106

Very similar to this question, except for Java.

What is the recommended way of encoding strings for an XML output in Java. The strings might contain characters like "&", "<", etc.

21 Answers 21

130

As others have mentioned, using an XML library is the easiest way. If you do want to escape yourself, you could look into StringEscapeUtils from the Apache Commons Lang library.

7
  • This could be the way to go if you don't care about absolute correctness, for example if you are putting together a prototype. Jan 13, 2009 at 18:32
  • 3
    Use StringEscapeUtils.escapeXml(str) from commons-lang. I use it in App Engine application - work like a charm. Here is the Java Doc for this function:
    – Oleg K
    Feb 15, 2011 at 19:04
  • The escapeXml method of StringEscapeUtils seems to be a bit costly. Is there a more efficient method that operates on a StringBuffer instead of a String? Sep 13, 2012 at 7:00
  • 1
    Do this method work for both XML content and attributes? To me it seems like it doesn't work for attributes. It doesn't seem to escape \t, \n and \r.
    – Lii
    Sep 27, 2017 at 11:39
  • 4
    Note that it has been moved from commons-lang to commons-text
    – Gregor
    Jan 29, 2021 at 15:11
36

Very simply: use an XML library. That way it will actually be right instead of requiring detailed knowledge of bits of the XML spec.

22
  • 28
    Can you recommend such a library? (I find it surprising that this is not a standard part of Java edition 5...such a common task).
    – Tim Cooper
    Nov 16, 2009 at 6:23
  • 4
    XML is part of the standard Java framework - look in org.w3c.sax and org.w3c.dom. However, there are some easier-to-use framework around as well, such as JDom. Note that there may not be an "encoding strings for XML output" method - I was more recommending that the whole XML task should be done with a library rather than just doing bits at a time with string manipulation.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 16, 2009 at 6:28
  • 1
    This is not such useful advice when outputting XHTML - FlyingSaucer requires XML, but there ain't no way I'm templating through an XML lib :). Thankfully StringTemplate allows me to quickly escape all String objects.
    – Stephen
    Jan 13, 2010 at 10:45
  • 5
    @mice: The question is tagged Java, and Java has lots of XML libraries. Indeed, there are XML APIs baked into Java, so there'd be no need to add anything else... but even if you did, a few hundred K is rarely a problem outside mobile these days. Even if it weren't Java, I'd be very wary of developing on a platform which didn't have any XML APIs...
    – Jon Skeet
    Apr 5, 2012 at 19:52
  • 2
    @mice: The DOM API is perfectly capable of generating XML. Or there are fairly small third-party libraries. (JDom's jar file is 114K for example.) Using an XML API is still the recommended way of creating XML.
    – Jon Skeet
    Apr 5, 2012 at 20:03
21

Just use.

<![CDATA[ your text here ]]>

This will allow any characters except the ending

]]>

So you can include characters that would be illegal such as & and >. For example.

<element><![CDATA[ characters such as & and > are allowed ]]></element>

However, attributes will need to be escaped as CDATA blocks can not be used for them.

6
  • 12
    In most cases, that is not what you should do. Too many people abuse the CDATA tags. The intent of the CDATA is to tell the processor not to process it as XML and just pass it through. If you are trying to create an XML file, then you should be creating XML, not just passing bytes through some wrapping element. May 16, 2009 at 16:05
  • 2
    @Mads, using CDATA results in a valid XML file so it is just as fine as doing it the "right way". If you dislike it, then parse it afterwards, identity transform it, and print it. May 19, 2010 at 7:56
  • 26
    If you wrap text in a CDATA element you have to escape the CDATA closing marker: "]]>"... except you cannot escape that. So instead you have to break your code into pieces where you put half of the data in one CDATA element and the other half in a second: <![CDATA[This data contain a CDATA closing marker: "]]]]><![CDATA[>" that is why it had to be split up.]]> ... In the end it may be a lot simpler to just escape '<', '>' and '&' instead. Of course many apps ignore the potential problem with CDATA closing markers in the data. Ignorance is bliss I guess. :) Dec 14, 2010 at 12:39
  • 3
    @StijndeWitt is absolutely correct. CDATA is not a panacea for escaping special characters.
    – dnault
    Dec 5, 2014 at 22:52
  • This is a bad idea. CDATA does not allow any character outside of the XML's encoding.
    – Florian F
    Feb 20, 2020 at 9:51
18

This question is eight years old and still not a fully correct answer! No, you should not have to import an entire third party API to do this simple task. Bad advice.

