Port of Xembly Library from Yegor Bugayenko.
The following usage guide is taken from the original repository.
Main responsible for this repository is HerickJ-22. Please request in every single PR a review from him.
Xambly is an Assembly-like imperative programming language for data manipulation in XML documents. It is a much simplier alternative to XSLT and XQuery. Read this blog post for a more detailed explanation: Xembly, an Assembly for XML.
Here is a command line implementation (as Ruby gem): Xembly-gem
For example, you have an XML document:
<orders>
<order id="553">
<amount>$45.00</amount>
</order>
</orders>
And you want to change the amount of the order #553
from $45.00
to $140.00
. Xambly script would look like:
XPATH "orders/order[@id=553]";
SET "$140.00";
It is much simpler and compact than XSLT or XQuery.
Full list of supported directives in the current version:
ADD
: adds new node to all current nodesADDIF
: adds new node, if it's absentADDIFATTRIBUTE
: adds new node, if a child element with specified attribute does not existADDIFCHILD
: adds new node, if a child element with specified content as text does not existATTR
: adds a attribute to the current node, with name and valueCDATA
: same asSET
, but makesCDATA
INSERTAFTER
: adds new node after the current nodeINSERTBEFORE
: adds new node before the current nodeNS
: sets namespace of all current nodesPI
: adds processing instructionPOP
: retrieves cursor from stackPUSH
: saves cursor in stackREMOVE
: removes all current nodesSET
: sets text value of current nodeSTRICT
: throws an exception if cursor is missing nodesUP
: moves cursor one node upXPATH
: moves cursor to the nodes found by XPathXSET
: sets text value, calculating it with XPath
"Cursor" or "current nodes" is where we're currently located in the XML document. When Xambly script starts, the cursor is empty and simply points to the highest level in the XML hierarchy. Pay attention, it doesn't point to the root node. It points to one level above the root. Remember, when document is empty, there is no root.
Then, we start executing directives one by one. After each directive
cursor is moving somewhere. There may be many nodes under the cursor,
or just one, or none. For example, let's assume we're starting
with this simple document <car/>
:
ADD 'hello'; // nothing happens, since cursor is empty
XPATH '/car'; // there is one node <car> under the cursor
ADD 'make'; // the result is "<car><make/></car>",
// cursor has one node "<make/>"
ATTR 'name', 'BMW'; // the result is "<car><make name='BMW'/></car>"
// cursor still has one node "<make/>"
UP; // cursor has one node "<car>"
ADD 'mileage'; // the result is "<car><make name='BMW'/><mileage/></car>"
// cursor still has one node "<car>"
XPATH '*'; // cursor has two nodes "<make name='BMW'/>"
// and "<mileage/>"
REMOVE; // the result is "<car/>", since all nodes under
// the cursor are removed
You can create a collection of directives either from text or
via supplementary methods, one per each directive. In both cases,
you need to use class Directives
:
import org.Xambly.Directives;
new Directives("XPATH '//car'; REMOVE;");
new Directives().xpath("//car").remove();
The second option is preferable, because it is faster - there is no parsing involved.
ADD
directive adds a new node to every node in the current node set.
ADD
expects exactly one mandatory argument, which is the name of
a new node to be added (case sensitive):
ADD 'orders';
ADD 'order';
Even if the node with the same name already exists, a new node
will be added. Use ADDIF
if you need to add only if the same-name node
is absent.
After execution, ADD
directive moves the cursor to the nodes just added.
ADDIF
directive adds a new node to every node of the current set,
only if it's absent. ADDIF
expects exactly one argument, which
is the name of the node to be added (case sensitive):
ADD 'orders';
ADDIF 'order';
After execution, ADDIF
directive moves the cursor to the nodes just added.
SET
changes text content of all current nodes, and expects
exactly one argument, which is the text content to set:
ADD "employee";
SET "John Smith";
SET
doesn't move the cursor anywhere.
XSET
changes text content of all current nodes to a value
calculated with XPath expression:
ADD "product-1";
ADD "price";
XSET "sum(/products/price) div count(/products)";
XSET
doesn't move the cursor anywhere.
UP
moves all current nodes to their parents.
XPATH
changes current nodes to the all found by XPath expression:
XPATH "//employee[@id='234' and name='John Smith']/name";
SET "John R. Smith";
REMOVE
removes current nodes under the cursor and
moves the cursor to their parents:
ADD "employee";
REMOVE;
STRICT
checks that there is certain number of current nodes:
XPATH "//employee[name='John Doe']"; // move cursor to the employee
STRICT "1"; // throw an exception if there
// is not exactly one node under
// the cursor
This is a very effective mechanism of validation of your script,
in production mode. It is similar to assert
statement in Java.
It is recommended to use STRICT
regularly, to make sure your
cursor has correct amount of nodes, to avoid unexpected modifications.
STRICT
doesn't move the cursor anywhere.
