Assumption: the attributes that you want to remove from your XmlObject must be optional in the corresponding XML Schema. Under this assumption, XMLBeans provides you with a couple of useful methods: unsetX and isSetX (where X is your attribute name. So, we can implement a removeAttributes method in this way:
public void removeAttributes(XmlObject obj,
String[] removeAttributeNames)
throws IllegalArgumentException, IllegalAccessException,
InvocationTargetException, SecurityException,
NoSuchMethodException {
Class<?> clazz = obj.getClass();
for (int i = 0; i < removeAttributeNames.length; i++) {
String attrName =
removeAttributeNames[i].substring(0, 1).toUpperCase() +
removeAttributeNames[i].substring(1);
String isSetMethodName = "isSet" + attrName;
Boolean isSet = null;
try {
Method isSetMethod = clazz.getMethod(isSetMethodName);
isSet = (Boolean) isSetMethod.invoke(obj, new Object[] {});
} catch (NoSuchMethodException e) {
System.out.println("attribute " + removeAttributeNames[i]
+ " is not optional");
}
if (isSet != null && isSet.booleanValue() == true) {
String unsetMethodName = "unset" + attrName;
Method unsetMethod = clazz.getMethod(unsetMethodName);
unsetMethod.invoke(obj, new Object[] {});
}
}
}
Note 1: I have slightly modified the semantics of your method signature: the second argument (the String[]) is actually the list of attributes that you want to remove. I think this is more consistent with the method name (removeAttributes), and it also simplify things (using unsetX and isSetX).
Note 2: The reason for calling isSetX before calling unsetX is that unsetX would throw an InvocationTargetException if called when the attribute X is not set.
Note 3: You may want to change exception handling according to your needs.