Understanding XPath
To pass the exam, you should also have a basic knowledge of XPath. You can think of XPath as being a query language, conceptually similar to SQL. Just as SQL allows you to select a set of information from a table or group of tables, XPath allows you to select a set of nodes from the DOM representation of an XML document. By writing an appropriate XPath expression, you can select particular elements or attributes within an XML document.
The XPath Language
XPath starts with the notion of current context. The current context defines the set of nodes that will be inspected by an XPath query. In general, there are four choices to specify the current context for an XPath query:
./Uses the current node as the current context
/Uses the root of the XML document as the current context
.//Uses the entire XML hierarchy starting with the current node as the current context
//Uses the entire XML document as the current context
To identify a set of elements using XPath, you use the path down the tree structure to those elements, separating tags by forward slashes. For example, this XPath expression selects all the Author elements in the Books.xml file:
/Books/Book/Author
You can also select all the Author elements without worrying about the full path to get to them by using this expression:
//Author
You can use an asterisk (*) as a wildcard at any level of the tree. So, for example, the following expression selects all the Author nodes that are grandchildren of the Books node:
/Books/*/Author
XPath expressions select a set of elements, not a single element. Of course, the set might only have a single member, or no members at all. In the context of the XmlDocument object, an XPath expression can be used to select a set of XmlNode objects to operate on later.
To identify a set of attributes, you trace the path down the tree to the attributes, just as you do with elements. The only difference is that attribute names must be prefixed with the @ character. For example, this XPath expression selects all the Pages attributes from Book elements in the Books.xml file:
//Book/@Pages
Of course, in the Books.xml file, only Book elements have a Pages attribute. So in this particular context, the following XPath expression is equivalent to the previous one:
//@Pages
You can select multiple attributes with the @* operator. To select all attributes of Book elements anywhere in the XML, use this expression:
//Book/@*
XPath also offers a predicate language to allow you to specify smaller groups of nodes or even individual nodes in the XML tree. You might think of this as a filtering capability similar to a SQL WHERE clause. One thing you can do is specify the exact value of the node you'd like to work with. To find all Publisher nodes with the value "Que," you could use the following XPath expression:
/Books/Book/Publisher[.="Que"]
Here, the dot operator stands for the current node. Alternatively, you can find all books published by Que:
/Books/Book[./Publisher="Que"]
Note that there is no forward slash between an element and a filtering expression in XPath.
Of course, you can filter on attributes as well as elements. You can also use operators and Boolean expressions within filtering specifications. For example, you might want to find books that have 1,000 or more pages:
/Books/Book[./@Pages>=1000]
Because the current node is the default context, you can simplify this expression a little bit:
/Books/Book[@Pages>=1000]
XPath also supports a selection of filtering functions. For example, to find books whose title starts with A, you could use this XPath expression:
/Books/Book[starts-with(Title,"A")]
Table 3.5 lists some additional XPath functions.
Table 3.5 Selected XPath Functions
Function |
Description |
concat |
Concatenates strings |
contains |
Determines whether one string contains another |
count |
Counts the number of nodes in an expression |
last |
The last element in a collection |
normalize-space |
Removes whitespace from a string |
not |
Negates its argument |
number |
Converts its argument to a number |
position |
The ordinal of a node within its parent |
starts-with |
Determines whether one string starts with another |
string-length |
Returns the number of characters in a string |
substring |
Returns a substring from a string |
Square brackets are also used to indicate indexing. Collections are indexed starting at one. To return the first Book node, you'd use this expression:
/Books/Book[1]
To return the first author in the XML file (knowing that authors are children of books in this file), regardless of the book, you'd use this expression:
(/Books/Book/Author)[1]
The parentheses are necessary because the square brackets have a higher operator precedence than the path operators. Without the brackets, the expression would return the first author of every book in the file. There's also the last() function, which you can use to return the last element in a collection, without needing to know how many elements are in the collection:
/Books/Book[last()]
Another useful operator is the vertical bar, which is used to form the union of two sets of nodes. This expression returns all the authors for books published by Addison-Wesley or Que:
/Books/Book[./Publisher="Addison-Wesley"]/Author| /Books/Book[./Publisher="Que"]/Author
One way to see XPath in action is to use the SelectNodes method of the XmlDocument object. Here's how you could load the Books.xml file and select nodes matching a particular XPath expression:
' Load the Books.xml file Dim xtr As XmlTextReader = _ New XmlTextReader("Books.xml") xtr.WhitespaceHandling = WhitespaceHandling.None Dim xd As XmlDocument = _ New XmlDocument() xd.Load(xtr) ' Retrieve nodes to match the expression Dim xnl As XmlNodeList = _ xd.DocumentElement.SelectNodes("//Books/Book/Title")
The SelectNodes method of the XmlDocument takes an XPath expression and evaluates that expression over the document. The resulting nodes are returned in an XmlNodeList object, which is just a collection of XML nodes.
Using the XPathNavigator Class
You've seen how you can use the XmlReader class to move through an XML document. But the XmlReader allows only forward-only, read-only access to the document. The System.Xml.XPath namespace contains another set of navigation classes. In particular, the XPathNavigator class provides you with read-only, random access to XML documents.
You can perform two distinct tasks with an XPathNavigator object:
Selecting a set of nodes with an XPath expression
Navigating the DOM representation of the XML document
Selecting Nodes with XPath
To use the XPathNavigator class, you should start with an XmlDocument, XmlDataDocument, or XPathDocument object. In particular, if you're mainly interested in XPath operations, you should use the XPathDocument class. The XPathDocument class provides a representation of the structure of an XML document that is optimized for query operations. You can construct an XPathDocument object from a URI (including a local filename), a stream, or a reader containing XML.
