have problems with it, think it's just perfect, or whatever.
- split (FIELD [, DELIM [, DESC]])
- Splits the value of FIELD on DELIM (default: `and'). Don't assume that
this works the same as Perl's builtin
"split" just because the names are the
same: in particular, DELIM must be a simple string (no regexps), and
delimiters that are at the beginning or end of the string, or at non-zero
brace depth, or not surrounded by whitespace, are ignored. Some examples
might illuminate matters:
if field F is... then split (F) returns...
'Name1 and Name2' ('Name1', 'Name2')
'Name1 and and Name2' ('Name1', undef, 'Name2')
'Name1 and' ('Name1 and')
'and Name2' ('and Name2')
'Name1 {and} Name2 and Name3' ('Name1 {and} Name2', 'Name3')
'{Name1 and Name2} and Name3' ('{Name1 and Name2}', 'Name3')
Note that a warning will be issued for empty names (as in the
second example above). A warning ought to be issued for delimiters at
the beginning or end of a string, but currently this isn't done.
(Hmmm.)
DESC is a one-word description of the substrings; it defaults
to 'name'. It is only used for generating warning messages.
- names (FIELD)
- Splits FIELD as described above, and further splits each name into four
components: first, von, last, and jr.
Returns a list of
"Text::BibTeX::Name" objects, each of
which represents one name. Use the
"part" method to query these objects;
see Text::BibTeX::Name for details on the interface to name objects (and
on name-parsing as well).
For example if this entry:
@article{foo,
author = {John Smith and
Hacker, J. Random and
Ludwig van Beethoven and
{Foo, Bar and Company}}}
has been parsed into a
"Text::BibTeX::Entry" object
$entry, then
@names = $entry->names ('author');
will put a list of
"Text::BibTeX::Name" objects in
@names. These can be queried individually as
described in Text::BibTeX::Name; for instance,
@last = $names[0]->part ('last');
would put the list of tokens comprising the last name of the
first author into the @last array:
"('Smith')".
- set_type (TYPE)
- Sets the entry's type.
- set_metatype (METATYPE)
- Sets the entry's metatype (must be one of the four constants
"BTE_COMMENT",
"BTE_PREAMBLE",
"BTE_MACRODEF", and
"BTE_REGULAR", which are all optionally
exported from "Text::BibTeX").
- set_key (KEY)
- Sets the entry's key.
- set (FIELD, VALUE, ...)
- Sets the value of field FIELD. (VALUE might be
"undef" or unsupplied, in which case
FIELD will simply be set to "undef" --
this is where the difference between the
"exists" method and testing the
definedness of field values becomes clear.)
Multiple (FIELD, VALUE) pairs may be supplied; they will be
processed in order (i.e. the input is treated like a list, not a hash).
For example:
$entry->set ('author', $author);
$entry->set ('author', $author, 'editor', $editor);
VALUE can be either a simple string or a
"Text::BibTeX::Value" object; it
doesn't matter if the entry was parsed in "full
post-processing" or "preserve input values" mode.
- delete (FIELD)
- Deletes field FIELD from an entry.
- set_fieldlist (FIELDLIST)
- Sets the entry's list of fields to FIELDLIST, which must be a list
reference. If any of the field names supplied in FIELDLIST are not
currently present in the entry, they are created with the value
"undef" and a warning is printed.
Conversely, if any of the fields currently present in the entry are not
named in the list of fields supplied to
"set_fields", they are deleted from the
entry and another warning is printed.
- write (BIBFILE)
- Prints a BibTeX entry on the filehandle associated with BIBFILE (which
should be a "Text::BibTeX::File" object,
opened for output). Currently the printout is not particularly
human-friendly; a highly configurable pretty-printer will be developed
eventually.
- print (FILEHANDLE)
- Prints a BibTeX entry on FILEHANDLE.
- print_s ()
- Prints a BibTeX entry to a string, which is the return value.
- warn (WARNING [, FIELD])
- Prepends a bit of location information (filename and line number(s)) to
WARNING, appends a newline, and passes it to Perl's
"warn". If FIELD is supplied, the line
number given is just that of the field; otherwise, the range of lines for
the whole entry is given. (Well, almost -- currently, the line number of
the last field is used as the last line of the whole entry. This is a
bug.)
For example, if lines 10-15 of file foo.bib look like
this:
@article{homer97,
author = {Homer Simpson and Ned Flanders},
title = {Territorial Imperatives in Modern Suburbia},
journal = {Journal of Suburban Studies},
year = 1997
}
then, after parsing this entry to
$entry, the calls
$entry->warn ('what a silly entry');
$entry->warn ('what a silly journal', 'journal');
would result in the following warnings being issued:
foo.bib, lines 10-14: what a silly entry
foo.bib, line 13: what a silly journal
- line ([FIELD])
- Returns the line number of FIELD. If the entry was parsed from a string,
this still works--it's just the line number relative to the start of the
string. If the entry was parsed from a file, this works just as you'd
expect it to: it returns the absolute line number with respect to the
whole file. Line numbers are one-based.
If FIELD is not supplied, returns a two-element list
containing the line numbers of the beginning and end of the whole entry.
(Actually, the "end" line number is currently inaccurate: it's
really the the line number of the last field in the entry. But it's
better than nothing.)
- filename ()
- Returns the name of the file from which the entry was parsed. Only works
if the file is represented by a
"Text::BibTeX::File" object---if you
just passed a filename/filehandle pair to
"parse", you can't get the filename
back. (Sorry.)
Text::BibTeX, Text::BibTeX::File, Text::BibTeX::Structure
Greg Ward <gward@python.net>
Copyright (c) 1997-2000 by Gregory P. Ward. All rights reserved. This file is
part of the Text::BibTeX library. This library is free software; you may
redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. Output converted with ManDoc. |