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          XPath Study XPath Introduction

          XPath is a language for finding information in an XML document. XPath is used to navigate through elements and attributes in an XML document.
          What You Should Already Know
          Before you continue you should have a basic understanding of the following:
          • HTML / XHTML
          • XML / XML Namespaces

          If you want to study these subjects first, find the tutorials on our Home page.
          What is XPath?
          • XPath is a syntax for defining parts of an XML document
          • XPath uses path expressions to navigate in XML documents
          • XPath contains a library of standard functions
          • XPath is a major element in XSLT
          • XPath is a W3C Standard
          XPath Path Expressions
          XPath uses path expressions to select nodes or node-sets in an XML document. These path expressions look very much like the expressions you see when you work with a traditional computer file system.
          XPath Standard Functions
          XPath includes over 100 built-in functions. There are functions for string values, numeric values, date and time comparison, node and QName manipulation, sequence manipulation, Boolean values, and more.
          XPath is Used in XSLT
          XPath is a major element in the XSLT standard. Without XPath knowledge you will not be able to create XSLT documents.
          You can read more about XSLT in our XSLT tutorial.
          XQuery and XPointer are both built on XPath expressions. XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 share the same data model and support the same functions and operators.
          You can read more about XQuery in our XQuery tutorial.
          XPath is a W3C Standard
          XPath became a W3C Recommendation 16. November 1999.
          XPath was designed to be used by XSLT, XPointer and other XML parsing software.
          You can read more about the XPath standard in our W3C tutorial. XPath Nodes

          In XPath, there are seven kinds of nodes: element, attribute, text, namespace, processing-instruction, comment, and document (root) nodes.
          XPath Terminology Nodes
          In XPath, there are seven kinds of nodes: element, attribute, text, namespace, processing-instruction, comment, and document (root) nodes. XML documents are treated as trees of nodes. The root of the tree is called the document node (or root node).
          Look at the following XML document:

          <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>

          <bookstore>

          <book>

          ? <title >
          ? <author>J K. Rowling</author>

          ??<year>2005</year>

          ? <price>29.99</price>

          </book>

          </bookstore>

          Example of nodes in the XML document above:

          <bookstore>? (document node)

          <author>J K. Rowling</author>? (element node)

          >
          Atomic values
          Atomic values are nodes with no children or parent.
          Example of atomic values:

          J K. Rowling

          "en"
          Items
          Items are atomic values or nodes.
          Relationship of Nodes Parent
          Each element and attribute has one parent.
          In the following example; the book element is the parent of the title, author, year, and price:

          <book>

          ? <title>Harry Potter</title>

          ? <author>J K. Rowling</author>

          ? <year>2005</year>

          ? <price>29.99</price>

          </book>
          Children
          Element nodes may have zero, one or more children.
          In the following example; the title, author, year, and price elements are all children of the book element:

          <book>

          ? <title>Harry Potter</title>

          ? <author>J K. Rowling</author>

          ? <year>2005</year>

          ? <price>29.99</price>

          </book>
          Siblings
          Nodes that have the same parent.
          In the following example; the title, author, year, and price elements are all siblings:

          <book>

          ? <title>Harry Potter</title>

          ? <author>J K. Rowling</author>

          ? <year>2005</year>

          ? <price>29.99</price>

          </book>
          Ancestors
          A node's parent, parent's parent, etc.
          In the following example; the ancestors of the title element are the book element and the bookstore element:

          <bookstore>

          <book>

          ? <title>Harry Potter</title>

          ? <author>J K. Rowling</author>

          ? <year>2005</year>

          ? <price>29.99</price>

          </book>

          </bookstore>
          Descendants
          A node's children, children's children, etc.
          In the following example; descendants of the bookstore element are the book, title, author, year, and price elements:

          <bookstore>

          <book>

          ? <title>Harry Potter</title>

          ? <author>J K. Rowling</author>

          ? <year>2005</year>

          ? <price>29.99</price>

          </book>

          </bookstore>
          XPath Syntax

          XPath uses path expressions to select nodes or node-sets in an XML document. The node is selected by following a path or steps.
          The XML Example Document
          We will use the following XML document in the examples below.

          <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>

          <bookstore>

          <book>

          ? <title >
          ? <price>29.99</price>

          </book>

          <book>

          ? <title >
          ? <price>39.95</price>

          </book>

          </bookstore>

          ?
          Selecting Nodes
          XPath uses path expressions to select nodes in an XML document. The node is selected by following a path or steps. The most useful path expressions are listed below:

          Expression

          Description

          nodename

          Selects all child nodes of the node

          /

          Selects from the root node

          //

          Selects nodes in the document from the current node that match the selection no matter where they are

          .

