https://github.com/cran/XML
Tip revision: 628e8f1c907b96e7e4a3fd514b0458cddd074c16 authored by Duncan Temple Lang on 24 December 2008, 00:00:00 UTC
version 1.99-0
version 1.99-0
Tip revision: 628e8f1
xmlNamespaceDefinitions.Rd
\name{xmlNamespaceDefinitions}
\alias{xmlNamespaceDefinitions}
\alias{getDefaultNamespace}
\alias{xmlNamespaces}
\alias{xmlNamespaces<-}
\alias{xmlNamespaces<-,XMLInternalNode-method}
\alias{xmlNamespaces<-,XMLNode-method}
\alias{coerce,NULL,XMLNamespaceDefinitions-method}
\alias{coerce,XMLNamespace,character-method}
\alias{coerce,XMLNamespaceDefinition,character-method}
\alias{coerce,XMLNamespaceDefinitions,character-method}
\alias{coerce,character,XMLNamespaceDefinitions-method}
\title{Get definitions of any namespaces defined in this XML node}
\description{
If the given node has any namespace definitions declared within it,
i.e. of the form \code{xmlns:myNamespace="http://www.myNS.org"},
\code{xmlNamespaceDefinitions} provides access to these definitions.
While they appear in the XML node in the document as attributes,
they are treated differently by the parser and so do not show up
in the nodes attributes via \code{\link{xmlAttrs}}.
\code{getDefaultNamespace} is used to get the default namespace
for the top-level node in a document.
The \code{recursive} parameter allows one to conveniently find all the namespace
definitions in a document or sub-tree without having to examine the file.
This can be useful when working with XPath queries via
\code{\link{getNodeSet}}.
}
\usage{
xmlNamespaceDefinitions(x, addNames = TRUE, recursive = FALSE, simplify = FALSE)
xmlNamespaces(x, addNames = TRUE, recursive = FALSE, simplify = FALSE)
getDefaultNamespace(doc)
}
\arguments{
\item{x}{the \code{XMLNode} object in which to find any namespace
definitions}
\item{addNames}{a logical indicating whether to compute the names for
the elements in the resulting list. The names are convenient, but
one can avoid the (very small) overhead of computing these with this
parameter.}
\item{doc}{the XMLInternalDocument object obtained from a call to
\code{xmlTreeParse(, useInternalNodes = TRUE)}
}
\item{recursive}{a logical value indicating whether to extract the
namespace definitions for just this node (\code{FALSE})
or all of the descendant nodes as well (\code{TRUE}).
If this is \code{TRUE}, all the namespace definitions are
collected into a single "flat" list and so there may be duplicate
names.
}
\item{simplify}{a logical value. If this is \code{TRUE},
a character vector of prefix-URI pairs is returned.
This can be used directly in calls to functions such as
\code{\link{xpathApply}} and \code{\link{getNodeSet}}.
The default value of \code{FALSE} returns a list
of name space definitions which also identify
whether the definition is local to the particular node or inherited
from an ancestor.
}
}
\value{
A list with as many elements as there are namespace definitions.
Each element is an object of class XMLNameSpace,
containing fields giving the local identifier, the associated defining
URI and a logical value indicating whether the definition is local to
this node.
The name of each element is the prefix or alias used for that
namespace definition, i.e. the value of the \code{id} field in the
namespace definition. For default namespaces, i.e. those that have no
prefix/alias, the name is \code{""}.
}
\references{\url{http://www.w3.org/XML}}
\author{ Duncan Temple Lang }
\seealso{
\code{\link{xmlTreeParse}}
\code{\link{xmlAttrs}}
\code{\link{xmlGetAttr}}
}
\examples{
f = system.file("exampleData", "longitudinalData.xml", package = "XML")
n = xmlRoot(xmlTreeParse(f))
xmlNamespaceDefinitions(n)
xmlNamespaceDefinitions(n, recursive = TRUE)
# Now using internal nodes.
f = system.file("exampleData", "namespaces.xml", package = "XML")
doc = xmlInternalTreeParse(f)
n = xmlRoot(doc)
xmlNamespaceDefinitions(n)
xmlNamespaceDefinitions(n, recursive = TRUE)
}
\keyword{IO}
\concept{XML}