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Is there a free XML formatting (indent) tool available where I can past an XML string and have it formatted so I can read the XML document correctly?

Thanks

Edit ~ I am using XML Notepad on Windows XP.

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  • 1
    What platform are you on? What text editor are you already using? Most decent text editors either support this out of the box or have add-ons available.
    – Jon Skeet
    Oct 11, 2008 at 6:12
  • 47
    I found this very constructive
    – JGilmartin
    Feb 28, 2012 at 16:04
  • 18
    Agree. This question actually is a good fit to the Q&A: there was a factual answer to a narrow question. This question shouldn't have been closed. Mar 2, 2012 at 23:06
  • 5
    I also agree. The answers to this question provide useful information. Also, closing a question 2 years after it was asked seems rather silly.
    – Bill W
    Jul 18, 2012 at 12:39
  • The Best Formatter --> freeformatter.com/xml-formatter.html
    – AZ_
    Jul 27, 2012 at 8:20

12 Answers 12

352

I believe that Notepad++ has this feature.

Edit (for newer versions)
Install the "XML Tools" plugin (Menu Plugins, Plugin Manager)
Then run: Menu Plugins, Xml Tools, Pretty Print (XML only - with line breaks)

Original answer (for older versions of Notepad++)

Notepad++ menu: TextFX -> HTML Tidy -> Tidy: Reindent XML

This feature however wraps XMLs and that makes it look 'unclean'. To have no wrap,

  • open C:\Program Files\Notepad++\plugins\Config\tidy\TIDYCFG.INI,
  • find the entry [Tidy: Reindent XML] and add wrap:0 so that it looks like this:
[Tidy: Reindent XML] 
input-xml: yes 
indent:yes 
wrap:0 
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  • 3
    You might need twu.ca/divisions/technology/sst/orion/blog/…
    – svrist
    Jan 21, 2009 at 9:19
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    I verified this works without plug-ins. Just download the latest version of Notepad++ and it will support this. Jul 31, 2009 at 23:46
  • 7
    It's funny (misleading?) that HTMLTidy is described as a feature of Notepad++. It is a standalone tool (tidy.sourceforge.net) that has been around much longer than Notepad++ and can be used in any text editor that supports external tools. I used it for ages from the command prompt before I found FirstObject XML Editor.
    – Ash
    Jun 15, 2010 at 1:04
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    Notepad++ 's XML indent feature however wraps XMLs and that makes it look 'unclean'. I like the way IE represents it. To have no wrap for "Tidy: Reindent XML", open "C:\Program Files\Notepad++\plugins\Config\tidy\TIDYCFG.INI", find the entry "[Tidy: Reindent XML]" and add "wrap:0" so that it looks like this: [Tidy: Reindent XML] input-xml: yes indent:yes wrap:0 This should give non-wrapped XML
    – Joseph
    Jul 20, 2010 at 5:15
  • 21
    Just FYI, the newest version of Notepad++ (5.9 at the time of writing) does not include TextFX, and getting it to work requires manual building of a DLL. In the Plugin Manager, install the XML Tools plugin -- MUCH easier. Jun 10, 2011 at 15:09
61

Firstobject's free XML editor for Windows is called foxe is a great tool.

Open or paste your XML into it and press F8 to indent (you may need to set the number of indent spaces as it may default to 0).

It looks simple, however it contains a custom written XML parser written in C++ that allows it to work efficiently with very large XML files easily (unlike some expensive "espionage" related tools I've used).

From the product page:

The full Visual C++ source code for this firstobject XML editor (including the CDataEdit gigabyte edit control MFC component) is available as part of the Advanced CMarkup Developer License. It allows developers to implement custom XML handling functions such as validation, transformation, beautify, and reporting for their own purposes.

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    Ha, expensive "espionage"...one for the day :)
    – Saif Khan
    Oct 13, 2008 at 18:02
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    That's a neat tool. Tiny as well.
    – Kev
    Oct 14, 2008 at 12:40
  • 1
    It even renders entities, that's really handy!
    – James B
    Feb 10, 2010 at 11:56
  • 1
    this is so much better than that xml tool plugin in notepad++ Mar 17, 2013 at 22:34
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    I have a 15MB file - Notepad++ was thrashing 1 core for many minutes without a result, Visual Studio was doing the same (and slowing chewing more and more memory. Foxe can open and format it instantly - impressive. UI is plan-jane but it does the job.
    – Mike Honey
    Apr 19, 2013 at 3:55
55

Use the following:

xmllint --format

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  • my cygwin distro already had this so I guess I didn't need to download the windows binary and then decide I'd rather write a bash script
    – vinnyjames
    Apr 9, 2013 at 20:58
22

You can open the XML file in any Visual Studio Express product and the press Ctrl+A, Ctrl+K, Ctrl+F to get it nicely formatted.

