It didn't turn apple into an array with sqr brackets. It returned a hash. Exactly what I wanted. A hash all the time for one or two elements. I was surprised to get a hash because I would have expected sqr brackets from ForceArray.

This really seems like odd behavior but I'll take it. It's exactly what I wanted.

Take this updated code for example:

use strict; use XML::Simple; use Data::Dumper; my $text=<<EOF; <main> <apple name="date" value="1231210"/> <apple name="time" value="235959"/> <cookies name="date" value="1231210"/> <cookies name="time" value="235959"/> <banana name="date" value="1231210"/> <butter name="date" value="1231210"/> <orange>one</orange> <milk>one</milk> <grape>one</grape> <grape>two</grape> </main> EOF my $p1 = new XML::Simple(); my $tree; my $config = eval { $tree= $p1->XMLin($text, ,ForceArray => ['banana','apple','orange'] # bingo!!! ) }; die("$@\n Ending") if ($@); print "\$tree " . Dumper(\$tree) . "\n"; exit 0;
Unlike Milk, when I put orange into the ForceArray I get sqr brackets. Orange doesn't have an attribute but Banana does. Cookies goes right to a hash without doing anything because there are two of them.
- x - x - x - x - x - x - x - x - $tree $VAR1 = \{ 'cookies' => { 'time' => { 'value' => '235959' }, 'date' => { 'value' => '1231210' } }, 'banana' => { 'date' => { 'value' => '1231210' } }, 'apple' => { 'time' => { 'value' => '235959' }, 'date' => { 'value' => '1231210' } }, 'orange' => [ 'one' ], 'butter' => { 'value' => '1231210', 'name' => 'date' }, 'grape' => [ 'one', 'two' ], 'milk' => 'one' }; - x - x - x - x - x - x - x - x -
Once again. Thanks for the tip. I wouldn't have attempted that.

In reply to Re^4: hash from xml::simple by Anonymous Monk
in thread hash from xml::simple by Anonymous Monk

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