xml4h is an MIT licensed library for Python to make it easier to work with XML.
This library exists because Python is awesome, XML is everywhere, and combining the two should be a pleasure but often is not. With xml4h, it can be easy.
As of version 1.0 xml4h supports Python versions 2.7 and 3.5+.
xml4h is a simplification layer over existing Python XML processing libraries such as lxml, ElementTree and the minidom. It provides:
- a rich pythonic API to traverse and manipulate the XML DOM.
- a document builder to simply and safely construct complex documents with minimal code.
- a writer that serialises XML documents with the structure and format that you expect, unlike the machine- but not human-friendly output you tend to get from other libraries.
The xml4h abstraction layer also offers some other benefits, beyond a nice API and tool set:
- A common interface to different underlying XML libraries, so code written against xml4h need not be rewritten if you switch implementations.
- You can easily move between xml4h and the underlying implementation: parse your document using the fastest implementation, manipulate the DOM with human-friendly code using xml4h, then get back to the underlying implementation if you need to.
Install xml4h with pip:
$ pip install xml4h
Or install the tarball manually with:
$ python setup.py install
- GitHub for source code and issues: https://github.com/jmurty/xml4h
- ReadTheDocs for documentation: https://xml4h.readthedocs.org
- Install from the Python Package Index: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/xml4h
With xml4h you can easily parse XML files and access their data.
Let's start with an example XML document:
$ cat tests/data/monty_python_films.xml <MontyPythonFilms source="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monty_Python"> <Film year="1971"> <Title>And Now for Something Completely Different</Title> <Description> A collection of sketches from the first and second TV series of Monty Python's Flying Circus purposely re-enacted and shot for film. </Description> </Film> <Film year="1974"> <Title>Monty Python and the Holy Grail</Title> <Description> King Arthur and his knights embark on a low-budget search for the Holy Grail, encountering humorous obstacles along the way. Some of these turned into standalone sketches. </Description> </Film> <Film year="1979"> <Title>Monty Python's Life of Brian</Title> <Description> Brian is born on the first Christmas, in the stable next to Jesus'. He spends his life being mistaken for a messiah. </Description> </Film> <... more Film elements here ...> </MontyPythonFilms>
With xml4h you can parse the XML file and use "magical" element and attribute lookups to read data:
>>> import xml4h >>> doc = xml4h.parse('tests/data/monty_python_films.xml') >>> for film in doc.MontyPythonFilms.Film[:3]: ... print(film['year'] + ' : ' + film.Title.text) 1971 : And Now for Something Completely Different 1974 : Monty Python and the Holy Grail 1979 : Monty Python's Life of Brian
You can also use more explicit (non-magical) methods to traverse the DOM:
>>> for film in doc.child('MontyPythonFilms').children('Film')[:3]: ... print(film.attributes['year'] + ' : ' + film.children.first.text) 1971 : And Now for Something Completely Different 1974 : Monty Python and the Holy Grail 1979 : Monty Python's Life of Brian
The xml4h builder makes programmatic document creation simple, with a method-chaining feature that allows for expressive but sparse code that mirrors the document itself. Here is the code to build part of the above XML document:
>>> b = (xml4h.build('MontyPythonFilms') ... .attributes({'source': 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monty_Python'}) ... .element('Film') ... .attributes({'year': 1971}) ... .element('Title') ... .text('And Now for Something Completely Different') ... .up() ... .elem('Description').t( ... "A collection of sketches from the first and second TV" ... " series of Monty Python's Flying Circus purposely" ... " re-enacted and shot for film." ... ).up() ... .up() ... ) >>> # A builder object can be re-used, and has short method aliases >>> b = (b.e('Film') ... .attrs(year=1974) ... .e('Title').t('Monty Python and the Holy Grail').up() ... .e('Description').t( ... "King Arthur and his knights embark on a low-budget search" ... " for the Holy Grail, encountering humorous obstacles along" ... " the way. Some of these turned into standalone sketches." ... ).up() ... .up() ... )
Pretty-print your XML document with xml4h's writer implementation with methods to write content to a stream or get the content as text with flexible formatting options:
>>> print(b.xml_doc(indent=4, newline=True)) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <MontyPythonFilms source="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monty_Python"> <Film year="1971"> <Title>And Now for Something Completely Different</Title> <Description>A collection of sketches from ...</Description> </Film> <Film year="1974"> <Title>Monty Python and the Holy Grail</Title> <Description>King Arthur and his knights embark ...</Description> </Film> </MontyPythonFilms> <BLANKLINE>
Python has three popular libraries for working with XML, none of which are particularly easy to use:
- xml.dom.minidom is a light-weight, moderately-featured implementation of the W3C DOM that is included in the standard library. Unfortunately the W3C DOM API is verbose, clumsy, and not very pythonic, and the minidom does not support XPath expressions.
- xml.etree.ElementTree is a fast hierarchical data container that is included in the standard library and can be used to represent XML, mostly. The API is fairly pythonic and supports some basic XPath features, but it lacks some DOM traversal niceties you might expect (e.g. to get an element's parent) and when using it you often feel like your working with something subtly different from XML, because you are.
- lxml is a fast, full-featured XML library with an API based on ElementTree but extended. It is your best choice for doing serious work with XML in Python but it is not included in the standard library, it can be difficult to install, and it gives you the same it's-XML-but-not-quite feeling as its ElementTree forebear.
Given these three options it can be difficult to choose which library to use, especially if you're new to XML processing in Python and haven't already used (struggled with) any of them.
In the past your best bet would have been to go with lxml for the most flexibility, even though it might be overkill, because at least then you wouldn't have to rewrite your code if you later find you need XPath support or powerful DOM traversal methods.
This is where xml4h comes in. It provides an abstraction layer over the existing XML libraries, taking advantage of their power while offering an improved API and tool set.
Currently xml4h includes adapter implementations for three of the main XML processing Python libraries.
If you have lxml available (highly recommended) it will use that, otherwise it will fall back to use the (c)ElementTree then the minidom libraries.
- Add support for Python 3 (3.5+)
- Dropped support for Python versions before 2.7.
- Fix node namespace prefix values for lxml adapter.
- Improve builder's
up()
method to accept and distinguish between a count of parents to step up, or the name of a target ancestor node. - Add
xml()
andxml_doc()
methods to document builder to more easily get string content from it, without resorting to the write methods. - The
write()
andwrite_doc()
methods no longer send output tosys.stdout
by default. The user must explicitly provide a target writer object, and hopefully be more mindful of the need to set up encoding correctly when providing a text stream object. - Handling of redundant Element namespace prefixes is now more consistent: we always strip the prefix when the element has an xmlns attribute defining the same namespace URI.
- Add adapter for the (c)ElementTree library versions included as standard with Python 2.7+.
- Improved "magical" node traversal to work with lowercase tag names without always needing a trailing underscore. See also improved docs.
- Fixes for: potential errors ASCII-encoding nodes as strings; default XPath namespace from document node; lookup precedence of xmlns attributes.
- Initial alpha release with support for lxml and minidom libraries.