PI
directive add a new processing directive to the XML:
PI "xsl-stylesheet" "href='http://example.com'";
PI
doesn't move the cursor anywhere.
PUSH
and POP
directives saves current DOM position to stack
and restores it from there.
Let's say you start your Xambly manipulations from a place in DOM,
which location is not determined for you. After your manipulations are
done, you want to get back to exactly the same place. You should
use PUSH
to save your current location and POP
to restore it
back, when manipulations are finished, for example:
PUSH; // doesn't matter where we are
// we just save the location to stack
XPATH '//user[@id="123"]'; // move the cursor to a completely
// different location in the XML
ADD 'name'; // add "<name/>" to all nodes under the cursor
SET 'Jeff'; // set text value to the nodes
POP; // get back to where we were before the PUSH
PUSH
basically saves the cursor into stack and POP
restores it from there.
This is a very similar technique to PUSH
/POP
directives in Assembly. The
stack has no limits, you can push multiple times and pop them back. It is
a stack, that's why it is First-In-Last-Out (FILO).
This operation is fast and it is highly recommended to use it everywhere, to be sure you're not making unexpected changes to the XML document. Every time you're not sure where your
NS
adds a namespace attribute to a node:
XPATH '/garage/car'; // move cursor to "<car/>" node(s)
NS "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/"; // set namespace there
If original document was like this:
<garage>
<car>BMW</car>
<car>Toyota</car>
</garage>
After applying that two directives it will look like this:
<garage xmlns:a="http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/">
<a:car>BMW</a:car>
<a:car>Toyota</a:car>
</garage>
The namspace prefix may no necessarily be a:
, but it doesn't
really matter.
NS
doesn't move the cursor anywhere.
Let's say you want to build an XML document with a collection of names:
package org.Xambly.example;
import org.Xambly.Directives;
import org.Xambly.Xambler;
public class XamblyExample {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
String[] names = new String[] {
"Jeffrey Lebowski",
"Walter Sobchak",
"Theodore Donald 'Donny' Kerabatsos",
};
Directives directives = new Directives().add("actors");
for (String name : names) {
directives.add("actor").set(name).up();
}
System.out.println(new Xambler(directives).xml());
}
}
Standard output will contain this text:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<actors>
<actor>Jeffrey Lebowski</actor>
<actor>Walter Sobchak</actor>
<actor>Theodore Donald 'Donny' Kerabatsos</actor>
</actors>
When you need to add an entire XML document, you can convert it first into Xambly directives and then add them all together:
Iterable<Iterable> dirs = new Directives()
.add("garage")
.append(Directives.copyOf(node))
.add("something-else");
This static utility method copyOf()
converts an instance of class
org.w3c.dom.Node
into a collection of Xambly directives. Then,
method append()
adds them all together to the main list.
Unfortunately, not every valid XML document can be parsed by copyOf()
. For
example, this one will lead to a runtime exception:
<car>2015<name>BMW</name></car>
. Read more about Xambly limitations,
a few paragraphs below.
XML, as standard, doesn't allow certain characters in its body. For example, this code will throw an exception:
String xml = new Xambler(
new Directives().add("car").set("\u00")
).xml();
Character \u00
is not allowed in XML. Actually, these ranges
are not allowed: \u00..\u08
, \u0B..\u0C
, \u0E..\u1F
,
\u7F..\u84
, and \u86..u9F
.
This means that you should validate everything and make sure you're
setting only "valid" text values to XML nodes. Sometimes, it's not feasible
to always check them. Sometimes you may simply need to save whatever
is possible and call it a day. There a utility static method Xambler.escape()
, to help
you do that:
String xml = new Xambler(
new Directives().add("car").set(Xambler.escape("\u00"))
).xml();
This code won't throw an exception. Method Xambler.escape()
will
conver "\u00" to "\u0000". It is recommended to use this method
everywhere, if you are not sure about the quality of the content.
Usually, you're supposed to use this dependency in your pom.xml
:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.jcabi.incubator</groupId>
<artifactId>Xambly</artifactId>
</dependency>
However, if you have conflicts between dependencies, you can use our "shaded" JAR, that includes all dependencies:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.jcabi.incubator</groupId>
<artifactId>Xambly</artifactId>
<classifier>jar-with-dependencies</classifier>
</dependency>
Xambly is not intended to be a replacement of XSL or XQuery. It is a lightweight (!) instrument for XML manipulations. There are a few things that can't be done by means of Xambly:
-
You can't add, remove, or modify XML comments (but you can find them with XPath)
-
DTD section can't be modified
-
Elements and text content can't be mixed, e.g. this structure is not supported:
<test>hello <b>friend</a></test>
Some of these limitations may be removed in the next versions.
Fork repository, make changes, send us a pull request. We will review
your changes and apply them to the master
branch shortly, provided
they don't violate our quality standards. To avoid frustration, before
sending us your pull request, please run full build from powershell:
.\build.ps1