71

Here is the code currently used.

public String getStringFromDoc(org.w3c.dom.Document doc)    {
        try
        {
           DOMSource domSource = new DOMSource(doc);
           StringWriter writer = new StringWriter();
           StreamResult result = new StreamResult(writer);
           TransformerFactory tf = TransformerFactory.newInstance();
           Transformer transformer = tf.newTransformer();
           transformer.transform(domSource, result);
           writer.flush();
           return writer.toString();
        }
        catch(TransformerException ex)
        {
           ex.printStackTrace();
           return null;
        }
    }

4 Answers 4

87

Relies on DOM Level3 Load/Save:

public String getStringFromDoc(org.w3c.dom.Document doc)    {
    DOMImplementationLS domImplementation = (DOMImplementationLS) doc.getImplementation();
    LSSerializer lsSerializer = domImplementation.createLSSerializer();
    return lsSerializer.writeToString(doc);   
}
2
  • 2
    Has Java 7 provided another alternative?
    – Brian
    Jun 15, 2012 at 12:20
  • import import org.w3c.dom.ls.DOMImplementationLS; import org.w3c.dom.ls.LSSerializer; Feb 15, 2017 at 8:59
14

The transformer API is the only XML-standard way to transform from a DOM object to a serialized form (String in this case). As standard I mean SUN Java XML API for XML Processing.

Other alternatives such as Xerces XMLSerializer or JDOM XMLOutputter are more direct methods (less code) but they are framework-specific.

In my opinion the way you have used is the most elegant and most portable of all. By using a standard XML Java API you can plug the XML-Parser or XML-Transformer of your choice without changing the code(the same as JDBC drivers). Is there anything more elegant than that?

14

This is a little more concise:

try {
    Transformer transformer = TransformerFactory.newInstance().newTransformer();
    StreamResult result = new StreamResult(new StringWriter());
    DOMSource source = new DOMSource(doc);
    transformer.transform(source, result);
    return result.getWriter().toString();
} catch(TransformerException ex) {
    ex.printStackTrace();
    return null;
}

Otherwise you could use a library like XMLSerializer from Apache:

//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());
1
  • I like the second variant. With JRE 1.8.0 XMLSerializer is even part of rt.jar
    – Würgspaß
    Feb 20, 2018 at 13:39
9

You could use XOM:

org.w3c.dom.Document domDocument = ...;
nu.xom.Document xomDocument = 
    nu.xom.converters.DOMConverter.convert(domDocument);
String xml = xomDocument.toXML();

You could use Jsoup:

org.jsoup.helper.W3CDom converter = new W3CDom();
String html = converter.asString( domDocument );
1
  • 1
    +1, XOM (and other similar libraries) can really simplify matters.
    – Jonik
    Jun 9, 2009 at 8:11

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