1

I'm trying to build up xml document from scratch with use linq-to-xml.

XElement root = new XElement("RootNode");
            XDocument doc = new XDocument(
            new XDeclaration("1.0", "utf-8", ""), root
            );
            for (int j = 0; j < 10; j++)
            {
                XElement element = new XElement("SetGrid");
                element.SetElementValue("ID", j);                    
                root.Add(element);

            }
   var reader = doc.CreateReader();//doc has 10 elements inside root element
   string result = reader.ReadInnerXml();//always empty string

How can I get string from XDocument?

4 Answers 4

2

Just use string result = doc.ToString() or

var wr = new StringWriter();
doc.Save(wr);
string result = wr.ToString();
1

One option for empty string as per documentation.

XmlReader return:

All the XML content, including markup, in the current node. If the current node has no children, an empty string is returned. If the current node is neither an element nor attribute, an empty string is returned.

try:

XmlReader reader = doc.CreateReader();
reader.Read(); 
string result = reader.ReadInnerXml()
1
  • This is totaly not the case in question - there're 10 elements inside the root element Feb 11, 2015 at 13:48
0
var wr = new StringWriter();
doc.Save(wr);
var xmlString = wr.GetStringBuilder().ToString());
0

There's a full answer is here.

Long story short, you're missing reader.MoveToContent();

i.e. it should be:

var reader = root.CreateReader();
reader.MoveToContent(); // <- the missing line
string result = reader.ReadInnerXml();

This way the result won't be empty and you even don't have to create XDocument

So the full code from the original question + the fix is:

XElement root = new XElement("RootNode");
for (int j = 0; j < 10; j++)
{
    XElement element = new XElement("SetGrid");
    element.SetElementValue("ID", j);
    root.Add(element);
}

var reader = root.CreateReader();// root has 10 elements
reader.MoveToContent(); // <-- missing line
string result = reader.ReadOuterXml(); // now it returns non-empty string

Output:

<RootNode><SetGrid><ID>0</ID></SetGrid><SetGrid><ID>1</ID></SetGrid><SetGrid><ID>2</ID></SetGrid><SetGrid><ID>3</ID></SetGrid><SetGrid><ID>4</ID></SetGrid><SetGrid><ID>5</ID></SetGrid><SetGrid><ID>6</ID></SetGrid><SetGrid><ID>7</ID></SetGrid><SetGrid><ID>8</ID></SetGrid><SetGrid><ID>9</ID></SetGrid></RootNode>

Note: The code is tested in Visual Studio 2013 / .NET Framework 4.5

MDSN Reference: XmlReader.ReadOuterXml

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