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Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +00001\section{\module{xml.dom} ---
2 The Document Object Model API}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +00003
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +00004\declaremodule{standard}{xml.dom}
5\modulesynopsis{Document Object Model API for Python.}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +00006\sectionauthor{Paul Prescod}{paul@prescod.net}
7\sectionauthor{Martin v. L\"owis}{loewis@informatik.hu-berlin.de}
8
9\versionadded{2.0}
10
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000011The Document Object Model, or ``DOM,'' is a cross-language API from
12the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) for accessing and modifying XML
13documents. A DOM implementation presents an XML document as a tree
14structure, or allows client code to build such a structure from
15scratch. It then gives access to the structure through a set of
16objects which provided well-known interfaces.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000017
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000018The DOM is extremely useful for random-access applications. SAX only
19allows you a view of one bit of the document at a time. If you are
20looking at one SAX element, you have no access to another. If you are
21looking at a text node, you have no access to a containing element.
22When you write a SAX application, you need to keep track of your
23program's position in the document somewhere in your own code. SAX
24does not do it for you. Also, if you need to look ahead in the XML
25document, you are just out of luck.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000026
27Some applications are simply impossible in an event driven model with
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000028no access to a tree. Of course you could build some sort of tree
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000029yourself in SAX events, but the DOM allows you to avoid writing that
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000030code. The DOM is a standard tree representation for XML data.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000031
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000032%What if your needs are somewhere between SAX and the DOM? Perhaps
33%you cannot afford to load the entire tree in memory but you find the
34%SAX model somewhat cumbersome and low-level. There is also a module
35%called xml.dom.pulldom that allows you to build trees of only the
36%parts of a document that you need structured access to. It also has
37%features that allow you to find your way around the DOM.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000038% See http://www.prescod.net/python/pulldom
39
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000040The Document Object Model is being defined by the W3C in stages, or
41``levels'' in their terminology. The Python mapping of the API is
42substantially based on the DOM Level 2 recommendation. Some aspects
43of the API will only became available in Python 2.1, or may only be
44available in particular DOM implementations.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000045
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000046DOM applications typically start by parsing some XML into a DOM. How
47this is accomplished is not covered at all by DOM Level 1, and Level 2
48provides only limited improvements. There is a
49\class{DOMImplementation} object class which provides access to
50\class{Document} creation methods, but these methods were only added
51in DOM Level 2 and were not implemented in time for Python 2.0. There
52is also no well-defined way to access this functions without an
53existing \class{Document} object. For Python 2.0, consult the
54documentation for each particular DOM implementation to determine the
55bootstrap procedure needed to create and initialize \class{Document}
56instances.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000057
58Once you have a DOM document object, you can access the parts of your
59XML document through its properties and methods. These properties are
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000060defined in the DOM specification; this portion of the reference manual
61describes the interpretation of the specification in Python.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000062
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000063The specification provided by the W3C defines the DOM API for Java,
64ECMAScript, and OMG IDL. The Python mapping defined here is based in
65large part on the IDL version of the specification, but strict
66compliance is not required (though implementations are free to support
67the strict mapping from IDL). See section \ref{dom-conformance},
68``Conformance,'' for a detailed discussion of mapping requirements.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000069
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000070
71\begin{seealso}
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000072 \seetitle[http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-2-Core/]{Document Object
73 Model (DOM) Level 2 Specification}
74 {The W3C recommendation upon which the Python DOM API is
75 based.}
76 \seetitle[http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-DOM-Level-1/]{Document Object
77 Model (DOM) Level 1 Specification}
78 {The W3C recommendation for the
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000079 DOM supported by \module{xml.dom.minidom}.}
80 \seetitle[http://pyxml.sourceforge.net]{PyXML}{Users that require a
81 full-featured implementation of DOM should use the PyXML
82 package.}
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000083 \seetitle[http://cgi.omg.org/cgi-bin/doc?orbos/99-08-02.pdf]{CORBA
84 Scripting with Python}
85 {This specifies the mapping from OMG IDL to Python.}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000086\end{seealso}
87
88
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000089\subsection{Objects in the DOM \label{dom-objects}}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000090
91The definitive documentation for the DOM is the DOM specification from
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +000092the W3C.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +000093
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +000094Note that DOM attributes may also be manipulated as nodes instead of
95as simple strings. It is fairly rare that you must do this, however,
96so this usage is not yet documented.
97
98
99\begin{tableiii}{l|l|l}{class}{Interface}{Section}{Purpose}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000100 \lineiii{DOMImplementation}{\ref{dom-implementation-objects}}
101 {Interface to the underlying implementation.}
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000102 \lineiii{Node}{\ref{dom-node-objects}}
103 {Base interface for most objects in a document.}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000104 \lineiii{NodeList}{\ref{dom-nodelist-objects}}
105 {Interface for a sequence of nodes.}
106 \lineiii{DocumentType}{\ref{dom-documenttype-objects}}
107 {Information about the declarations needed to process a document.}
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000108 \lineiii{Document}{\ref{dom-document-objects}}
109 {Object which represents an entire document.}
110 \lineiii{Element}{\ref{dom-element-objects}}
111 {Element nodes in the document hierarchy.}
112 \lineiii{Attr}{\ref{dom-attr-objects}}
113 {Attribute value nodes on element nodes.}
114 \lineiii{Comment}{\ref{dom-comment-objects}}
115 {Representation of comments in the source document.}
116 \lineiii{Text}{\ref{dom-text-objects}}
117 {Nodes containing textual content from the document.}
118 \lineiii{ProcessingInstruction}{\ref{dom-pi-objects}}
119 {Processing instruction representation.}
120\end{tableiii}
121
Fred Drakebc9c1b12000-12-13 17:38:02 +0000122An additional section describes the exceptions defined for working
123with the DOM in Python.