The following method will:

  • correctly handle characters outside the basic multilingual plane
  • escape characters required in XML
  • escape any non-ASCII characters, which is optional but common
  • replace illegal characters in XML 1.0 with the Unicode substitution character. There is no best option here - removing them is just as valid.

I've tried to optimise for the most common case, while still ensuring you could pipe /dev/random through this and get a valid string in XML.

public static String encodeXML(String s) {
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
    int len = s.length();
    for (int i=0;i<len;) {
        int c = s.codePointAt(i);
        if (c < 0x80) {      // ASCII range: test most common case first
            if (c < 0x20 && (c != '\t' && c != '\r' && c != '\n')) {
                // Illegal XML character, even encoded. Skip or substitute
                sb.append("&#xfffd;");   // Unicode replacement character
            } else {
                switch(c) {
                  case '&':  sb.append("&amp;"); break;
                  case '>':  sb.append("&gt;"); break;
                  case '<':  sb.append("&lt;"); break;
                  // Uncomment next two if encoding for an XML attribute
//                  case '\''  sb.append("&apos;"); break;
//                  case '\"'  sb.append("&quot;"); break;
                  // Uncomment next three if you prefer, but not required
//                  case '\n'  sb.append("&#10;"); break;
//                  case '\r'  sb.append("&#13;"); break;
//                  case '\t'  sb.append("&#9;"); break;

                  default:   sb.append((char)c);
                }
            }
        } else if ((c >= 0xd800 && c <= 0xdfff) || c == 0xfffe || c == 0xffff) {
            // Illegal XML character, even encoded. Skip or substitute
            sb.append("&#xfffd;");   // Unicode replacement character
        } else {
            sb.append("&#x");
            sb.append(Integer.toHexString(c));
            sb.append(';');
        }
        i += c <= 0xffff ? 1 : 2;
    }
    return sb.toString();
}

Edit: for those who continue to insist it foolish to write your own code for this when there are perfectly good Java APIs to deal with XML, you might like to know that the StAX API included with Oracle Java 8 (I haven't tested others) fails to encode CDATA content correctly: it doesn't escape ]]> sequences in the content. A third party library, even one that's part of the Java core, is not always the best option.

6
  • +1 for standalone code. Just comparing your code with guava implementation, I'm wondering what about '\t','\n','\r' ? See also notes at guava docs
    – jschnasse
    Sep 17, 2018 at 9:51
  • 2
    There's no need to escape \n, \r and \t, they are valid, although they do make formatting a bit ugly. I've modified the code to show how to escsape them if that's what you want.
    – Mike B
    Dec 18, 2018 at 12:14
  • 2
    There is no way to "escape ]]>" in CDATA.
    – kmkaplan
    Oct 22, 2019 at 6:42
  • 1
    Then it should reject the content by throwing an IllegalArgumentException. Under no circumstances should it claim to succeed but still output invalid XML.
    – Mike B
    Oct 23, 2019 at 11:20
  • Instead of replacing illegal characters in XML 1.0 with the Unicode substitution character you can use my methods here stackoverflow.com/a/59475093/3882565.
    – stonar96
    Dec 25, 2019 at 12:41
13

Try this:

