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I am having a lot of difficulty constructing a query that will return all the text from all the elements below in one string (assume all other elements on the page contain text as well and are not span or div elements).

Note: Because I am using the PHP XPath engine, I am forced to use a solution that is XPath 1.0.

HTML

<div>Hello</div>
<div>World</div>
<div>!!!</div>
<span>This</span>
<span>is</span>
<span>cool</span>

XPath

normalize-space(//*/div | //*/span)

Desired output:

Hello World!!! This is cool

I appreciate any suggestions. Many thanks in advance!

4 Answers 4

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The normalize-space() Xpath 1.0 function does work on a string - not on a node-set. In your example code you have a node-set as it's first parameter:

 normalize-space(//*/div | //*/span)

In such a case, the "string-value of a node-set" is the string value of the first node. So what you do is not fitting to your needs.

To the very best of my knowledge it is not possible to achieve what you're looking for with a single XPath 1.0 query alone. It's possible with the help of PHP however creating the string you're looking for by registering a PHP function that does what you're looking for.

See as well:

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You already have space between the elements, so there's no need to add any, as long as you include it in what you select. If you pass a node set to something that expects a string, XPath converts the node set to a string by just concatenating together all descendant text nodes, in document order. So if the context node is the parent of all these div and span elements, the simplest expression is just

normalize-space(.)
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  • indeed, much simpler! Jul 17, 2013 at 14:25
  • Thanks for the reply! I tried (/*/div | //*/span)/normalize-space(.) with no success and I also the following query normalize-space(.) returns a lot of unwanted text, is there a way to target only a specific type of element to grab the normalized-space-text from? Jul 17, 2013 at 19:04
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This works for xpath 2.0:

string-join(/*/text(), ' ')

Tested here, prints:

Hello World !!! This is cool
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  • 1
    Thanks for the reply, however, I am using PHP's XPath engine which unfortunately does not suport XPath 2.0. Jul 17, 2013 at 19:16
  • Ok, your are welcome. I'll just leave it here, may be it'll be helpful to someone. Thanks.
    – alecxe
    Jul 17, 2013 at 19:20
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Using EXSLT string extensions with lxml (Python) http://www.exslt.org/str/str.html

str:replace(str:concat(//text()), "\n", " ")

or even simpler

normalize-space(str:concat(//text()))

Tested in Python shell

>>> import lxml.etree
>>> import lxml.html
>>> doc="""<div>Hello</div>
... <div>World</div>
... <div>!!!</div>
... <span>This</span>
... <span>is</span>
... <span>cool</span>"""
>>> root = lxml.etree.fromstring(doc, parser=lxml.html.HTMLParser())
>>> root.xpath('str:replace(str:concat(//text()), "\n", " ")', namespaces={"str": "http://exslt.org/strings"})
'Hello World !!! This is cool'
>>> root.xpath('normalize-space(str:concat(//text()))', namespaces={"str": "http://exslt.org/strings"})
'Hello World !!! This is cool'
>>> 

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