Is there a way to interactively search for a nodes that matches a given xpath expression in emacs?
I would like something similar to re-forward-search
but instead of using a regular expression I'd type an xpath expression.
Is there a way to interactively search for a nodes that matches a given xpath expression in emacs?
I would like something similar to re-forward-search
but instead of using a regular expression I'd type an xpath expression.
I don't have an answer wrt XPath queries; sorry. But you might try Icicles search search keys M-s M-s x
and M-s M-s X
(commands icicle-search-xml-element
and icicle-search-xml-element-text-node
).
These let you search the contents and the text()
nodes, respectively, of top-level XML elements whose names match a regexp that you provide.
For icicle-search-xml-element
, can have any of these
forms:
<ELEMENTNAME>...</ELEMENTNAME>
<ELEMENTNAME ATTRIBUTE1="..."...>...</ELEMENTNAME>
<ELEMENTNAME/>
<ELEMENTNAME ATTRIBUTE1="...".../>
You can alternatively choose to search, not the search contexts as defined by the element-name regexp, but the non-contexts, that is, the buffer text that is outside such elements. To do this, use `C-M-~' during completion. (This is a toggle, and it affects only future search commands, not the current one.)
For icicle-search-xml-element-text-node
, the top-level matching elements must not have attributes. Only top-level elements of the form <ELEMENTNAME>...</ELEMENTNAME>
are
matched.
HTH.
I did something like that a long time ago. I can't give you any details now, but I'll provide an overview of the approach I took.
I created some Emacs functions to interact with (query) a native XML database. I did it with a MarkLogic server once and with a Berkley DB XML database another time. One of those functions simply queried the database. Another one of the functions would send an XQuery query that included an Emacs buffer or buffer selection.
The native XML database server would process the query, return the results, and my Emacs functions would render the result in a result buffer.
This approach allowed me to query the XML with XPath and XQuery, which is a much more powerful query language that includes XPath. (I wrote about XQuery a long time ago, here: https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/library/x-xqueryxpath/)
As difficult as all of this might sound, it turned out to be surprisingly easy.