Hey, it's free and it's a tool, so it fits the question. :-)

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  • I used to do this :D Well, I had a proper VS edition. I'm so glad I know of better lightweight tools now! Oct 20, 2010 at 9:03
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    All this time, I've been copying it from VS to Notepad++ just to format the xml, and I could have just done that! What's more, I use Ctrl+K Ctrl+F to format code already. :-) Nice one.
    – Lee Oades
    Oct 10, 2011 at 13:14
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    And can even be simplified a little since Ctrl+K, Ctrl+D formats the whole document so you can skip the Ctrl+A. Feb 11, 2013 at 13:49
17

Another method to reindent XML in Notepad++:

From menu select Plugins -> XML Tools -> Pretty print (XML only – with line breaks)
or press Ctrl+Alt+Shift+B.

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    you might need to add the plugin before you can do this. add via the Plugin Manager Aug 30, 2011 at 7:05
  • even with this plugin, NPP gets quite slower even opening 20+ MB files on my Core-i5/8GB pc
    – kmonsoor
    Sep 7, 2014 at 11:25
5

You could also try http://xmltoolbox.appspot.com/ it is an online xml formatter. You just paste your xml into a large text area field and press "format xml" then it pretty prints the xml in the text area so its easy to read or copy.

There is also a nice little filter feature that allows you to see all of a certain element.

Hope you will enjoy the tool

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4

If you use Notepad++, I would suggest installing the XML Tools plugin. You can beautify any XML content (indentation and line breaks) or linarize it. Also you can (auto-)validate your file and apply XSL transformation to it.

Download the latest zip and copy the extracted DLL to the plugins directory of your Notepad++ installation. Also, download the External libs and copy them to your %SystemRoot%\system32\ directory.

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    Actually you will need the ext_libs as well, there is an exe that will do the whole thing for you in the source forge repo Aug 5, 2009 at 10:50
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Advanced Conventional Formatting [Update]

XMLSpectrum is an open source syntax-highlighter. Supporting XML - but with special features for XSLT 2.0, XSD 1.1 and XPath 2.0. I'm mentioning this here because it also has special formatting capabilities for XML: it vertically aligns attributes and their contents as well as elements - to enhance XML readability.

The output HTML is suitable for reviewing in a browser or if the XML needs further editing it can be copied and pasted into an XML editor of your choice

Because xmlspectrum.xsl uses its own XML text parser, all content such as entity references and CDATA sections are preserved - as in an editor.

enter image description here

Note on usage: this is just an XSLT 2.0 stylesheet so you would need to enclose the required command-line (samples provided) in a small script so you could automatically transform the XML source.

Virtual Formatting

XMLQuire is a free XML editor that has special formatting capabilities - it formats XML properly, including multi-line attributes, attribute-values, word-wrap indentation and even XML comments.

All XML indentation is done without inserting tabs or spaces, ensuring the integrity of the XML is maintained. For versions of Windows later than XP, no installation is needed, its just a 3MB .exe file.

If you need to print out the formatted XML there are special options within the print-preview, such as line-numbering that follows the indentation. If you need to copy the formatted XML to a word processor as rich text, that's available too.

[Disclosure: I maintain both XMLQuire and XMLSpectrum as 'home projects']

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If you are a programmer, many XML parsing programming libraries will let you parse XML, then output it - and generating pretty printed, indented output is an output option.

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Try http://prettydiff.com/ The algorithm is similar to HTML Tidy, but is more complete. The program is written entirely in JavaScript, so you don't have to install anything.

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Notepad++ dit it well only if you're in ANSI. If you do it in something like "ANSI AS UTF8", tidy dirty the doc :/.

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Not directly an answer, but good to know nevertheless: After indenting, please make sure that the parser(s) and application(s) which will subsequently process the formatted XML will not yield different results. White space is often significant in XML and most conforming parsers bubble it up to the application.

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