I am creating a GUI frontend for the Eve Online API in Python.
I have successfully pulled the XML data from their server.
I am trying to grab the value from a node called "name":
from xml.dom.minidom import parse
dom = parse("C:\\eve.xml")
name = dom.getElementsByTagName('name')
print name
This seems to find the node, but the output is below:
[<DOM Element: name at 0x11e6d28>]
How could I get it to print the value of the node?
It should just be
name[0].firstChild.nodeValue
Probably something like this if it's the text part you want...
from xml.dom.minidom import parse
dom = parse("C:\\eve.xml")
name = dom.getElementsByTagName('name')
print " ".join(t.nodeValue for t in name[0].childNodes if t.nodeType == t.TEXT_NODE)
The text part of a node is considered a node in itself placed as a child-node of the one you asked for. Thus you will want to go through all its children and find all child nodes that are text nodes. A node can have several text nodes; eg.
<name>
blabla
<somestuff>asdf</somestuff>
znylpx
</name>
You want both 'blabla' and 'znylpx'; hence the " ".join(). You might want to replace the space with a newline or so, or perhaps by nothing.
you can use something like this.It worked out for me
doc = parse('C:\\eve.xml')
my_node_list = doc.getElementsByTagName("name")
my_n_node = my_node_list[0]
my_child = my_n_node.firstChild
my_text = my_child.data
print my_text
The above answer is correct, namely:
name[0].firstChild.nodeValue
However for me, like others, my value was further down the tree:
name[0].firstChild.firstChild.nodeValue
To find this I used the following:
def scandown( elements, indent ):
for el in elements:
print(" " * indent + "nodeName: " + str(el.nodeName) )
print(" " * indent + "nodeValue: " + str(el.nodeValue) )
print(" " * indent + "childNodes: " + str(el.childNodes) )
scandown(el.childNodes, indent + 1)
scandown( doc.getElementsByTagName('text'), 0 )
Running this for my simple SVG file created with Inkscape this gave me:
nodeName: text
nodeValue: None
childNodes: [<DOM Element: tspan at 0x10392c6d0>]
nodeName: tspan
nodeValue: None
childNodes: [<DOM Text node "'MY STRING'">]
nodeName: #text
nodeValue: MY STRING
childNodes: ()
nodeName: text
nodeValue: None
childNodes: [<DOM Element: tspan at 0x10392c800>]
nodeName: tspan
nodeValue: None
childNodes: [<DOM Text node "'MY WORDS'">]
nodeName: #text
nodeValue: MY WORDS
childNodes: ()
I used xml.dom.minidom, the various fields are explained on this page, MiniDom Python.
I know this question is pretty old now, but I thought you might have an easier time with ElementTree
from xml.etree import ElementTree as ET
import datetime
f = ET.XML(data)
for element in f:
if element.tag == "currentTime":
# Handle time data was pulled
currentTime = datetime.datetime.strptime(element.text, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
if element.tag == "cachedUntil":
# Handle time until next allowed update
cachedUntil = datetime.datetime.strptime(element.text, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
if element.tag == "result":
# Process list of skills
pass
I know that's not super specific, but I just discovered it, and so far it's a lot easier to get my head around than the minidom (since so many nodes are essentially white space).
For instance, you have the tag name and the actual text together, just as you'd probably expect:
>>> element[0]
<Element currentTime at 40984d0>
>>> element[0].tag
'currentTime'
>>> element[0].text
'2010-04-12 02:45:45'e
I had a similar case, what worked for me was:
name.firstChild.childNodes[0].data
XML is supposed to be simple and it really is and I don't know why python's minidom did it so complicated... but it's how it's made
Here is a slightly modified answer of Henrik's for multiple nodes (ie. when getElementsByTagName returns more than one instance)
images = xml.getElementsByTagName("imageUrl")
for i in images:
print " ".join(t.nodeValue for t in i.childNodes if t.nodeType == t.TEXT_NODE)
The question has been answered, my contribution consists in clarifying one thing that may confuse beginners:
Some of the suggested and correct answers used firstChild.data
and others used firstChild.nodeValue
instead. In case you are wondering what is the different between them, you should remember they do the same thing because nodeValue
is just an alias for data
.
The reference to my statement can be found as a comment on the source code of minidom:
#
nodeValue
is an alias fordata
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/317413/get-element-value-with-minidom-with-python