Teach Time Encyclopedia - Learn About Our World
Home Page
Teach Time
Featured Topics

United States
by state

CITYology

Academic Disciplines

Historical Timelines

Themed Timelines

Calendars

Reference Tables

Biographies

How-tos



Friday, October 10, 2008

XPath

XPath (XML Path Language) is a terse (non-XML) syntax for addressing portions of an XML document.

Originally motivated by a desire to provide a common syntax and behavior model between XPointer and XSL, XPath has rapidly been adopted by developers as a small query language.

Table of contents
1 Notation
2 Examples
3 External Links

Notation

The notation is compact, suitable for expressing within XML attributes. A typical XPath expression is a _Location Path_ consisting of a string of element or attribute qualifiers separated by forward slashes ("/"), similar in appearance to a file system path. XPath also allows built-in functions, filters, bound variable access, and axis specifiers.

Location Paths are divided into Steps, each of which has three components:

An Axis Specifier indicates the kind of information which will be selected. For instance, _child::_ is the unabbreviated axis specifier for element children. For many XPath expressions, the axis specifier is omitted allowing it to default to _child::_. A common abbreviated axis specifier is a commercial "at" sign ("@"), which represents attributes.

A Node Test limits the specific elements or attributes which will be addressed. A common form of node test is a _name test_ which is the name of an element or an attribute.

Predicates are used to filter out, or exclude, certain nodes on the basis of more complex expressions. Predicates are introduced using a square-bracket ("[", "]") syntax.

Examples

An exhaustive set of examples is beyond the scope of this article. Some typical XPath expressions which might be used in an XSL context are:

;The Root element: /*

; All elements everywhere (implementations of this expression can be very slow): //*

;All Top Level Elements (children of Root): /*/*

;The fifth child element under an element named "FOOB": FOOB[5]

;The element FOOB whose BAZ attribute is "untrue": FOOB[ @BAZ = "untrue" ]

See also:

External Links



Internet Hotel Solutions

Site Sponsors
AC Units
Baltimore Harbor
Boot Camp Grads
Bra Size
Burkittsville
College Hotels
Digital Harbor
Free Cell Phones
Golden Hare Travel
Golf Vacations
Golf Courses
Gourmet
Hair Styles
Hippodrome
iWoman
Lesson Plans
Maryland Hotels
MD Genealogy
Minor League Stuff
Motel Site
Ocean City
OC Real Estate
Old Agers
Office Supplies
Orlando
Pet Friendly Hotel
Room Prices
Savannah, GA
Ski Vacations
South Baltimore
Student Teaching
Travel Sources
University Hotels
Visit Military Bases
Washington, DC

Brought to you by NoChildLeftBehind.com and the Beaches and Towns Network, LLC.