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The following code snippet on SQL server 2005 fails on the ampersand '&':

select cast('<name>Spolsky & Atwood</name>' as xml)

Does anyone know a workaround?

Longer explanation, I need to update some data in an XML column, and I'm using a search & replace type hack by casting the XML value to a varchar, doing the replace and updating the XML column with this cast.

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Does 2005 have an XML type, really? Why? – mgroves Jul 13 '09 at 13:12
1  
What do you mean "why"? To provide XML syntax, to permit manipulation via XQuery, to permit indexes over XML, to permit validation against sets of schemas, ... – John Saunders Jul 13 '09 at 13:22
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5 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted
select cast('<name>Spolsky &amp; Atwood</name>' as xml)

A literal ampersand inside an XML tag is not allowed by the XML standard, and such a document will fail to parse by any XML parser.

An XMLSerializer() will output the ampersand HTML-encoded.

The following code:

using System.Xml.Serialization;

namespace xml
{
    public class MyData
    {
        public string name = "Spolsky & Atwood";
    }

    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            new XmlSerializer(typeof(MyData)).Serialize(System.Console.Out, new MyData());
        }
    }
}

will output the following:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<MyData
 xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
 xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
  <name>Spolsky &amp; Atwood</name>
</MyData>

, with an &amp; instead of &.

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Thanks. This does work, but puts the literal '&amp;' in the xml. The original XML which I'm trying to hack, was written by XmlSerializer.Serialize(), which kept the ampersand as-is in the xml. I'd like to reproduce that (preferably without going to the whole serializing process again :) – edosoft Jul 13 '09 at 13:12
2  
If your XML contains unescaped &-characters is is basically invalid XML and you really should work on fixing that. – Martin Liversage Jul 13 '09 at 14:24
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It's not valid XML. Use &amp;:

select cast('<name>Spolsky &amp; Atwood</name>' as xml)
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2  
I believe your XML entity "&amp;" has been replaced by "&" by Stack Overflow. Very tricky. – Martin Liversage Jul 13 '09 at 13:07
Looks ok to me. – John Saunders Jul 13 '09 at 13:08
It is OK in the code, but I (perhaps wrongly) assumed that you wanted the text to read "It's not valid XML. Use "&amp;"". – Martin Liversage Jul 13 '09 at 13:15
@Martin Liversage & @John Saunders, yeah, I thought you wanted the verbose "&amp;" in the text explainning the code... – KM. Jul 13 '09 at 13:16
@KM: You were right. I thought you were talking about the code. Please go ahead and fix the text. – John Saunders Jul 13 '09 at 13:20
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When working with XML in SQL you're a lot safer using built-in functions instead of converting it manually.

The following code will build a proper SQL XML variable that looks like your desired output based on a raw string:

DECLARE @ExampleString nvarchar(40)
    , @ExampleXml xml

SELECT  @ExampleString = N'Spolsky & Atwood'

SELECT  @ExampleXml =
    (
        SELECT  'Spolsky & Atwood' AS 'name'
        FOR XML PATH (''), TYPE
    )

SELECT  @ExampleString , @ExampleXml
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This is dead handly for converting a text field in the db into an XML output as well, bugged me for ages that – Rich Andrews Nov 3 '11 at 8:59
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You'd need to XML escape the text, too.

So let's backtrack and assume you're building that string as:

SELECT '<name>' + MyColumn + '</name>' FROM MyTable

you'd want to do something more like:

SELECT '<name>' + REPLACE( MyColumn, '&', '&amp;' ) + '</name>' FROM MyTable

Of course, you probable should cater for the other entities thus:

SELECT '<name>' + REPLACE( REPLACE( REPLACE( REPLACE( REPLACE( MyColumn, '&', '&amp;' ), '''', '&apos;' ), '"', '&quot;' ), '<', '&lt;' ), '>', '&gt;' ) + '</name>' FROM MyTable
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1  
Thinking about it, you could probably do this better playing about using the 'FOR XML' to generate the XML, and the relevant XPath to read the source, if it already is properly formatted XML - would need a better description of what you're trying to achieve with schema to really make a judgement – Rowland Shaw Jul 13 '09 at 13:11
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As John and Quassnoi state, & on it's own is not valid. This is because the ampersand character is the start of a character entity - used to specify characters that cannot be represented literally. There are two forms of entity - one specifies the character by name (e.g., &amp;, or &quot;), and one the specifies the character by it's code (I believe it's the code position within the Unicode character set, but not sure. e.g., &#34; should represent a double quote).

Thus, to include a literal & in a HTML document, you must specify it's entity: &amp;. Other common ones you may encounter are &lt; for <, &gt; for >, and &quot; for ".

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