Today I've had some fairly good progress with Hitomi, the XML templater. Using the draft grammar moritz++ helped me build, I created a class that takes an XML document and translates it to a stream of events. This makes about half of the tests that I ported from Genshi last time pass; the other half of that test file concern tag soup input — I think I'll punt that one for now, and go for the lower hanging fruit: the classes Template
and MarkupTemplate
. With those, it should be possible to actually, you know, do some templating.
I'm getting more and more familiar with the original Python code, and starting to have some significant respect for the Genshi code base. It's simply a very well-thought-out piece of software. I can see why people like it. The project doesn't seem terribly active, unfortunately, so sometimes questions from me and others go unanswered on the #python-genshi
IRC channel.
Is Hitomi a good name? jnthn++ pointed out today that it sounded very similar to "hit on me", and I find myself constantly writing either "Hitmo" or "Himoti". Then again, I kinda like that it means (or so I've read) "doubly beautiful", and I don't have a better suggestion at the moment.
Another thing that has been going on in the past week is that viklund++ said, almost in passing, that it'd be nice to have an XPath engine for Match
objects. I thought it was a great idea, and incubated the project "Grampa" (short for "grammar paths") on github. I've since made some good progress on it, and it's already slightly useful. Not to mention that I've learned a few new things about XPath and EBNF that I didn't know before. pmichaud++ helped me with some questions on the latter.
How does that tie into Web.pm? Well, it turns out that at least two of the subprojects of Web.pm would benefit from XPath searches: Hitomi, and Happle (our Hpricot clone). This suggests that Grampa should really be a Match
front-end to an XPath query back-end, so that the back-end can then be reused in other projects. I've been implementing Grampa with this in mind.
Finally, since it's nearing the end of my original part of the grant, I've taken a fresh look at doc/PLAN and refined it a little. No major course corrections were needed, which feels comforting. I'll probably write some more about the status of the subprojects in next week's blog post.
Another thing I plan to do in the coming week is start on my Web.pm talk for YAPC::EU. I thought I'd write the talk in Perl 6 Pod, and then do various conversions to end up with a PDF. Since most of the toolchain for doing that doesn't exist yet, I thought I'd better start now. 哈哈
I wish to thank The Perl Foundation for sponsoring the Web.pm effort.