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I have a string that represents a non indented XML that I would like to pretty-print. For example:

<root><node/></root>

should become:

<root>
  <node/>
</root>

Syntax highlighting is not a requirement. To tackle the problem I first transform the XML to add carriage returns and white spaces and then use a pre tag to output the XML. To add new lines and white spaces I wrote the following function:

function formatXml(xml) {
    var formatted = '';
    var reg = /(>)(<)(\/*)/g;
    xml = xml.replace(reg, '$1\r\n$2$3');
    var pad = 0;
    jQuery.each(xml.split('\r\n'), function(index, node) {
        var indent = 0;
        if (node.match( /.+<\/\w[^>]*>$/ )) {
            indent = 0;
        } else if (node.match( /^<\/\w/ )) {
            if (pad != 0) {
                pad -= 1;
            }
        } else if (node.match( /^<\w[^>]*[^\/]>.*$/ )) {
            indent = 1;
        } else {
            indent = 0;
        }

        var padding = '';
        for (var i = 0; i < pad; i++) {
            padding += '  ';
        }

        formatted += padding + node + '\r\n';
        pad += indent;
    });

    return formatted;
}

I then call the function like this:

jQuery('pre.formatted-xml').text(formatXml('<root><node1/></root>'));

This works perfectly fine for me but while I was writing the previous function I thought that there must be a better way. So my question is do you know of any better way given an XML string to pretty-print it in an html page? Any javascript frameworks and/or plugins that could do the job are welcome. My only requirement is this to be done on the client side.

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4 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

From the text of the question I get the impression that a string result is expected, as opposed to an HTML-formatted result.

If this is so, the simplest way to achieve this is to process the XML document with the identity transformation and with an <xsl:output indent="yes"/> instruction:

<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0"
 xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform">
 <xsl:output omit-xml-declaration="yes" indent="yes"/>

    <xsl:template match="node()|@*">
      <xsl:copy>
        <xsl:apply-templates select="node()|@*"/>
      </xsl:copy>
    </xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>

When applying this transformation on the provided XML document:

<root><node/></root>

most XSLT processors (.NET XslCompiledTransform, Saxon 6.5.4 and Saxon 9.0.0.2, AltovaXML) produce the wanted result:

<root>
  <node />
</root>
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It looks like a great solution. Is there any cross browser way to apply this transformation in javascript? I don't have a server side script to rely on. – Darin Dimitrov Dec 18 '08 at 8:06
1  
Yes. Look at Sarissa: dev.abiss.gr/sarissa and here: xml.com/pub/a/2005/02/23/sarissa.html – Dimitre Novatchev Dec 18 '08 at 14:58
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what about creating a stub node (document.createElement('div') - or using your library equivalent), filling it with the xml string (via innerHTML) and calling simple recursive function for the root element/or the stub element in case you don't have a root. The function would call itself for all the child nodes.

You could then syntax-highlight along the way, be certain the markup is well-formed (done automatically by browser when appending via innerHTML) etc. It wouldn't be that much code and probably fast enough.

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vote up 0 vote down

Personnaly, I use google-code-prettify with this function :

prettyPrintOne('<root><node1/></root>', 'xml')

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Oups, you need to indent XML and google-code-prettify only colorized the code. sorry. – Touv Jul 29 at 15:07
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Note that in Darin's function, you need to strip any newline or CR before processing your XML.

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