I trying to parse a string in an XML node by using an XPath query which requires that I strip out a substring and read the remaining value. The substring may have a dynamic amount of whitespace before and after it before I can get to the value, so it would be helpful to have some sort of a indexOf function to use in the XPath. I'm trying to use substring-after, but there is a good chance the XPath is 1.0, which according to this post might make this more difficult to accomplish. The following is an example of the XML I am trying to parse:
<root>
<myField> StringToParse 7</myField>
</root>
I'm trying to get at the value 7 in the string, which would seem possible with some combination of substring-after and normalize-space. I'm not entirely sure I'm using it correctly because no matter which way I try 开发者_开发问答to use it, the result is either a null value or the entire string, with the substring not removed.
The way I am able to return the entire value (the lesser of two evils) is:
/myField[substring-after(.,'StringToParse')]
which I would hope would return ' 7' Could anyone let me know I'm doing wrong with the syntax, or if there is an alternate method I should be using to accomplish what I want?
Thanks,
Mike
The way I am able to return the entire value (the lesser of two evils) is:
/myField[substring-after(.,'StringToParse')]
, which I would hope would return ' 7' Could anyone let me know I'm doing wrong
You are close, but there are at least two problems with the expression:
/myField[substring-after(.,'StringToParse')]
myField
is not the top element in the document and this expression requests that the top element be selected and that this element's name ismyField
. If evaluated against the provided XML document, no node would be selected, because the top element in the provided XML document is namedroot
.The function call to
substring-after()
is inside a predicate. This means that the top node namedmyField
is to be selected depending on the value of the call tosubstring-after()
, converted to boolean. This is clearly what you want -- you dont want a node -- you want a string!
Solution:
substring-after(/*/myField, 'StringToParse')
evaluates to (without the quotes):
" 7"
A better solution may be:
normalize-space(substring-after(/*/myField, 'StringToParse'))
this evaluates to just:
"7"
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