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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2000-12-13 22:36:02 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2000-12-13 22:36:02 (GMT) |
commit | 48971198c5ea69907b8fc7fb7436b6b2be342302 (patch) | |
tree | 3aaf35753b0b0361907c357d79b832ee2c75861b | |
parent | 0e76ab2eccbee4205f20b87b3352721edcfc29f9 (diff) | |
download | cpython-48971198c5ea69907b8fc7fb7436b6b2be342302.zip cpython-48971198c5ea69907b8fc7fb7436b6b2be342302.tar.gz cpython-48971198c5ea69907b8fc7fb7436b6b2be342302.tar.bz2 |
Finish a sentence that was left half-written!
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/xmlsax.tex | 36 |
1 files changed, 20 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/xmlsax.tex b/Doc/lib/xmlsax.tex index c1b94da..fb35c21 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/xmlsax.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/xmlsax.tex @@ -43,25 +43,29 @@ The convenience functions are: \end{funcdesc} A typical SAX application uses three kinds of objects: readers, -handlers and input sources. ``Reader'' in this context is another term -for parser, ie. some piece of code that reads the bytes or characters -from the input source, and produces a sequence of events. The events -then get distributed to the handler objects, ie. the reader invokes a -method on the handler. A SAX application must therefore obtain a -handler object, create or open the input sources, create the handlers, -and connect these objects all together. As the final step, parsing is -invoked. During parsing +handlers and input sources. ``Reader'' in this context is another +term for parser, i.e.\ some piece of code that reads the bytes or +characters from the input source, and produces a sequence of events. +The events then get distributed to the handler objects, i.e.\ the +reader invokes a method on the handler. A SAX application must +therefore obtain a reader object, create or open the input sources, +create the handlers, and connect these objects all together. As the +final step of preparation, the reader is called to parse the input. +During parsing, methods on the handler objects are called based on +structural and syntactic events from the input data. For these objects, only the interfaces are relevant; they are normally -not instantiated by the application itself. Since Python does not have +not instantiated by the application itself. Since Python does not have an explicit notion of interface, they are formally introduced as -classes. The \class{InputSource}, \class{Locator}, -\class{AttributesImpl}, and \class{XMLReader} interfaces are defined -in the module \refmodule{xml.sax.xmlreader}. The handler interfaces -are defined in \refmodule{xml.sax.handler}. For convenience, -\class{InputSource} (which is often instantiated directly) and the -handler classes are also available from \module{xml.sax}. These -classes are described below. +classes, but applications may use implementations which do not inherit +from the provided classes. The \class{InputSource}, \class{Locator}, +\class{AttributesImpl}, \class{AttributesNSImpl}, and +\class{XMLReader} interfaces are defined in the module +\refmodule{xml.sax.xmlreader}. The handler interfaces are defined in +\refmodule{xml.sax.handler}. For convenience, \class{InputSource} +(which is often instantiated directly) and the handler classes are +also available from \module{xml.sax}. These interfaces are described +below. In addition to these classes, \module{xml.sax} provides the following exception classes. |