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Newbie - I am trying to use lxml to find "error" in any element (sample XML file below, but it should work regardless to how nested the tags are):

<test>
  <test1>
    error
  </test1>
  <test2>  
    <test3>
      error
    </test3>
  </test2>
</test>

So far it seems that lxml is only capable of searching for tags and not the data within the tags - is this correct?

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1 Answer 1

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Are you asking if there's a built-in function to search the text in an element? It's pretty simple to write your own search routine using lxml's etree parser. For example:

test.xml

<test>
  <test1>
    error
  </test1>
  <test2>  
    <test3>
      error
    </test3>
  </test2>
</test>

And from the command line:

>>> import lxml.etree as etree
>>> for event, element in etree.iterparse("test.xml"):
...   # Print the tag of a matching element
...   if element.text.strip() == "error":
...     print element.tag
... 
test1
test3

EDIT: If you end up going this route and don't need to muck about with XML namespaces I recommend you check out xml.etree.cElementTree instead of lxml.etree. It's included in the Python standard modules and is on par or slightly faster than lxml.etree.

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  • If my input is a string, can I just use "ET.fromstring" instead of "etree.iterparse".
    – Mark Ryan
    Apr 4, 2013 at 8:29

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