The XPathDocument object has a single method of interest, CreateNavigator (you'll also find this method on the XmlDocument and XmlDataDocument objects). This method returns an XPathNavigator object that can perform operations with the XML document represented by the XPathDocument object. Table 3.6 lists the important members of the XPathNavigator object.
Table 3.6 Important Members of the XPathNavigator Class
Member |
Type |
Description |
Clone |
Method |
Creates a duplicate of this object with the current state |
ComparePosition |
Method |
Compares two XPathNavigator objects to determine whether they have the same current node |
Compile |
Method |
Compiles an XPath expression for faster execution |
Evaluate |
Method |
Evaluates an XPath expression |
HasAttributes |
Property |
Indicates whether the current node has any attributes |
HasChildren |
Property |
Indicates whether the current node has any children |
IsEmptyElement |
Property |
Indicates whether the current node is an empty element |
Matches |
Method |
Determines whether the current node matches an XSLT (Extensible Stylesheet Language Transform) pattern |
MoveToFirst |
Method |
Moves to the first sibling of the current node |
MoveToFirstAttribute |
Method |
Moves to the first attribute of the current node |
MoveToFirstChild |
Method |
Moves to the first child of the current node |
MoveToNext |
Method |
Moves to the next sibling of the current node |
MoveToNextAttribute |
Method |
Moves to the next attribute of the current node |
MoveToParent |
Method |
Moves to the parent of the current node |
MoveToPrevious |
Method |
Moves to the previous sibling of the current node |
MoveToRoot |
Method |
Moves to the root node of the DOM |
Name |
Property |
The qualified name of the current node |
Select |
Method |
Selects a set of nodes using an XPath expression |
Value |
Property |
The value of the current node |
CAUTION
Unlike the XmlReader class, the XPathNavigator class implements methods such as MovePrevious and MoveParent that can move backward in the DOM. The XPathNavigator class provides random access to the entire XML document.
Like the XmlReader class, the XPathNavigator class maintains a pointer to a current node in the DOM at all times. But the XPathNavigator brings additional capabilities to working with the DOM. For example, you can use this class to execute an XPath query by calling its Select method:
' Load the Books.xml file Dim xpd As XPathDocument = _ New XPathDocument("Books.xml") ' Get the associated navigator Dim xpn As XPathNavigator = _ xpd.CreateNavigator() ' Retrieve nodes to match the expression Dim xpni As XPathNodeIterator = _ xpn.Select("//Books/Book/Title") ' And dump the results lbNodes.Items.Clear() While xpni.MoveNext lbNodes.Items.Add( _ xpni.Current.NodeType.ToString _ & ": " & xpni.Current.Name & " = " & _ xpni.Current.Value) End While
The Select method of the XPathNavigator class returns an XPathNodeIterator object, which lets you visit each member of the selected set of nodes in turn.
Navigating Nodes with XPath
You can also use the XPathNavigator object to move around in the DOM. To see how this works, try following these steps:
-
Open a Visual Basic .NET Windows Application project and add a new form to the project.
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Add four Button controls (btnParent, btnPrevious, btnNext, and btnChild) and a ListBox control named lbNodes to the form.
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Double-click the Button control to open the form's module. Add this line of code at the top of the module:
-
Add code to load an XML document when you load the form:
-
Add code to handle events from the Button controls:
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Set the form as the startup form for the project.
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Run the project and then experiment with the buttons. You'll find that you can move around in the DOM, as shown in Figure 3.2.
Figure
3.2 Exploring an XML document with the XPathNavigator.
Imports System.Xml.XPath
Dim xpd As XPathDocument Dim xpn As XPathNavigator Private Sub StepByStep2_9_Load( _ ByVal sender As System.Object, _ ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load ' Load the Books.xml file xpd = New XPathDocument("Books.xml") ' Get the associated navigator xpn = xpd.CreateNavigator() xpn.MoveToRoot() ListNode() End Sub Private Sub ListNode() ' Dump the current node to the listbox lbNodes.Items.Add( _ xpn.NodeType.ToString _ & ": " & xpn.Name & " = " & _ xpn.Value) End Sub
Private Sub btnParent_Click( _ ByVal sender As System.Object, _ ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles btnParent.Click ' Move to the parent of the current node If xpn.MoveToParent() Then ListNode() Else lbNodes.Items.Add("No parent node") End If End Sub Private Sub btnPrevious_Click( _ ByVal sender As System.Object, _ ByVal e As System.EventArgs) _ Handles btnPrevious.Click ' Move to the previous sibling of the current node If xpn.MoveToPrevious() Then ListNode() Else lbNodes.Items.Add("No previous node") End If End Sub Private Sub btnNext_Click( _ ByVal sender As System.Object, _ ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles btnNext.Click ' Move to the next sibling of the current node If xpn.MoveToNext() Then ListNode() Else lbNodes.Items.Add("No next node") End If End Sub Private Sub btnChild_Click( _ ByVal sender As System.Object, _ ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles btnChild.Click ' Move to the first child of the current node If xpn.MoveToFirstChild() Then ListNode() Else lbNodes.Items.Add("No child node") End If End Sub
The XPathNavigator class does not throw an error if you try to move to a nonexistent node. Instead, it returns False from the method call, and the current node remains unchanged.