2

First, I've got xml file:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no"?>
<bookshelf>
    <book ISBN="c01" press="AD press">
        <book>Oracle</book>
        <Author>Smith</Author>
        <price>32.00</price>
    </book>
    <book ISBN="b11" press="XY press">
        <book>Android</book>
        <Author>Smith</Author>
        <price>35.00</price>
    </book>
</bookshelf>

Then having java code:

DocumentBuilderFactory factory = DocumentBuilderFactory.newInstance();
DocumentBuilder builder = factory.newDocumentBuilder();
Document document = builder.parse(currentPath + "/book.xml");
for (int i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
    System.out.println("begin");
    Node n = document.getElementsByTagName("book").item(i);
    Element e = (Element) n;
    System.out.println(e.getAttribute("ISBN"));
    System.out.println(e.getAttribute("press"));
    System.out.println("end");
}

Then it prints:

begin
b11
XY press
end
begin


end

It's weird to me:

(1) Why the first element printed is "b11" but not "c01"? It's the first element.

(2) Why only one "book" element is printed, the other is empty?

Thanks a lot.

3 Answers 3

2

(1) Why the first element printed is "b11" but not "c01"? It's the first element.

It didn't, for me. I got c01 and then a blank entry, which makes sense given the input.

(2) Why only one "book" element is printed, the other is empty?

Because you have book elements within other book elements. getElementsByTagName returns all four of them. The second one is the one nested within the first:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no"?>
<bookshelf>
    <book ISBN="c01" press="AD press">      #1 (index 0)
        <book>Oracle</book>                 #2 (index 1)
        <Author>Smith</Author>
        <price>32.00</price>
    </book>
    <book ISBN="b11" press="XY press">      #3 (index 2)
        <book>Android</book>                #4 (index 3)
        <Author>Smith</Author>
        <price>35.00</price>
    </book>
</bookshelf>

I'm not that familiar with this specific API, but if I get the bookshelf and then loop its children and pick out the ones that are books, I get the expected output:

import javax.xml.parsers.*;
import org.w3c.dom.*;

class Example {
    public static final void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        DocumentBuilderFactory factory = DocumentBuilderFactory.newInstance();
        DocumentBuilder builder = factory.newDocumentBuilder();
        Document document = builder.parse("book.xml");
        NodeList bookshelves = document.getElementsByTagName("bookshelf");
        if (bookshelves.getLength() > 0) {
            Element bookshelf = (Element)bookshelves.item(0);
            NodeList children = bookshelf.getChildNodes();
            for (int i = 0, l = children.getLength(); i < l; ++i) {
                Node child = children.item(i);
                if (child.getNodeName().equals("book")) {
                    Element book = (Element)child;
                    System.out.println(book.getAttribute("ISBN"));
                    System.out.println(book.getAttribute("press"));
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

That code assumes a single bookshelf, obviously adapt as needed. It doesn't assume just two bookshelf > book elements, it lists as many as there are.

2

It's because of nested <book> tag. Since <book> tag inside <book>, parser considers <book>Oracle</book> as second record.

 <book ISBN="c01" press="AD press">
        <book>Oracle</book> //<book> tag inside <book>
        <Author>Smith</Author>
        <price>32.00</price>
    </book>
0

your xml is a bit wierd because <book> represents two different things.

My advise is to mark you document more readable with <title> for the title and not <book>.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no"?>
<bookshelf>
    <book ISBN="c01" press="AD press">
        <title>Oracle</title>
        <Author>Smith</Author>
        <price>32.00</price>
    </book>
    <book ISBN="b11" press="XY press">
        <title>Android</title>
        <Author>Smith</Author>
        <price>35.00</price>
    </book>
</bookshelf>

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