          Selects the current node

          ..

          Selects the parent of the current node

          @

          Selects attributes
          Examples
          In the table below we have listed some path expressions and the result of the expressions:

          Path Expression

          Result

          bookstore

          Selects all the child nodes of the bookstore element

          /bookstore

          Selects the root element bookstore
          Note: If the path starts with a slash ( / ) it always represents an absolute path to an element!

          bookstore/book

          Selects all book elements that are children of bookstore

          //book

          Selects all book elements no matter where they are in the document

          bookstore//book

          Selects all book elements that are descendant of the bookstore element, no matter where they are under the bookstore element

          //@lang

          Selects all attributes that are named lang

          ?
          Predicates
          Predicates are used to find a specific node or a node that contains a specific value.
          Predicates are always embedded in square brackets. Examples
          In the table below we have listed some path expressions with predicates and the result of the expressions:

          Path Expression

          Result

          /bookstore/book[1]

          Selects the first book element that is the child of the bookstore element

          /bookstore/book[last()]

          Selects the last book element that is the child of the bookstore element

          /bookstore/book[last()-1]

          Selects the last but one book element that is the child of the bookstore element

          /bookstore/book[position()<3]

          Selects the first two book elements that are children of the bookstore element

          //title[@lang]

          Selects all the title elements that have an attribute named lang

          //title[@>

          Selects all the title elements that have an attribute named lang with a value of 'eng'

          /bookstore/book[price>35.00]

          Selects all the book elements of the bookstore element that have a price element with a value greater than 35.00

          /bookstore/book[price>35.00]/title

          Selects all the title elements of the book elements of the bookstore element that have a price element with a value greater than 35.00

          ?
          Selecting Unknown Nodes
          XPath wildcards can be used to select unknown XML elements.

          Wildcard

          Description

          *

          Matches any element node

          @*

          Matches any attribute node

          node()

          Matches any node of any kind
          Examples
          In the table below we have listed some path expressions and the result of the expressions:

          Path Expression

          Result

          /bookstore/*

          Selects all the child nodes of the bookstore element

          //*

          Selects all elements in the document

          //title[@*]

          Selects all title elements which have any attribute

          ?
          Selecting Several Paths
          By using the | operator in an XPath expression you can select several paths. Examples
          In the table below we have listed some path expressions and the result of the expressions:

          Path Expression

          Result

          //book/title | //book/price

          Selects all the title AND price elements of all book elements

          //title | //price

          Selects all the title AND price elements in the document

          /bookstore/book/title | //price

          Selects all the title elements of the book element of the bookstore element AND all the price elements in the document
          XPath Axes
          The XML Example Document
          We will use the following XML document in the examples below.

          <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>

          <bookstore>

          <book>

          ? <title >
          ? <price>29.99</price>

          </book>

          <book>

          ? <title >
          ? <price>39.95</price>

          </book>

          </bookstore>

          ?
          XPath Axes
          An axis defines a node-set relative to the current node.

          AxisName

          Result

          ancestor

          Selects all ancestors (parent, grandparent, etc.) of the current node

          ancestor-or-self

          Selects all ancestors (parent, grandparent, etc.) of the current node and the current node itself

          attribute

          Selects all attributes of the current node

          child

          Selects all children of the current node

          descendant

          Selects all descendants (children, grandchildren, etc.) of the current node

          descendant-or-self

          Selects all descendants (children, grandchildren, etc.) of the current node and the current node itself

          following

          Selects everything in the document after the closing tag of the current node

          following-sibling

          Selects all siblings after the current node

          namespace

          Selects all namespace nodes of the current node

          parent

          Selects the parent of the current node

          preceding

          Selects everything in the document that is before the start tag of the current node

          preceding-sibling

          Selects all siblings before the current node

          self

          Selects the current node

          ?
          Location Path Expression
          A location path can be absolute or relative.
          An absolute location path starts with a slash ( / ) and a relative location path does not. In both cases the location path consists of one or more steps, each separated by a slash:

          An absolute location path:

          /step/step/...

          A relative location path:

          step/step/...

