# xmlcreate # [![Node.js CI](https://github.com/michaelkourlas/node-xmlcreate/actions/workflows/node.js.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/michaelkourlas/node-xmlcreate/actions/workflows/node.js.yml) [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/xmlcreate.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/js/xmlcreate) ## Overview ## xmlcreate is a Node.js module that can be used to build XML using a simple API. ## Features ## xmlcreate allows you to use a series of chained function calls to build an XML tree. Once the tree is built, it can be serialized to text. The formatting of the text is customizable. xmlcreate can perform some basic validation to check that the resulting XML is well-formed. ## Installation ## The easiest way to install xmlcreate is using npm: ``` npm install xmlcreate ``` You can also build xmlcreate from source using npm: ``` git clone https://github.com/michaelkourlas/node-xmlcreate.git npm install npm run-script build ``` The `build` script will build the production variant of xmlcreate, run all tests, and build the documentation. You can build the production variant without running tests using the script `prod`. You can also build the development version using the script `dev`. The only difference between the two is that the development version includes source maps. ## Usage ## The documentation for the current version is available [here](http://www.kourlas.com/node-xmlcreate/docs/2.0.4/). You can also build the documentation using npm: ``` npm run-script docs ``` ## Examples ## The following TypeScript example illustrates the basic usage of xmlcreate: ```typescript import {document} from "xmlcreate"; const tree = document(); tree .decl({encoding: "UTF-8"}) .up() .dtd({ name: "html", pubId: "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN", sysId: "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" }) .up() .element({name: "html"}) .attribute({name: "xmlns"}) .text({charData: "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"}) .up() .up() .attribute({name: "xml:lang"}) .text({charData: "en"}) .up() .up() .element({name: "head"}) .element({name: "title"}) .charData({charData: "My page title"}) .up() .up() .up() .element({name: "body"}) .element({name: "h1"}) .charData({charData: "Welcome!"}) .up() .up() .element({name: "p"}) .charData({charData: "This is some text on my website."}) .up() .up() .element({name: "div"}) .element({name: "img"}) .attribute({name: "src"}) .text({charData: "picture.png"}) .up() .up() .attribute({name: "alt"}) .text({charData: "picture"}).up().up().up().up().up(); console.log(tree.toString({doubleQuotes: true})); ``` This example produces the following XML: ```xml
This is some text on my website.
``` A JavaScript version of this example can be found in the examples directory. ## Tests ## xmlcreate includes a set of tests to verify core functionality. You can run the tests using npm: ``` npm run-script test-prod ``` The only difference between the `test-prod` and `test-dev` scripts is that the development version includes source maps. ## License ## xmlcreate is licensed under the [Apache License 2.0](http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0). Please see the LICENSE file for more information.