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LIBXO(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual LIBXO(3)
NAME
xo_open_marker, xo_open_marker_h, xo_close_marker, xo_close_marker_h -
prevent and allow closing of open constructs
LIBRARY
Text, XML, JSON, and HTML Output Emission Library (libxo, -lxo)
SYNOPSIS
#include <libxo/xo.h>
xo_ssize_t
xo_open_marker(const char *name);
xo_ssize_t
xo_open_marker_h(xo_handle_t *handle, const char *name);
xo_ssize_t
xo_close_marker(const char *name);
xo_ssize_t
xo_close_marker_h(xo_handle_t *handle, const char *name);
DESCRIPTION
libxo represents hierarchy using two constructs: "containers" and
"lists". A marker can be used to affect how open constructs are closed,
either by preventing their (implicit or explicit) closure or by forcing
their closure. While a marker is open, no other open constructs can be
closed. When a marker is closed, all constructs open since the marker
was opened will be closed. A marker is used to "freeze" any open
constructs. Calls to xo_close_*() functions that would normally close
them will be ignored, effectively blocking their closure. However when
xo_close_marker() is called, any containers, lists, or leaf-lists open
since the matching xo_open_marker() call will be close and the marker
discarded. Markers use names which are not user-visible, allowing the
caller to choose appropriate internal names. The marker has no value and
is not emitted in any form.
To open a marker, call xo_open_marker() or xo_open_marker_h(). The
former uses the default handle and the latter accepts a specific handle.
To close a marker, use the xo_close_marker() or xo_close_marker_h()
functions.
Each open call must have a matching close call.
In this example, the xo_close_container() call on line [1] will be
ignored, since the open marker "outer" will prevent close of any open
constructs that precede it. The xo_close_marker() call on line [2] will
close the "system" container, since it was opened after the "outer"
marker.
Example:
xo_open_container("top");
xo_open_marker("outer");
xo_open_container("system");
xo_emit("{:host-name/%s%s%s", hostname,
domainname ? "." : "", domainname ?: "");
for (i = 0; fish[i]; i++) {
xo_open_instance("fish");
xo_open_marker("fish-guts");
dump_fish_details(i);
xo_close_marker("fish-guts");
}
SEE ALSO
xo_emit(3), libxo(3)
HISTORY
The libxo library first appeared in FreeBSD 11.0.
AUTHORS
libxo was written by Phil Shafer <phil@freebsd.org>.
FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11 January 22, 2015 FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11