A
LSSerializer
provides an API for serializing (writing) a
DOM document out into XML. The XML data is written to a string or an
output stream. Any changes or fixups made during the serialization affect
only the serialized data. The
Document
object and its
children are never altered by the serialization operation.
During serialization of XML data, namespace fixup is done as defined in [
DOM Level 3 Core]
, Appendix B. [
DOM Level 2 Core]
allows empty strings as a real namespace URI. If the
namespaceURI
of a
Node
is empty string, the
serialization will treat them as
null
, ignoring the prefix
if any.
LSSerializer
accepts any node type for serialization. For
nodes of type
Document
or
Entity
, well-formed
XML will be created when possible (well-formedness is guaranteed if the
document or entity comes from a parse operation and is unchanged since it
was created). The serialized output for these node types is either as a
XML document or an External XML Entity, respectively, and is acceptable
input for an XML parser. For all other types of nodes the serialized form
is implementation dependent.
Within a
Document
,
DocumentFragment
, or
Entity
being serialized,
Nodes
are processed as
follows
-
Document
nodes are written, including the XML
declaration (unless the parameter "xml-declaration" is set to
false
) and a DTD subset, if one exists in the DOM. Writing a
Document
node serializes the entire document.
-
Entity
nodes, when written directly by
LSSerializer.write
, outputs the entity expansion but no
namespace fixup is done. The resulting output will be valid as an
external entity.
- If the parameter "
entities" is set to
true
, EntityReference
nodes are
serialized as an entity reference of the form "
&entityName;
" in the output. Child nodes (the expansion)
of the entity reference are ignored. If the parameter "
entities" is set to false
, only the children of the entity reference
are serialized. EntityReference
nodes with no children (no
corresponding Entity
node or the corresponding
Entity
nodes have no children) are always serialized.
-
CDATAsections
containing content characters that cannot be
represented in the specified output encoding are handled according to the
"
split-cdata-sections" parameter. If the parameter is set to true
,
CDATAsections
are split, and the unrepresentable characters
are serialized as numeric character references in ordinary content. The
exact position and number of splits is not specified. If the parameter
is set to false
, unrepresentable characters in a
CDATAsection
are reported as
"wf-invalid-character"
errors if the parameter "
well-formed" is set to true
. The error is not recoverable - there is no
mechanism for supplying alternative characters and continuing with the
serialization.
-
DocumentFragment
nodes are serialized by
serializing the children of the document fragment in the order they
appear in the document fragment.
- All other node types (Element, Text,
etc.) are serialized to their corresponding XML source form.
Note: The serialization of a
Node
does not always
generate a well-formed XML document, i.e. a
LSParser
might
throw fatal errors when parsing the resulting serialization.
Within the character data of a document (outside of markup), any
characters that cannot be represented directly are replaced with
character references. Occurrences of '<' and '&' are replaced by
the predefined entities < and &. The other predefined
entities (>, ', and ") might not be used, except
where needed (e.g. using > in cases such as ']]>'). Any
characters that cannot be represented directly in the output character
encoding are serialized as numeric character references (and since
character encoding standards commonly use hexadecimal representations of
characters, using the hexadecimal representation when serializing
character references is encouraged).
To allow attribute values to contain both single and double quotes, the
apostrophe or single-quote character (') may be represented as
"'", and the double-quote character (") as """. New
line characters and other characters that cannot be represented directly
in attribute values in the output character encoding are serialized as a
numeric character reference.
Within markup, but outside of attributes, any occurrence of a character
that cannot be represented in the output character encoding is reported
as a
DOMError
fatal error. An example would be serializing
the element <LaCa\u00f1ada/> with
encoding="us-ascii"
.
This will result with a generation of a
DOMError
"wf-invalid-character-in-node-name" (as proposed in "
well-formed").
When requested by setting the parameter "
normalize-characters" on
LSSerializer
to true, character normalization is
performed according to the definition of
fully
normalized characters included in appendix E of [
XML 1.1] on all
data to be serialized, both markup and character data. The character
normalization process affects only the data as it is being written; it
does not alter the DOM's view of the document after serialization has
completed.
Implementations are required to support the encodings "UTF-8",
"UTF-16", "UTF-16BE", and "UTF-16LE" to guarantee that data is
serializable in all encodings that are required to be supported by all
XML parsers. When the encoding is UTF-8, whether or not a byte order mark
is serialized, or if the output is big-endian or little-endian, is
implementation dependent. When the encoding is UTF-16, whether or not the
output is big-endian or little-endian is implementation dependent, but a
Byte Order Mark must be generated for non-character outputs, such as
LSOutput.byteStream
or
LSOutput.systemId
. If
the Byte Order Mark is not generated, a "byte-order-mark-needed" warning
is reported. When the encoding is UTF-16LE or UTF-16BE, the output is
big-endian (UTF-16BE) or little-endian (UTF-16LE) and the Byte Order Mark
is not be generated. In all cases, the encoding declaration, if
generated, will correspond to the encoding used during the serialization
(e.g.
encoding="UTF-16"
will appear if UTF-16 was
requested).
Namespaces are fixed up during serialization, the serialization process
will verify that namespace declarations, namespace prefixes and the
namespace URI associated with elements and attributes are consistent. If
inconsistencies are found, the serialized form of the document will be
altered to remove them. The method used for doing the namespace fixup
while serializing a document is the algorithm defined in Appendix B.1,
"Namespace normalization", of [
DOM Level 3 Core]
.
While serializing a document, the parameter "discard-default-content"
controls whether or not non-specified data is serialized.
While serializing, errors and warnings are reported to the application
through the error handler (
LSSerializer.domConfig
's "
error-handler" parameter). This specification does in no way try to define all possible
errors and warnings that can occur while serializing a DOM node, but some
common error and warning cases are defined. The types (
DOMError.type
) of errors and warnings defined by this
specification are:
"no-output-specified" [fatal]
LSOutput
LSOutput
"unbound-prefix-in-entity-reference" [fatal]
-
namespaces
true
"unsupported-encoding" [fatal]
In addition to raising the defined errors and warnings, implementations
are expected to raise implementation specific errors and warnings for any
other error and warning cases such as IO errors (file not found,
permission denied,...) and so on.
See also the
Document Object Model (DOM) Level 3 Load
and Save Specification.
* Copyright (c) 2004 World Wide Web Consortium,
*
* (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, European Research Consortium for
* Informatics and Mathematics, Keio University). All Rights Reserved. This
* work is distributed under the W3C(r) Software License [1] in the hope that
* it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied
* warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
*
* [1] http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/2002/copyright-software-20021231