String xmlEscapeText(String t) {
   StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
   for(int i = 0; i < t.length(); i++){
      char c = t.charAt(i);
      switch(c){
      case '<': sb.append("&lt;"); break;
      case '>': sb.append("&gt;"); break;
      case '\"': sb.append("&quot;"); break;
      case '&': sb.append("&amp;"); break;
      case '\'': sb.append("&apos;"); break;
      default:
         if(c>0x7e) {
            sb.append("&#"+((int)c)+";");
         }else
            sb.append(c);
      }
   }
   return sb.toString();
}
16
  • 9
    You've got at least two bugs that I can see. One is subtle, the other isn't. I wouldn't have such a bug - because I wouldn't reinvent the wheel in the first place.
    – Jon Skeet
    Apr 5, 2012 at 20:29
  • 1
    And iterating through Unicode strings is a bit more complicated. See here: stackoverflow.com/q/1527856/402322
    – ceving
    Sep 26, 2012 at 16:33
  • 1
    Not sure it is subtle but It'd better consider the case where t==null.
    – Myobis
    Dec 12, 2013 at 23:08
  • 3
    I'm happy with the final version. Java SE is compact, fast, and efficient. Doing just what needs to be done rather than downloading another 100 MB of bloatware is always better in my book. Nov 10, 2015 at 16:40
  • 2
    All characters below 0x20 except 0x09, 0x0A and 0x0D are invalid in XML. This applies whether they are escaped or not. The only correct way to handle those is to skip them or throw an Exception. Other than that, this is a good solution and similar to the one we'd typically use.
    – Mike B
    Nov 18, 2016 at 10:40
9

StringEscapeUtils.escapeXml() does not escape control characters (< 0x20). XML 1.1 allows control characters; XML 1.0 does not. For example, XStream.toXML() will happily serialize a Java object's control characters into XML, which an XML 1.0 parser will reject.

To escape control characters with Apache commons-lang, use

NumericEntityEscaper.below(0x20).translate(StringEscapeUtils.escapeXml(str))
9
public String escapeXml(String s) {
    return s.replaceAll("&", "&amp;").replaceAll(">", "&gt;").replaceAll("<", "&lt;").replaceAll("\"", "&quot;").replaceAll("'", "&apos;");
}
4
  • 7
    Chaining replaceAll calls is very inefficient, especially for large strings. Every call results in a new String object being created, which will hang around until garbage collected. Also, each call requires looping through the string again. This could be consolidated into one single manual loop with comparisons against each target char in every iteration.
    – daiscog
    Jan 27, 2015 at 14:56
  • 2
    This should be the accepted answer, even if it is inefficient. It solves the problem in a single line. Feb 13, 2018 at 8:15
  • And it has many bugs. See this comment above Nov 12, 2018 at 18:08
  • To fix these bugs you can additionally use my method here stackoverflow.com/a/59475093/3882565. Note that this is not a replacement but it can be used additionally.
    – stonar96
    Dec 25, 2019 at 12:43
8

For those looking for the quickest-to-write solution: use methods from apache commons-lang:

Remember to include dependency:

<dependency>
  <groupId>org.apache.commons</groupId>
  <artifactId>commons-lang3</artifactId>
  <version>3.5</version> <!--check current version! -->
</dependency>
1
  • Note that it has been moved from commons-lang to commons-text
    – Trisped
    Sep 1, 2021 at 23:59
6

While idealism says use an XML library, IMHO if you have a basic idea of XML then common sense and performance says template it all the way. It's arguably more readable too. Though using the escaping routines of a library is probably a good idea.

Consider this: XML was meant to be written by humans.

Use libraries for generating XML when having your XML as an "object" better models your problem. For example, if pluggable modules participate in the process of building this XML.

Edit: as for how to actually escape XML in templates, use of CDATA or escapeXml(string) from JSTL are two good solutions, escapeXml(string) can be used like this:

<%@taglib prefix="fn" uri="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/functions"%>

<item>${fn:escapeXml(value)}</item>
6

The behavior of StringEscapeUtils.escapeXml() has changed from Commons Lang 2.5 to 3.0. It now no longer escapes Unicode characters greater than 0x7f.

This is a good thing, the old method was to be a bit to eager to escape entities that could just be inserted into a utf8 document.

The new escapers to be included in Google Guava 11.0 also seem promising: http://code.google.com/p/guava-libraries/issues/detail?id=799

2
6

While I agree with Jon Skeet in principle, sometimes I don't have the option to use an external XML library. And I find it peculiar the two functions to escape/unescape a simple value (attribute or tag, not full document) are not available in the standard XML libraries included with Java.

