9

This removes all elements from the document:

        XDocument document = XDocument.Load(inputFile);
        foreach (XElement element in document.Elements())
        {
            element.Remove();
        }
        document.Save(outputFile);

This doesn't have any effect:

        XDocument document = XDocument.Load(inputFile);
        foreach (XElement element in document.Elements())
        {
            //element.Remove();
            foreach (XElement child in element.Elements())
                child.Remove();
        }
        document.Save(outputFile);

Am I missing something here? Since these are all references to elements within the XDocument, shouldn't the changes take effect? Is there some other way I should be removing nested children from an XDocument?

Thanks!

5
  • Have you debugged the code? Are you sure that element.Elements() is returning child elements? Just looking for a bit more information about exactly what you are seeing happen.
    – jrista
    Jul 9, 2010 at 18:58
  • @jrista It is returning child elements, but the problem seems to be with the enumerator behaving differently after a .Remove().
    – Jake
    Jul 12, 2010 at 16:11
  • 1
    Yes, that is what I would expect. Enumerators generally throw exceptions when you modify the collection, as they are very dependent upon the stability of the underlying collection to function properly. I am actually surprised you can continue after removing a node while using a foreach/enumerator. I would generally recommend using a while loop (or possibly for...but thats more complicated), rather than a foreach.
    – jrista
    Jul 12, 2010 at 16:40
  • @jrista When you put it that way it makes a lot more sense. Silent failure always gives me a headache :/
    – Jake
    Jul 12, 2010 at 19:00
  • Yeah, I hate silent failures. I'm really surprised thats happening here, as usually, iteration + collection modification in .NET means an exception is thrown. I dug through the XDocument code in reflector, and the way .Remove() works is really round-about, and involves the creation of an internal list at one point. I'm guessing thats why the remove is succeeding and not throwing...but it will definitely mess up enumeration since the collection's state changes, and the enumerator does not know that.
    – jrista
    Jul 12, 2010 at 20:15

3 Answers 3

20

Apparently when you iterate over element.Elements(), calling a Remove() on one of the children causes the enumerator to yield break. Iterating over element.Elements().ToList() fixed the problem.

3
  • Is this specific to XPath then?
    – Neo
    Nov 10, 2016 at 14:11
  • @Neo In what way? As jirsta pointed out above, most enumerators will break when the underlying collection changes.
    – Jake
    Nov 11, 2016 at 10:38
  • Yes I'm aware that an InvalidOperationException occurs normally. My question is about yield break. Is this specific to XPath vis-à-vis @jrista's comment re silent failing?
    – Neo
    Nov 15, 2016 at 10:21
2

Here's an example of another way using System.Xml.XPath (change the xpath query to suit your needs):

const string xml = 
    @"<xml>
        <country>
            <states>
                <state>arkansas</state>
                <state>california</state>
                <state>virginia</state>
            </states>
        </country>
    </xml>";
XDocument doc = XDocument.Parse(xml);
doc.XPathSelectElements("//xml/country/states/state[.='arkansas']").ToList()
   .ForEach(el => el.Remove());;
Console.WriteLine(doc.ToString());
Console.ReadKey(true);
2

When using XDocument try this instead:

XDocument document = XDocument.Load(inputFile);
foreach (XElement element in document.Elements())
{
     document.Element("Root").SetElementValue(element , null);
}
document.Save(outputFile)

Regards, Todd

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