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Although I am able to set a text value inside a node with the code below

private static void setPhoneNumber(Document xmlDoc, String phoneNumber) {
    Element root = xmlDoc.getDocumentElement();     
    Element phoneParent = (Element) root.getElementsByTagName("gl-bus:entityPhoneNumber").item(0);      
    Element phoneElement = (Element) phoneParent.getElementsByTagName("gl-bus:phoneNumber").item(0);    
    phoneElement.setTextContent(phoneNumber);       
}

I cannot do the same with XPath because I get null for the node object

private static void setPhoneNumber(Document xmlDoc, String phoneNumber) {
    try {
        NodeList nodes = (NodeList) xPath.evaluate("/gl-cor:entityInformation/gl-bus:entityPhoneNumber/gl-bus:phoneNumber", xmlDoc, XPathConstants.NODESET);
        Node node = nodes.item(0);
        node.setTextContent(phoneNumber);
    } catch (XPathExpressionException e) {
        // TODO Auto-generated catch block
        e.printStackTrace();
    }
 }
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1 Answer 1

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The fact that you're using the non-namespace-aware method getElementsByTagName(), passing it an element name containing a colon, suggests that you're not handling namespaces properly when you parse the XML. If your XML were parsed in a namespace-aware manner then this shouldn't have worked, but something like

String namespace = // the namespace URI bound to the gl-bus prefix in your doc
Element phoneParent = (Element) root.getElementsByTagNameNS(namespace, "entityPhoneNumber").item(0);

would work correctly. Note that the standard Java DocumentBuilderFactory is not namespace aware by default, you must call setNamespaceAware(true) on the factory before you ask it for a newDocumentBuilder.

XPath requires namespace-aware parsing, and if you want to access elements that are in a namespace via XPath then you must supply a NamespaceContext to the XPath object to tell it what prefix bindings to use - it does not inherit the prefix bindings from the original XML. Annoyingly there's no default implementation of NamespaceContext provided in the core Java library so you either have to write your own or use a third-party implementation such as Spring's SimpleNamespaceContext. With that:

SimpleNamespaceContext ctx = new SimpleNamespaceContext();
ctx.bindNamespaceUri("g", namespace); // the same URI as before
ctx.bindNamespaceUri("c", ...); // the namespace bound to gl-cor:
xPath.setNamespaceContext(ctx);

NodeList nodes = (NodeList) xPath.evaluate("/c:entityInformation/g:entityPhoneNumber/g:phoneNumber", xmlDoc, XPathConstants.NODESET);

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