vote up 3 vote down star

I have several identical elements with different attributes that I'm accessing with SimpleXML:

<data>
    <seg id="A1"/>
    <seg id="A5"/>
    <seg id="A12"/>
    <seg id="A29"/>
    <seg id="A30"/>
</data>

I need to remove a specific seg element, with an id of "A12", how can I do this? I've tried looping through the seg elements and unsetting the specific one, but this doesn't work, the elements remain.

foreach($doc->seg as $seg)
{
    if($seg['id'] == 'A12')
    {
        unset($seg);
    }
}
flag

7 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

SimpleXML provides no way to remove or reorder XML nodes. Its modification capabilities are somewhat limited. You have to resort to using the DOM extension. dom_import_simplexml() will help you with converting your SimpleXMLElement into a DOMElement.

Just some example code (tested with PHP 5.2.5):

$data='<data>
    <seg id="A1"/>
    <seg id="A5"/>
    <seg id="A12"/>
    <seg id="A29"/>
    <seg id="A30"/>
</data>';
$doc=new SimpleXMLElement($data);
foreach($doc->seg as $seg)
{
    if($seg['id'] == 'A12') {
        $dom=dom_import_simplexml($seg);
        $dom->parentNode->removeChild($dom);
    }
}
echo $doc->asXml();

outputs

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<data><seg id="A1"/><seg id="A5"/><seg id="A29"/><seg id="A30"/></data>

By the way: selecting specific nodes is much more simple when you use XPath (SimpleXMLElement->xpath):

$segs=$doc->xpath('//seq[@id="A12"]');
if (count($segs)>=1) {
    $seg=$segs[0];
}
// same deletion procedure as above
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vote up 3 vote down

Just unset the node.

Read the solution here: http://www.kavoir.com/2008/12/how-to-delete-remove-nodes-in-simplexml.html

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vote up 1 vote down

There is a way to remove a child element via SimpleXml. The code looks for a element, and does nothing. Otherwise it adds the element to a string. It then writes out the string to a file. Also note that the code saves a backup before overwriting the original file.

$username = $_GET['delete_account'];
echo "DELETING: ".$username;
$xml = simplexml_load_file("users.xml");

$str = "<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>
<users>";
foreach($xml->children() as $child){
  if($child->getName() == "user") {
      if($username == $child['name']) {
      	continue;
    } else {
      	$str = $str.$child->asXML();
    }
  }
}
$str = $str."
</users>";
echo $str;

$xml->asXML("users_backup.xml");
$myFile = "users.xml";
$fh = fopen($myFile, 'w') or die("can't open file");
fwrite($fh, $str);
fclose($fh);
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vote up 0 vote down

(Originally published by me at youkey.krasnoludken.pl on Thursday, August 20th, 2009 at 11:13 pm )

Idea about helper functions is from one of the comments for DOM on php.net and idea about using unset is from kavoir.com. For me this solution finally worked:

function Myunset($node)
{
 unsetChildren($node);
 $parent = $node->parentNode;
 unset($node);
}

function unsetChildren($node)
{
 while (isset($node->firstChild))
 {
 unsetChildren($node->firstChild);
 unset($node->firstChild);
 }
}

using it: $xml is SimpleXmlElement

Myunset($xml->channel->item[$i]);

The result is stored in $xml, so don’t worry about assigning it to any variable.

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vote up 0 vote down

Even though SimpleXML doesn't have a detailed way to remove elements, you can remove elements from SimpleXML by using PHP's unset(). The key to doing this is managing to target the desired element. At least one way to do the targeting is using the order of the elements. First find out the order number of the element you want to remove (for example with a loop), then remove the element:

$target = false;
$i = 0;
foreach ($xml->seg as $s) {
  if ($s['id']=='A12') { $target = $i; break; }
  $i++;
}
if ($target !== false) {
  unset($xml->seg[$target]);
}

You can even remove multiple elements with this, by storing the order number of target items in an array. Just remember to do the removal in a reverse order (array_reverse($targets)), because removing an item naturally reduces the order number of the items that come after it.

Admittedly, it's a bit of a hackaround, but it seems to work fine.

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vote up 0 vote down

For future reference, deleting nodes with SimpleXML can be a pain sometimes, especially if you don't know the exact structure of the document. That's why I have written SimpleDOM, a class that extends SimpleXMLElement to add a few convenience methods.

For instance, deleteNodes() will delete all nodes matching a XPath expression. And if you want to delete all nodes with the attribute "id" equal to "A5", all you have to do is:

// don't forget to include SimpleDOM.php
include 'SimpleDOM.php';

// use simpledom_load_string() instead of simplexml_load_string()
$data = simpledom_load_string(
    '<data>
        <seg id="A1"/>
        <seg id="A5"/>
        <seg id="A12"/>
        <seg id="A29"/>
        <seg id="A30"/>
    </data>'
);

// and there the magic happens
$data->deleteNodes('//seg[@id="A5"]');
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vote up 0 vote down

I believe Stefan's answer is right on. If you want to remove only one node (rather than all matching nodes), here is another example:

//Load XML from file (or it could come from a POST, etc.)
$xml = simplexml_load_file('fileName.xml');

//Use XPath to find target node for removal
$target = $xml->xpath("//seg[@id=$uniqueIdToDelete]");

//If target does not exist (already deleted by someone/thing else), halt
if($target == false)
return; //Returns null

//Import simpleXml reference into Dom & do removal (removal occurs in simpleXML object)
$domRef = dom_import_simplexml($target[0]); //Select position 0 in XPath array
$domRef->parentNode->removeChild($domRef);

//Format XML to save indented tree rather than one line and save
$dom = new DOMDocument('1.0');
$dom->preserveWhiteSpace = false;
$dom->formatOutput = true;
$dom->loadXML($xml->asXML());
$dom->save('fileName.xml');

Note that sections Load XML... (first) and Format XML... (last) could be replaced with different code depending on where your XML data comes from and what you want to do with the output; it is the sections in between that find a node and remove it.

In addition, the if statement is only there to ensure that the target node exists before trying to move it. You could choose different ways to handle or ignore this case.

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