54

I have got the following exception from the below code block.

An error occurred while parsing EntityName. Line1, position 844.

I was trying to parse s set of data retrieved from table to a data set.

public DataSet BindMasterData(string xml)
        {
            DataSet ds = null;
            try
            {
                ds = new DataSet();
                TextReader txtReader = new StringReader(xml);
                XmlReader reader = new XmlTextReader(txtReader);
                ds.ReadXml(reader);
            }
            catch (Exception ex)
            {
                return new DataSet();
            }
            return ds;
        }

I have figured out the reason for the exception, but I couldn't solve it. In this particular situation, the string(which is retrieved from DB) contains a special character (&). That causes exception. How I can solve it. Any help on this would be great.

2
  • 2
    Please show the part of the document which causes the exception.
    – Codor
    May 8, 2014 at 12:35
  • The string contains &. For Ex. A & B Constructions May 8, 2014 at 12:40

5 Answers 5

97

Just replace them:

Not valid in XML elements:

"   "
'   '
<   &lt;
>   &gt;
&   &amp;

  public static string UnescapeXMLValue(string xmlString)
  {
    if (xmlString == null)
        throw new ArgumentNullException("xmlString")
    
    return xmlString.Replace("&apos;", "'").Replace("&quot;", "\"").Replace("&gt;", ">").Replace("&lt;", "<").Replace("&amp;", "&");
  }
 
 public static string EscapeXMLValue(string xmlString)
  {

    if (xmlString == null)
        throw new ArgumentNullException("xmlString")

    return xmlString.Replace( "&","&amp;").Replace("'","&apos;").Replace( "\"", "&quot;").Replace(">","&gt;").Replace( "<","&lt;");
  }
4
  • 5
    If you string the Replace function like that you can easily end up causing an error. e.g. "Dave's" would first become "Dave&apos;s" and would then become "Dave&amp;apos;s" which would display as "Dave&apos;s". This is seen frequently on some websites because someone made a mistake. I would suggest you don't try it using replace but instead look at stackoverflow.com/questions/8331119/… Oct 1, 2014 at 13:40
  • 3
    Replace( "&","&amp;") should be call first in your method, otherwise something would happen like ">" turns into "&amp;gt;", it would be wrong. Oct 22, 2019 at 9:50
  • 1
    return xmlString.Replace("'","&apos;").Replace( "\"", "&quot;").Replace(">","&gt;").Replace( "<","&lt;").Replace( "&","&amp;"); - the last part will find the previously inserted & and replace them with &amp.
    – Ivan Ičin
    Feb 29, 2020 at 18:18
  • Replacing "&amp;" with "&" gave me the same error; only once I replaced with a regular string the parsing worked Mar 1, 2020 at 12:56
25

This has already been answered, but found a nicer way of achieving the same outcome by doing this in .NET 4.5 by using the Escape method as below:

var xmlWithEscapedCharacters = SecurityElement.Escape(xmlWithoutEscapedCharacters);

and then just plug that string into the XML that is being generated.

Link: MSDN - SecurityElement.Escape Method

1
1

If your XML is being constructed with string concatenation then you'll be wanting to escape it. & should become &amp; while < and > should become &lt; and &gt; respectively.

There may be others too. Of course you should really use a proper XML encoder rather than trying to do it yourself for many reasons.

1

As the data comes from some data base, the problem can be hot-fixed in the context you described, but I would strongly recommend a different approach. The ampersand symbol should not have occured in the xml in the first place, as discussed here. Please clarify how the xml is generated and address the problem there.

1

You can use: SecurityElement.Escape(XML string)

Reference link: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.security.securityelement.escape(v=vs.110).aspx

1
  • Unfortinatly it make the same problem as common replace. I tested it like var tagText = SecurityElement.Escape("jsskhfkj & nln &amp;"); and get - "jsskhfkj &amp; nln &amp;amp;". So you see that &amp; prodeses "&amp;amp;".
    – Kate
    May 25, 2020 at 15:30

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