XML/XPath
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
Perform the following three XPath queries on the XML Document below:
- Retrieve the first "item" element
- Perform an action on each "price" element (print it out)
- Get an array of all the "name" elements
XML Document:
<inventory title="OmniCorp Store #45x10^3"><item upc="123456789" stock="12"> <name>Invisibility Cream</name> <price>14.50</price> <description>Makes you invisible</description> </item> <item upc="445322344" stock="18"> <name>Levitation Salve</name> <price>23.99</price> <description>Levitate yourself for up to 3 hours per application</description> </item> <item upc="485672034" stock="653"> <name>Blork and Freen Instameal</name> <price>4.95</price> <description>A tasty meal in a tablet; just add water</description> </item> <item upc="132957764" stock="44"> <name>Grob winglets</name> <price>3.56</price> <description>Tender winglets of Grob. Just add water</description> </item> </inventory>
Ruby
#Example taken from the REXML tutorial (http://www.germane-software.com/software/rexml/docs/tutorial.html) require "rexml/document" include REXML #create the REXML Document from the string (%q is Ruby's multiline string, everything between the two @-characters is the string) doc = Document.new( %q@<inventory title="OmniCorp Store #45x10^3"> ... </inventory> @ ) # The invisibility cream is the first <item> invisibility = XPath.first( doc, "//item" ) # Prints out all of the prices XPath.each( doc, "//price") { |element| puts element.text } # Gets an array of all of the "name" elements in the document. names = XPath.match( doc, "//name" )
PHP
<?php //PHP5 only example due to changes in XML extensions between version 4 and 5 (Tested on PHP5.2.0) $doc = DOMDocument::loadXML('<inventory title="OmniCorp Store #45x10^3">...</inventory>'); //Load from file instead with $doc = DOMDocument::load('filename'); $xpath = new DOMXPath($doc); /* 1st Task: Retrieve the first "item" element */ $nodelist = $xpath->query('//item'); $result = $nodelist->item(0); /* 2nd task: Perform an action on each "price" element (print it out) */ $nodelist = $xpath->query('//price'); for($i = 0; $i < $nodelist->length; $i++) { //print each price element in the DOMNodeList instance, $nodelist, as text/xml followed by a newline print $doc->saveXML($nodelist->item($i))."\n"; } /* 3rd Task: Get an array of all the "name" elements */ $nodelist = $xpath->query('//name'); //our array to hold all the name elements, though in practice you'd probably not need to do this and simply use the DOMNodeList $result = array(); //a different way of iterating through the DOMNodeList foreach($nodelist as $node) { $result[] = $node; }
C#
XmlReader XReader;
// Either read the xml from a string ...
XReader = XmlReader.Create(new StringReader("<inventory title=... </inventory>"));
// ... or read it from the file system.
XReader = XmlReader.Create("xmlfile.xml");
// Create a XPathDocument object (which implements the IXPathNavigable interface) // which is optimized for XPath operation. (very fast).
IXPathNavigable XDocument = new XPathDocument(XReader);
// Create a Navigator to navigate through the document. XPathNavigator Nav = XDocument.CreateNavigator();
Nav = Nav.SelectSingleNode("//item");
// Move to the first element of the selection. (if available). if(Nav.MoveToFirst())
Console.WriteLine(Nav.OuterXml); // The outer xml of the first item element.
// Get an iterator to loop over multiple selected nodes. XPathNodeIterator Iterator = XDocument.CreateNavigator().Select("//price");
while (Iterator.MoveNext())
Console.WriteLine(Iterator.Current.Value);
Iterator = XDocument.CreateNavigator().Select("//name");
// Use a generic list. List<string> NodesValues = new List<string>();
while (Iterator.MoveNext())
NodesValues.Add(Iterator.Current.Value);
// Convert the generic list to an array and output the count of items. Console.WriteLine(NodesValues.ToArray().Length);