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In Scala REPL:

val input = <outerTag xmlns="http://xyz"> <innerTag> </innerTag> </outerTag>

input\\@"innerTag"

=>

<innerTag xmlns="http://xyz"> </innerTag>

How do I stop Scala do this? Why can't it just give me <innerTag> </innerTag>? How can I stop this happening (or remove the xmlns attributes simply)?

Thanks!

Joe

Clarification: My overall task is chopping up an XML file and recombining it. So this node will be taken from beneath the root node (which has the xmlns attribute) and then integrated back into a document under a root which again has the xmlns.

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Do you want to remove the namespace from the XML, or from a string derived from that XML? – Daniel Oct 21 at 16:04
Either will do: I'm writing it back to a file. I could do it with a regular expression afterward but I thought there would just be a parameter somehwere I could flip. Please see clarification edit. – Joe Oct 21 at 16:17

3 Answers

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In your input document, <innerTag> has the logical namespace "http://xyz" because its parent <outerTag> element had that namespace. That's the way XML namespaces work.

When you ask for the <innerTag> element on its own, Scala copies the namespace declaration from the parent <outerTag>, because the namespace is a logical part of the <innerTag>, even if it wasn't explicitly stated in the initial document.

If you want to remove the namespace, you'll have to perform some additional processing to do so.

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Thanks. I reasoned something like that was the case. Any ideas on how to process it, given that % is a member of Elem but not Node (which is what I'm dealing with)? – Joe Oct 21 at 15:42
Sorry, my Scala is a bit rusty – skaffman Oct 21 at 15:55
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Use named parameter and Elem.copy() in Scala 2.8.0:

scala> import scala.xml._
import scala.xml._

scala> val outer = <outerTag xmlns="http://xyz"><innerTag></innerTag></outerTag>
outer: scala.xml.Elem = <outerTag xmlns="http://xyz"><innerTag></innerTag></outerTag>

scala> outer \\ "innerTag" map { case e: Elem => e.copy(scope = TopScope) }
res0: scala.xml.NodeSeq = <innerTag></innerTag>
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error: value copy is not a member of scala.xml.Elem Using latest Scala. bizarre... – Joe Oct 21 at 17:03
@Joe copy method was added to Elem in Revision 18757 which was 4 weeks ago. If you are using the most current nightly, you will surely see it. – Walter Chang Oct 21 at 17:31
Ah no I had the stable release (2.7.6). I'll try again with the nightly tomorrow. Thanks! – Joe Oct 21 at 18:19
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God, I hope I'm missing something. It can't be this awkward!

import scala.xml._
import scala.xml.tranform._

val rw = new RewriteRule { 
  override def transform(n: Node) = n match {
    case Elem(p, l, a, s, children@ _*) => Elem(p, l, a, TopScope, children: _*)
    case x => x
  }
  override def transform(ns: Seq[Node]): Seq[Node] = ns flatMap transform
}
val rt = new RuleTransformer(rw)

val input = <outerTag xmlns="http://xyz"> <innerTag> </innerTag> </outerTag>

val result = input \\ "innerTag" map rt

Or am I too spoiled with Scala to think this is overly complex?

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