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Python and ElementTree: return "inner XML" excluding parent element

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-10 17:07 出处:网络
In Python 2.6 using ElementTree, what\'s a good way to fetch the XML (as a string) inside a particular element, like what you can do in HTML and javascript with innerHTML?

In Python 2.6 using ElementTree, what's a good way to fetch the XML (as a string) inside a particular element, like what you can do in HTML and javascript with innerHTML?

Here's a simplified sample of the XML node I am starting with:

<label attr="foo" attr2="bar">This is some text <a href="foo.htm">and a link</a> in embedded HTML</label>

I'd like to end up with this string:

This is some text <a href="foo.htm">and a link</a> in embedded HTML

I've tried iterating over the parent node and concatenating the tostring() of the children, but that gave me only the subnodes:

# returns only subnodes (e.g. <a href="foo.htm">and a link</a>)
''.join([et.tostring(sub, encoding="utf-8") for sub in node])

I can hack up a solution using regular expressions, but was hoping there'd be something less hacky than this:

re.sub("</\w+?>\s*?$", "", re.sub("^\s*?<\w*?开发者_StackOverflow社区>", "", et.tostring(node, encoding="utf-8")))


How about:

from xml.etree import ElementTree as ET

xml = '<root>start here<child1>some text<sub1/>here</child1>and<child2>here as well<sub2/><sub3/></child2>end here</root>'
root = ET.fromstring(xml)

def content(tag):
    return tag.text + ''.join(ET.tostring(e) for e in tag)

print content(root)
print content(root.find('child2'))

Resulting in:

start here<child1>some text<sub1 />here</child1>and<child2>here as well<sub2 /><sub3 /></child2>end here
here as well<sub2 /><sub3 />


This is based on the other solutions, but the other solutions did not work in my case (resulted in exceptions) and this one worked:

from xml.etree import Element, ElementTree

def inner_xml(element: Element):
    return (element.text or '') + ''.join(ElementTree.tostring(e, 'unicode') for e in element)

Use it the same way as in Mark Tolonen's answer.


The following worked for me:

from xml.etree import ElementTree as etree
xml = '<root>start here<child1>some text<sub1/>here</child1>and<child2>here as well<sub2/><sub3/></child2>end here</root>'
dom = etree.XML(xml)

(dom.text or '') + ''.join(map(etree.tostring, dom)) + (dom.tail or '')
# 'start here<child1>some text<sub1 />here</child1>and<child2>here as well<sub2 /><sub3 /></child2>end here'

dom.text or '' is used to get the text at the start of the root element. If there is no text dom.text is None.

Note that the result is not a valid XML - a valid XML should have only one root element.

Have a look at the ElementTree docs about mixed content.


Using Python 2.6.5, Ubuntu 10.04

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