PHP 8.4.0 RC4 available for testing

The DOMXPath class

(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

Introduzione

Supports XPath 1.0

Sommario della classe

class DOMXPath {
/* Proprietà */
public readonly DOMDocument $document;
/* Metodi */
public __construct(DOMDocument $document, bool $registerNodeNS = true)
public evaluate(string $expression, ?DOMNode $contextNode = null, bool $registerNodeNS = true): mixed
public query(string $expression, ?DOMNode $contextNode = null, bool $registerNodeNS = true): mixed
public static quote(string $str): string
public registerNamespace(string $prefix, string $namespace): bool
}

Proprietà

document

registerNodeNamespaces

When set to true, namespaces in the node are registered.

Log delle modifiche

Versione Descrizione
8.4.0 It is no longer possible to clone a DOMXPath object. Doing so will result in an exception being thrown. Prior to PHP 8.4.0 this resulted in an unusable object.
8.0.0 The registerNodeNamespaces property has been added.

Indice dei contenuti

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User Contributed Notes 5 notes

up
79
Mark Omohundro, ajamyajax dot com
15 years ago
<?php
// to retrieve selected html data, try these DomXPath examples:

$file = $DOCUMENT_ROOT. "test.html";
$doc = new DOMDocument();
$doc->loadHTMLFile($file);

$xpath = new DOMXpath($doc);

// example 1: for everything with an id
//$elements = $xpath->query("//*[@id]");

// example 2: for node data in a selected id
//$elements = $xpath->query("/html/body/div[@id='yourTagIdHere']");

// example 3: same as above with wildcard
$elements = $xpath->query("*/div[@id='yourTagIdHere']");

if (!
is_null($elements)) {
foreach (
$elements as $element) {
echo
"<br/>[". $element->nodeName. "]";

$nodes = $element->childNodes;
foreach (
$nodes as $node) {
echo
$node->nodeValue. "\n";
}
}
}
?>
up
9
TechNyquist
4 years ago
When working with XML (as a strict format) might be very important to give a namespace to XPath object in order to make it work properly.

I was experiencing "query" always returning empty node lists, it could not find anything. Only a broad "//*" was able to show off only the root element.

Then found out that registering the namespace reported in the "xmlns" attribute of the root element in the XPath object, and writing the namespace near the elements name, made it work properly.

So for an XML like this (from a sitemap):

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<urlset xmlns="http://www.sitemaps.org/schemas/sitemap/0.9">
<url>
<loc>http://example.com/index.php</loc>
<lastmod>2005-01-01</lastmod>
<changefreq>monthly</changefreq>
<priority>0.5</priority>
</url>
</urlset>

I needed the following XPath configuration:

<?php

$doc
= new DOMDocument;
$doc->load("sitemap.xml");
$xpath = new DOMXPath($doc);
$xpath->registerNamespace('ns', 'http://www.sitemaps.org/schemas/sitemap/0.9');
$nodes = $xpath->query('//ns:urlset/ns:url');

?>

Then again, that "xmlns" could be provided dynamically from the root element attribute of course.
up
5
peter at softcoded dot com
7 years ago
You may not always know at runtime whether your file has
a namespace or not. This can make it difficult to create
XPath queries. Use the seriously underdocumented
"namespaceURI" property of the documentElement of a
DOMDocument to determine if there is a namespace.
Use code such as the following:

$doc = new DOMDocument();
$doc->load($file);
$xpath = new DOMXPath($doc);
$ns = $doc->documentElement->namespaceURI;
if($ns) {
$xpath->registerNamespace("ns", $ns);
$nodes = $xpath->query("//ns:em[@class='glossterm']");
} else {
$nodes = $xpath->query("//em[@class='glossterm']");
}
//look at nodes here
up
1
peter at softcoded dot com
7 years ago
Using XPath expressions can save a lot of programming
and allow you to home in on only the nodes you want.
Suppose you want to delete all empty <p> tags.
If you create a query using the following XPath expression,
you can find <p> tags that do not have any text
(other than spaces), any attributes,
any children or comments:

$expression = "//p[not(@*)
and not(*)
and not(./comment())
and normalize-space(text())='']";

This expression will only find para tags that look like:

<p>[any number of spaces]</p>
<p></p>

Imagine the code you would have to add if you used
DOMDocument::getElementsByTagName("p") instead.
up
-5
archimedix32783262 at mailinator dot com
10 years ago
Note that evaluate() will use the same encoding as the XML document.

So if you have a UTF-16 XML, you will have to query using UTF-16 strings.

You can use iconv() to convert from your code's encoding to the target encoding for better legibility.
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