vote up 1 vote down star

I'm creating XML documents with values fetched from a DB. Occasionally due to a legacy implementation, I'll pullback a value that contains a char that's invalid when not properly escaped (& for example).

So the question becomes, should I CDATA or Escape? Are certain situations more appropriate for one vs. the other?

Examples:

<Email>foo&bar@domain.com</Email>

I'd lean towards CDATA here.

<Name>Bob & Tom</Name>

I'd lean towards escaping here.

I want to avoid blindly CDATA'ing every time, but from a performance perspective it seems like that's the logical choice. That will be always faster than looking for an invalid char, and if it exists then wrap.

Thoughts?

flag

2 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

CDATA is primarily useful, IMO, for human readability. As far as a machine is concerned, there's no difference between CDATA and escaped text other than the length, at most. Perhaps the escaped version will take a little bit longer to process, but I say perhaps, because this shouldn't be a significant factor unless your application is mostly IO-bound.

Are people likely to be reading the XML? If not, just let the XML parser do what it does and don't worry about CDATA vs escaped text. If people will be reading this XML, then perhaps CDATA can be the better choice.

If you're going to have an XML element whose value is XML, then for this case, CDATA may be the better choice.

For more information, see for example the XML FAQ's question, When should I use a CDATA Marked Section?

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I've seen people use CDATA for the above which is OK, and for wrapping things that are not XML - such as e.g. JSON or CSS - and that's a better reason to use it. The problem happens when people use it to quote element-based markup such as HTML, and then the confusion happens.

People do not expect

<![CDATA[<foo>bar</foo>]]>

to be identical to

&lt;foo&gt;bar&lt;/foo&gt;

as far as XML systems are concerned.

See RSS tag soup for examples of the horror of escaping levels.

You also have to be sure that the character sequence ']]>' will never appear in your wrapped data since that's the terminator.

So unless readability is paramount or you are wrapping non-element markup, I recommend avoiding CDATA.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.