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    SU Ruby + XML

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    • tbdT Offline
      tbd
      last edited by

      I will try to look tomorrow when I get on my Windows machine and make a SU friendly package of a XML parser.

      It all depends on what XML files you need to parse - if they are static, then you can write a specific XML parser yourself and save the troubles. I wouldn't use XML for anything, hate that format πŸ˜‰

      SketchUp Ruby Consultant | Podium 1.x developer
      http://plugins.ro

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      • thomthomT Offline
        thomthom
        last edited by

        There are several different uses for XML I'd like to use. I like the format, maybe from working with websites...

        Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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        • thomthomT Offline
          thomthom
          last edited by

          @unknownuser said:

          I will try to look tomorrow when I get on my Windows machine and make a SU friendly package of a XML parser.

          It all depends on what XML files you need to parse - if they are static, then you can write a specific XML parser yourself and save the troubles. I wouldn't use XML for anything, hate that format πŸ˜‰

          hmm.. These XMl packages - are they PC only?

          The nokogiri package has different packages for different platform. That could be a problem. I was hoping to find a cross platform solution. If REXML is cross platform I don't mind it's not too fast. But what troubles me with that is it's conflict with the Set class.

          Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
          List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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          • tbdT Offline
            tbd
            last edited by

            @thomthom said:

            These XML packages - are they PC only?

            almost everything that needs speed in Ruby is implemented as an extension, so it is platform dependent. some gems are precompiled (e.g. for Windows), others are in source form and compiled on user machine to gather additional speed on optimizations (e.g. Mac)

            http://github.com/jnunemaker/happymapper sounds interesting but again, has a lot of requirements

            SketchUp Ruby Consultant | Podium 1.x developer
            http://plugins.ro

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            • thomthomT Offline
              thomthom
              last edited by

              Seeing how getting an XML parser working I think I will go for a custom format and make a simple parser that creates nested Hashes. In fact, I have to make my own Hash object as I want to traverse the Hash in the order the items where inserted.

              But I'd still like to be able to read XML data from SU ruby. There's some other projects I'd like to use it which involves reading existing XML based files.

              Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
              List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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              • P Offline
                Pout
                last edited by

                and? did you manage to get something working that could parse xml?

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                • thomthomT Offline
                  thomthom
                  last edited by

                  No - I've still not found a good solution. πŸ˜•

                  Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                  List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                  • AdamBA Offline
                    AdamB
                    last edited by

                    Thomthom, what do you actually want?

                    If you don't need the full DOM, then these big (often slow) XML parsers may be a hammer to crack a nut.

                    If you're just looking to use XML as a simple text mark-up of parameters etc, then writing something in Ruby that yanks out tag-value pairs would be trivial.

                    Developer of LightUp Click for website

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                    • thomthomT Offline
                      thomthom
                      last edited by

                      You got a point there. It's mostly simple XML files with tags and attributes.
                      Could make a simple reader and writer. Make a custom class that holds values and attributes, read the XML file as a nested object.
                      K.I.S.S.

                      Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                      List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                      • T Offline
                        todd burch
                        last edited by

                        I write an xml file in ruby, pass it to my webdialog, and use the browser to parse the xml and generate my html table dynamically.

                        Works awesome.

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                        • M Offline
                          MartinRinehart
                          last edited by

                          @unknownuser said:

                          I write an xml file in ruby, pass it to my webdialog, and use the browser to parse the xml and generate my html table dynamically.

                          Works awesome.

                          Todd, you're working too hard. Replace the XML with JSON (no harder, may be easier in Ruby), pass it to your WebDialog and "parse the XML" is just eval( foo = json ). If json is a valid JavaScript object, even a complex one nesting arrays and other objects as properties (that in turn nest other ...), you're done.

                          Author, Edges to Rubies - The Complete SketchUp Tutorial at http://www.MartinRinehart.com/models/tutorial.

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                          • T Offline
                            todd burch
                            last edited by

                            No, I'm working smart. With what I am doing with XML, I can allow user customization of the entire dialog for table layout, ordering, field values, content, etc., and never have to touch how my ruby script generates the data again.

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                            • P Offline
                              Pout
                              last edited by

                              So you import the xml file into the webdialog and in there you parse it? With a javascript script or something else?
                              I'm getting lost here.

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                              • T Offline
                                todd burch
                                last edited by

                                @pout said:

                                So you import the xml file into the webdialog and in there you parse it? With a javascript script or something else?
                                I'm getting lost here.

                                I display a webdialog. In the webdialog, on some user action, (a javascript event), a javascript function calls a Ruby callback, which iterates over the SketchUp model and builds an XML document of it. Then, the callback finished by setting a javascript variable with the xml document. Then, back in javascript, I call the browser to parse the XML document. I then (in javascript) iterate over the parsed document to build my dynamic html <table>.

                                Todd

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                                • M Offline
                                  MartinRinehart
                                  last edited by

                                  @unknownuser said:

                                  a Ruby callback, which iterates over the SketchUp model and builds an XML document of it

                                  Why is XML better than JSON?

                                  Author, Edges to Rubies - The Complete SketchUp Tutorial at http://www.MartinRinehart.com/models/tutorial.

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                                  • T Offline
                                    todd burch
                                    last edited by

                                    It's not that XML is better or JSON is better. Forward thinking, XML is what I chose to use.

                                    XML does, however, interface with the rest of the world better than JSON.

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                                    • P Offline
                                      Pout
                                      last edited by

                                      @unknownuser said:

                                      @pout said:

                                      So you import the xml file into the webdialog and in there you parse it? With a javascript script or something else?
                                      I'm getting lost here.

                                      I display a webdialog. In the webdialog, on some user action, (a javascript event), a javascript function calls a Ruby callback, which iterates over the SketchUp model and builds an XML document of it. Then, the callback finished by setting a javascript variable with the xml document. Then, back in javascript, I call the browser to parse the XML document. I then (in javascript) iterate over the parsed document to build my dynamic html <table>.

                                      Todd

                                      ok, i get this.
                                      But different browsers have different ways to parse XML data.
                                      What kind of code do you use so each browser can handle the xml?
                                      In my case i want to import an xml.
                                      So i parse it with the webbrowser of the webdialog. But due to the several possible browsers (IE 5-6-7, Safari, FF, ...) this is so difficult to manage.
                                      Do you have a cross browser script that reads XML files?

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                                      • thomthomT Offline
                                        thomthom
                                        last edited by

                                        @pout said:

                                        But due to the several possible browsers (IE 5-6-7, Safari, FF, ...) this is so difficult to manage.

                                        IE and webkit is the only options.

                                        Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                                        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                                        • P Offline
                                          Pout
                                          last edited by

                                          Hey ThomThom,

                                          Can you explain a bit more?
                                          Thx

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                                          • thomthomT Offline
                                            thomthom
                                            last edited by

                                            With Webdialogs you only deal with IE (under Windows) and webkit (under OSX). All other browsers are irrelevant.

                                            Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                                            List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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