          Each step is evaluated against the nodes in the current node-set.
          A step consists of:
          • an axis (defines the tree-relationship between the selected nodes and the current node)
          • a node-test (identifies a node within an axis)
          • zero or more predicates (to further refine the selected node-set)

          The syntax for a location step is:

          axisname::nodetest[predicate]
          Examples

          Example

          Result

          child::book

          Selects all book nodes that are children of the current node

          attribute::lang

          Selects the lang attribute of the current node

          child::*

          Selects all children of the current node

          attribute::*

          Selects all attributes of the current node

          child::text()

          Selects all text child nodes of the current node

          child::node()

          Selects all child nodes of the current node

          descendant::book

          Selects all book descendants of the current node

          ancestor::book

          Selects all book ancestors of the current node

          ancestor-or-self::book

          Selects all book ancestors of the current node - and the current as well if it is a book node

          child::*/child::price

          Selects all price grandchildren of the current node
          XPath Operators

          An XPath expression returns either a node-set, a string, a Boolean, or a number.
          XPath Operators
          Below is a list of the operators that can be used in XPath expressions:

          Operator

          Description

          Example

          Return value

          |

          Computes two node-sets

          //book | //cd

          Returns a node-set with all book and cd elements

          +

          Addition

          6 + 4

          10

          -

          Subtraction

          6 - 4

          2

          *

          Multiplication

          6 * 4

          24

          div

          Division

          8 div 4

          2

          =

          Equal

          price=9.80

          true if price is 9.80false if price is 9.90

          !=

          Not equal

          price!=9.80

          true if price is 9.90false if price is 9.80

          <?

          Less than

          price<9.80

          true if price is 9.00false if price is 9.80

          <=

          Less than or equal to

          price<=9.80

          true if price is 9.00false if price is 9.90

          >?

          Greater than

          price>9.80

          true if price is 9.90false if price is 9.80

          >=

          Greater than or equal to

          price>=9.80

          true if price is 9.90false if price is 9.70

          or

          or

          price=9.80 or price=9.70

          true if price is 9.80false if price is 9.50

          and

          and

          price>9.00 and price<9.90

          true if price is 9.80false if price is 8.50

          mod

          Modulus (division remainder)

          5 mod 2

          1
          XPath Examples

          Let's try to learn some basic XPath syntax by looking at some examples.
          The XML Example Document
          We will use the following XML document in the examples below.
          "books.xml":

          <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>

          <bookstore>

          <book category="COOKING">

          ? <title >
          ? <author>Giada De Laurentiis</author>

          ? <year>2005</year>

          ? <price>30.00</price>

          </book>

          <book category="CHILDREN">

          ? <title >
          ? <author>J K. Rowling</author>

          ? <year>2005</year>

          ? <price>29.99</price>

          </book>

          <book category="WEB">

          ? <title >
          ? <author>James McGovern</author>

          ? <author>Per Bothner</author>

          ? <author>Kurt Cagle</author>

          ? <author>James Linn</author>

          ? <author>Vaidyanathan Nagarajan</author>

          ? <year>2003</year>

          ? <price>49.99</price>

          </book>

          <book category="WEB">

          ? <title >
          ? <author>Erik T. Ray</author>

          ? <year>2003</year>

          ? <price>39.95</price>

          </book>

          </bookstore>

          View the "books.xml" file in your browser.
          Selecting Nodes
          We will use the Microsoft XMLDOM object to load the XML document and the selectNodes() function to select nodes from the XML document:

          set xmlDoc=CreateObject("Microsoft.XMLDOM")

          xmlDoc.async="false"

          xmlDoc.load("books.xml")

          xmlDoc.selectNodes(path expression)

          ?
          Select all book Nodes
          The following example selects all the book nodes under the bookstore element:

          xmlDoc.selectNodes("/bookstore/book")

          If you have IE 5 or higher you can try it yourself.
          Select the First book Node
          The following example selects only the first book node under the bookstore element:

          xmlDoc.selectNodes("/bookstore/book[0]")

          If you have IE 5 or higher you can try it yourself.
          Note: IE 5 and 6 has implemented that [0] should be the first node, but according to the W3C standard it should have been [1]!!
          Note: This is corrected in IE 6 SP2!
          Select the prices
          The following example selects the text from all the price nodes:

          xmlDoc.selectNodes("/bookstore/book/price/text()")

          If you have IE 5 or higher you can try it yourself.
          Selecting price Nodes with Price>35
          The following example selects all the price nodes with a price higher than 35:

          xmlDoc.selectNodes("/bookstore/book[price>35]/price")

          If you have IE 5 or higher you can try it yourself.
          Selecting title Nodes with Price>35
          The following example selects all the title nodes?with a price higher than 35:

          xmlDoc.selectNodes("/bookstore/book[price>35]/title")

          If you have IE 5 or higher you can try it yourself.
          ?
          ?
          ?
          ?
          ?

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          posted on 2006-10-24 17:57 zhyiwww 閱讀(1114) 評論(0)  編輯  收藏 所屬分類: java basic
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