As a result and based on the different answers I have seen posted here and elsewhere, here is the solution I've ended up creating (nothing worked as a simple copy/paste):

  public final static String ESCAPE_CHARS = "<>&\"\'";
  public final static List<String> ESCAPE_STRINGS = Collections.unmodifiableList(Arrays.asList(new String[] {
      "&lt;"
    , "&gt;"
    , "&amp;"
    , "&quot;"
    , "&apos;"
  }));

  private static String UNICODE_NULL = "" + ((char)0x00); //null
  private static String UNICODE_LOW =  "" + ((char)0x20); //space
  private static String UNICODE_HIGH = "" + ((char)0x7f);

  //should only be used for the content of an attribute or tag      
  public static String toEscaped(String content) {
    String result = content;
    
    if ((content != null) && (content.length() > 0)) {
      boolean modified = false;
      StringBuilder stringBuilder = new StringBuilder(content.length());
      for (int i = 0, count = content.length(); i < count; ++i) {
        String character = content.substring(i, i + 1);
        int pos = ESCAPE_CHARS.indexOf(character);
        if (pos > -1) {
          stringBuilder.append(ESCAPE_STRINGS.get(pos));
          modified = true;
        }
        else {
          if (    (character.compareTo(UNICODE_LOW) > -1)
               && (character.compareTo(UNICODE_HIGH) < 1)
             ) {
            stringBuilder.append(character);
          }
          else {
            //Per URL reference below, Unicode null character is always restricted from XML
            //URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valid_characters_in_XML
            if (character.compareTo(UNICODE_NULL) != 0) {
              stringBuilder.append("&#" + ((int)character.charAt(0)) + ";");
            }
            modified = true;
          }
        }
      }
      if (modified) {
        result = stringBuilder.toString();
      }
    }
    
    return result;
  }

The above accommodates several different things:

  1. avoids using char based logic until it absolutely has to - improves unicode compatibility
  2. attempts to be as efficient as possible given the probability is the second "if" condition is likely the most used pathway
  3. is a pure function; i.e. is thread-safe
  4. optimizes nicely with the garbage collector by only returning the contents of the StringBuilder if something actually changed - otherwise, the original string is returned

At some point, I will write the inversion of this function, toUnescaped(). I just don't have time to do that today. When I do, I will come update this answer with the code. :)

7
  • Looks pretty good to me. I do not wish to add another jar to my project for only one method. If you please grant permission, may I copy paste your code in mine? Jan 23, 2014 at 13:15
  • 1
    @SatishMotwani Of course you can take the above code and do with it as you like. It's my understanding that any code published on StackOverflow is assumed to be copyright free (isn't covered as a work in totality). On the flip side, it would be exceedingly difficult for someone to press any sort of copyright claim and expect an sort of outcome for themselves. Jan 23, 2014 at 14:46
  • 1
    You forgot to handle NUL characters. And maybe other things too. Nov 12, 2018 at 18:10
  • @DavidBalažic Okay, please explain in more detail what I might have missed it? Please read through the code more closely. I handled EVERY SINGLE Unicode character (of the 1,111,998), including the null character. Can you explain the definition of the two values, UNICODE_LOW and UNICODE_HIGH? Please reread the if that uses those two values. Notice null (\u0000 which is (int)0) doesn't fall between these two values. Read out how it becomes properly "escaped" just like ALL Unicode characters existing outside the UNICODE_LOW and UNICODE_HIGH range, by using the &# technique. Aug 29, 2020 at 16:18
  • 1
    @chaotic3quilibrium NULL is illegal in XML (and some other characters too). Doesn't matter how you encode it. It is illegal. (also: there is really no need to escape Unicode characters, they are nicely supported in XML, except if the XML document has a non-Unicode encoding itself) Aug 29, 2020 at 18:14
5

Note: Your question is about escaping, not encoding. Escaping is using <, etc. to allow the parser to distinguish between "this is an XML command" and "this is some text". Encoding is the stuff you specify in the XML header (UTF-8, ISO-8859-1, etc).

First of all, like everyone else said, use an XML library. XML looks simple but the encoding+escaping stuff is dark voodoo (which you'll notice as soon as you encounter umlauts and Japanese and other weird stuff like "full width digits" (&#FF11; is 1)). Keeping XML human readable is a Sisyphus' task.

I suggest never to try to be clever about text encoding and escaping in XML. But don't let that stop you from trying; just remember when it bites you (and it will).

