XPath is a Ruby DSL around a subset of XPath 1.0. Its primary purpose is to facilitate writing complex XPath queries from Ruby code.
To create quick, one-off expressions, XPath.generate
can be used:
XPath.generate { |x| x.descendant(:ul)[x.attr(:id) == 'foo'] }
You can also call expression methods directly on the XPath
module:
XPath.descendant(:ul)[XPath.attr(:id) == 'foo']
However for more complex expressions, it is probably more convenient to include
the XPath
module into your own class or module:
module MyXPaths
include XPath
def foo_ul
descendant(:ul)[attr(:id) == 'foo']
end
def password_field(id)
descendant(:input)[attr(:type) == 'password'][attr(:id) == id]
end
end
Both ways return an
XPath::Expression
instance, which can be further modified. To convert the expression to a
string, just call #to_s
on it. All available expressions are defined in
XPath::DSL
.
When you send a string as an argument to any XPath function, XPath assumes this to be a string literal. On the other hand if you send in Symbol, XPath assumes this to be an XPath literal. Thus the following two statements are not equivalent:
XPath.descendant(:p)[XPath.attr(:id) == 'foo']
XPath.descendant(:p)[XPath.attr(:id) == :foo]
These are the XPath expressions that these would be translated to:
.//p[@id = 'foo']
.//p[@id = foo]
The second expression would match any p tag whose id attribute matches a 'foo' tag it contains. Most likely this is not what you want.
In fact anything other than a String is treated as a literal. Thus the following works as expected:
XPath.descendant(:p)[1]
Keep in mind that XPath is 1-indexed and not 0-indexed like most other programming languages, including Ruby.
Hashes are automatically converted to equality expressions, so the above example could be written as:
XPath.descendant(:p)[:@id => 'foo']
Which would generate the same expression:
.//p[@id = 'foo']
Note that the same rules apply here, both the keys and values in the hash are treated the same way as any other expression in XPath. Thus the following are not equivalent:
XPath.descendant(:p)[:@id => 'foo'] # => .//p[@id = 'foo']
XPath.descendant(:p)[:id => 'foo'] # => .//p[id = 'foo']
XPath.descendant(:p)['id' => 'foo'] # => .//p['id' = 'foo']
XPath comes with a set of premade XPaths for use with HTML documents.
You can generate these like this:
XPath::HTML.link('Home')
XPath::HTML.field('Name')
See XPath::HTML
for all
available matchers.
(The MIT License)
Copyright © 2010 Jonas Nicklas
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