xml_find_all | R Documentation |
Xpath is like regular expressions for trees - it's worth learning if
you're trying to extract nodes from arbitrary locations in a document.
Use xml_find_all
to find all matches - if there's no match you'll
get an empty result. Use xml_find_first
to find a specific match -
if there's no match you'll get an xml_missing
node.
xml_find_all(x, xpath, ns = xml_ns(x), ...)
## S3 method for class 'xml_nodeset'
xml_find_all(x, xpath, ns = xml_ns(x), flatten = TRUE, ...)
xml_find_first(x, xpath, ns = xml_ns(x))
xml_find_num(x, xpath, ns = xml_ns(x))
xml_find_int(x, xpath, ns = xml_ns(x))
xml_find_chr(x, xpath, ns = xml_ns(x))
xml_find_lgl(x, xpath, ns = xml_ns(x))
x |
A document, node, or node set. |
xpath |
A string containing an xpath (1.0) expression. |
ns |
Optionally, a named vector giving prefix-url pairs, as produced
by |
... |
Further arguments passed to or from other methods. |
flatten |
A logical indicating whether to return a single, flattened nodeset or a list of nodesets. |
xml_find_all
returns a nodeset if applied to a node, and a nodeset
or a list of nodesets if applied to a nodeset. If there are no matches,
the nodeset(s) will be empty. Within each nodeset, the result will always
be unique; repeated nodes are automatically de-duplicated.
xml_find_first
returns a node if applied to a node, and a nodeset
if applied to a nodeset. The output is always the same size as
the input. If there are no matches, xml_find_first
will return a
missing node; if there are multiple matches, it will return the first
only.
xml_find_num
, xml_find_chr
, xml_find_lgl
return
numeric, character and logical results respectively.
xml_find_one()
has been deprecated. Instead use
xml_find_first()
.
xml_ns_strip()
to remove the default namespaces
x <- read_xml("<foo><bar><baz/></bar><baz/></foo>")
xml_find_all(x, ".//baz")
xml_path(xml_find_all(x, ".//baz"))
# Note the difference between .// and //
# // finds anywhere in the document (ignoring the current node)
# .// finds anywhere beneath the current node
(bar <- xml_find_all(x, ".//bar"))
xml_find_all(bar, ".//baz")
xml_find_all(bar, "//baz")
# Find all vs find one -----------------------------------------------------
x <- read_xml("<body>
<p>Some <b>text</b>.</p>
<p>Some <b>other</b> <b>text</b>.</p>
<p>No bold here!</p>
</body>")
para <- xml_find_all(x, ".//p")
# By default, if you apply xml_find_all to a nodeset, it finds all matches,
# de-duplicates them, and returns as a single nodeset. This means you
# never know how many results you'll get
xml_find_all(para, ".//b")
# If you set flatten to FALSE, though, xml_find_all will return a list of
# nodesets, where each nodeset contains the matches for the corresponding
# node in the original nodeset.
xml_find_all(para, ".//b", flatten = FALSE)
# xml_find_first only returns the first match per input node. If there are 0
# matches it will return a missing node
xml_find_first(para, ".//b")
xml_text(xml_find_first(para, ".//b"))
# Namespaces ---------------------------------------------------------------
# If the document uses namespaces, you'll need use xml_ns to form
# a unique mapping between full namespace url and a short prefix
x <- read_xml('
<root xmlns:f = "http://foo.com" xmlns:g = "http://bar.com">
<f:doc><g:baz /></f:doc>
<f:doc><g:baz /></f:doc>
</root>
')
xml_find_all(x, ".//f:doc")
xml_find_all(x, ".//f:doc", xml_ns(x))
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