That said, if you use only UTF-8, to make things more readable you can consider this strategy:

  • If the text does contain '<', '>' or '&', wrap it in <![CDATA[ ... ]]>
  • If the text doesn't contain these three characters, don't warp it.

I'm using this in an SQL editor and it allows the developers to cut&paste SQL from a third party SQL tool into the XML without worrying about escaping. This works because the SQL can't contain umlauts in our case, so I'm safe.

4

If you are looking for a library to get the job done, try:

  1. Guava 26.0 documented here

    return XmlEscapers.xmlContentEscaper().escape(text);

    Note: There is also an xmlAttributeEscaper()

  2. Apache Commons Text 1.4 documented here

    StringEscapeUtils.escapeXml11(text)

    Note: There is also an escapeXml10() method

3

To escape XML characters, the easiest way is to use the Apache Commons Lang project, JAR downloadable from: http://commons.apache.org/lang/

The class is this: org.apache.commons.lang3.StringEscapeUtils;

It has a method named "escapeXml", that will return an appropriately escaped String.

1
2

You could use the Enterprise Security API (ESAPI) library, which provides methods like encodeForXML and encodeForXMLAttribute. Take a look at the documentation of the Encoder interface; it also contains examples of how to create an instance of DefaultEncoder.

1

Use JAXP and forget about text handling it will be done for you automatically.

1
  • Your link is in Spanish, which is not so helpful for the most of us. Better is this one. Mar 7, 2018 at 9:01
1

Here's an easy solution and it's great for encoding accented characters too!

String in = "Hi Lârry & Môe!";

StringBuilder out = new StringBuilder();
for(int i = 0; i < in.length(); i++) {
    char c = in.charAt(i);
    if(c < 31 || c > 126 || "<>\"'\\&".indexOf(c) >= 0) {
        out.append("&#" + (int) c + ";");
    } else {
        out.append(c);
    }
}

System.out.printf("%s%n", out);

Outputs

Hi L&#226;rry &#38; M&#244;e!
1
  • Shouldn't the "31" in the first line of the "if" be "32"; i.e. less than the space character? And if "31" must remain, then shouldn't it be corrected to read "if (c <= 31 ||..." (additional equals sign following the less than sign)? Dec 19, 2013 at 22:03
0

Try to encode the XML using Apache XML serializer

//Serialize DOM
OutputFormat format    = new OutputFormat (doc); 
// as a String
StringWriter stringOut = new StringWriter ();    
XMLSerializer serial   = new XMLSerializer (stringOut, 
                                          format);
serial.serialize(doc);
// Display the XML
System.out.println(stringOut.toString());
0

Just replace

 & with &amp;

And for other characters:

> with &gt;
< with &lt;
\" with &quot;
' with &apos;
0
0

Here's what I found after searching everywhere looking for a solution:

Get the Jsoup library:

<!-- https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/org.jsoup/jsoup -->
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.jsoup</groupId>
    <artifactId>jsoup</artifactId>
    <version>1.12.1</version>
</dependency>

Then:

import org.jsoup.Jsoup
import org.jsoup.nodes.Document
import org.jsoup.nodes.Entities
import org.jsoup.parser.Parser

String xml = '''<?xml version = "1.0"?>
<SOAP-ENV:Envelope
   xmlns:SOAP-ENV = "http://www.w3.org/2001/12/soap-envelope"
   SOAP-ENV:encodingStyle = "http://www.w3.org/2001/12/soap-encoding">

   <SOAP-ENV:Body xmlns:m = "http://www.example.org/quotations">
      <m:GetQuotation>
         <m:QuotationsName> MiscroSoft@G>>gle.com </m:QuotationsName>
      </m:GetQuotation>
   </SOAP-ENV:Body>
</SOAP-ENV:Envelope>'''



Document doc = Jsoup.parse(new ByteArrayInputStream(xml.getBytes("UTF-8")), "UTF-8", "", Parser.xmlParser())
doc.outputSettings().charset("UTF-8")
doc.outputSettings().escapeMode(Entities.EscapeMode.base)

println doc.toString()

Hope this helps someone

-1

I have created my wrapper here, hope it will helps a lot, Click here You can modify depends on your requirements

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