One of the important feature that a Web 2.0 language needs is an XML parser. Run BASIC now has one built in. The XMLPARSER statement parses an XML string and returns an XML accessor object with a bunch of handy built-in methods for making your way through an XML document.
Here is a simple example of what that sort of code looks like:
a$ = "<program name=""myprog"" author=""Carl Gundel""/>"
xmlparser #parser, a$
print #parser key$()
for x = 1 to #parser attribCount()
key$ = #parser attribKey$(x)
print key$; ", ";
print #parser attribValue$(x)
next x
This short program produces:
program
name, myprog
author, Carl Gundel
And here is a short program which will display the tag names and contents of an artibrarily nested XML document:
xmlparser #doc, s$
print #doc key$()
call displayElements #doc
end
sub displayElements #xmlDoc
count = #xmlDoc elementCount()
for x = 1 to count
#elem = #xmlDoc #element(x)
print "Key: "; #elem key$();
value$ = #elem value$()
if value$ <> "" then
print " Value: "; value$
end if
print
call displayElements #elem
next x
end sub
1 comment:
Very interesting things you are doing with Run Basic! I am not a strong web developer (some PHP and ASP.NET), but I can think of some of the objects they all have in common. I assume there might be some kind of session object, a request object, a response object (for headers), cookies object, etc. Also, the usual UrlEncode and UrlDecode stuff.
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