-1

I'm retrieving data from this XML:

<appMetrics versionName="1.1.0" startDate="2013-04-16" metric="ActiveUsersByDay" groupBy="dayOfYear" endDate="2013-04-18" country="US" version="1.0" generatedDate="4/19/13 10:10 AM">
<day value="6" date="2013-04-16"/>
<day value="4" date="2013-04-17"/>
<day value="2" date="2013-04-18"/>
</appMetrics>

I have been successful with simpler XMLs like if it was like this instead:

<appMetrics versionName="1.1.0" startDate="2013-04-16" metric="ActiveUsersByDay" groupBy="dayOfYear" endDate="2013-04-18" country="US" version="1.0" generatedDate="4/19/13 10:10 AM">
<day value="6"/>
<day value="4"/>
<day value="2"/>
</appMetrics>

How do I extract both the day value and date under the same single element? What i've done in the past is just search for an element then copy the string, but there are multiple pieces so it doesnt work. Do I have to make it an array instead? Or is there a way to just take the day value and date separately?

5
  • Yes there're a lot of ways to get them separately. You can create an array if you want to. What's the problem with Xcode ?
    – A-Live
    Apr 19, 2013 at 22:15
  • Ive been trying to get the pieces out as a string so obviously it doesnt work when it's two pieces like that. How would i do it as an array? Apr 19, 2013 at 22:18
  • Xcode is just the program you are using to write the code. The question doesn't have anything to do with Xcode. You'll get better results by tagging your questions with the programming language you are using.
    – Jim
    Apr 19, 2013 at 22:21
  • All the parsers I know read XML as text, so there must be no problem to read string from string and that is certainly possible. Now without any code it's reasonably impossible to tell how or for what you are going to use an array, you might want to clarify it and add some code.
    – A-Live
    Apr 19, 2013 at 22:22
  • Basically I check the name of the element, then set whatever's in it as a string. But in this case it's not working Apr 19, 2013 at 22:30

3 Answers 3

1

You should use NSXMLParser. In its delegate callback

parser:didStartElement:namespaceURI:qualifiedName:attributes:

you can find all the attributes (like value, date) in the attributes dictionary.

Edit

Parsing is really easy. Just create a parser with your data, set self as delegate and start parsing. Maintain some mutable array where you read everything in.

See the NSXMLParser Reference and NSXMLParserDelegate protocol.

If you need more help, go for this question with many links to tutorials.

0
0

You would parse it so that you get the following nested structure.

{
    "appMetrics": {
        "versionName": "1.1.0",
        "startDate": "2013-04-16",
        "metric": "ActiveUsersByDay",
        "groupBy": "dayOfYear",
        "endDate": "2013-04-18",
        "country": "US",
        "version": "1.0",
        "generatedDate": "4/19/13 10:10 AM",
        "day": [
            {
                "value": "6",
                "date": "2013-04-16"
            },
            {
                "value": "4",
                "date": "2013-04-17"
            },
            {
                "value": "2",
                "date": "2013-04-18"
            }
        ]
    }
}

You parse it using NSXMLParser, or if you're worried about performance, libxml2 (for which NSXMLParser is just an Objective-C wrapper).

0

Just tryout this....

- (void)parser:(NSXMLParser *)parser didStartElement:(NSString *)elementName namespaceURI:(NSString *)namespaceURI qualifiedName:(NSString *)qName attributes:(NSDictionary *)attributeDict {          

 if([elementName isEqualToString:@"day"]) {
         currentValue = [attributeDict objectForKey:@"value"];
         currentDate = [attributeDict objectForKey:@"date"];
         NSLog(@"value:%@ date:@", currentValue, currentDate); 
    }
 }
}

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