124
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000125
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000126\subsubsection{DOMImplementation Objects
127 \label{dom-implementation-objects}}
128
129The \class{DOMImplementation} interface provides a way for
130applications to determine the availability of particular features in
131the DOM they are using. DOM Level 2 added the ability to create new
132\class{Document} and \class{DocumentType} objects using the
133\class{DOMImplementation} as well.
134
135\begin{methoddesc}[DOMImplementation]{hasFeature}{feature, version}
136\end{methoddesc}
137
138
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000139\subsubsection{Node Objects \label{dom-node-objects}}
140
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000141All of the components of an XML document are subclasses of
142\class{Node}.
143
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000144\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{nodeType}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000145An integer representing the node type. Symbolic constants for the
146types are on the \class{Node} object: \constant{DOCUMENT_NODE},
147\constant{ELEMENT_NODE}, \constant{ATTRIBUTE_NODE},
148\constant{TEXT_NODE}, \constant{CDATA_SECTION_NODE},
149\constant{ENTITY_NODE}, \constant{PROCESSING_INSTRUCTION_NODE},
150\constant{COMMENT_NODE}, \constant{DOCUMENT_NODE},
151\constant{DOCUMENT_TYPE_NODE}, \constant{NOTATION_NODE}.
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000152This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000153\end{memberdesc}
154
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000155\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{parentNode}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000156The parent of the current node, or \code{None} for the document node.
157The value is always a \class{Node} object or \code{None}. For
158\class{Element} nodes, this will be the parent element, except for the
159root element, in which case it will be the \class{Document} object.
160For \class{Attr} nodes, this is always \code{None}.
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000161This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000162\end{memberdesc}
163
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000164\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{attributes}
Fred Drake9368a122001-01-24 18:19:40 +0000165A \class{NamedNodeList} of attribute objects. Only elements have
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000166actual values for this; others provide \code{None} for this attribute.
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000167This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000168\end{memberdesc}
169
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000170\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{previousSibling}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000171The node that immediately precedes this one with the same parent. For
172instance the element with an end-tag that comes just before the
173\var{self} element's start-tag. Of course, XML documents are made
174up of more than just elements so the previous sibling could be text, a
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000175comment, or something else. If this node is the first child of the
176parent, this attribute will be \code{None}.
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000177This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000178\end{memberdesc}
179
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000180\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{nextSibling}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000181The node that immediately follows this one with the same parent. See
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000182also \member{previousSibling}. If this is the last child of the
183parent, this attribute will be \code{None}.
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000184This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000185\end{memberdesc}
186
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000187\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{childNodes}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000188A list of nodes contained within this node.
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000189This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000190\end{memberdesc}
191
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000192\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{firstChild}
193The first child of the node, if there are any, or \code{None}.
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000194This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000195\end{memberdesc}
196
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000197\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{lastChild}
198The last child of the node, if there are any, or \code{None}.
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000199This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000200\end{memberdesc}
201
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000202\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{localName}
203The part of the \member{tagName} following the colon if there is one,
204else the entire \member{tagName}. The value is a string.
205\end{memberdesc}
206
207\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{prefix}
208The part of the \member{tagName} preceding the colon if there is one,
209else the empty string. The value is a string, or \code{None}
210\end{memberdesc}
211
212\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{namespaceURI}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000213The namespace associated with the element name. This will be a
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000214string or \code{None}. This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000215\end{memberdesc}
216
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000217\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{nodeName}
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000218This has a different meaning for each node type; see the DOM
219specification for details. You can always get the information you
220would get here from another property such as the \member{tagName}
221property for elements or the \member{name} property for attributes.
222For all node types, the value of this attribute will be either a
223string or \code{None}. This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000224\end{memberdesc}
225
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000226\begin{memberdesc}[Node]{nodeValue}
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000227This has a different meaning for each node type; see the DOM
228specification for details. The situation is similar to that with
229\member{nodeName}. The value is a string or \code{None}.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000230\end{memberdesc}
231
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000232\begin{methoddesc}[Node]{hasAttributes}{}
233Returns true if the node has any attributes.
234\end{methoddesc}
235
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000236\begin{methoddesc}[Node]{hasChildNodes}{}
237Returns true if the node has any child nodes.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000238\end{methoddesc}
239
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000240\begin{methoddesc}[Node]{appendChild}{newChild}
241Add a new child node to this node at the end of the list of children,
242returning \var{newChild}.
243\end{methoddesc}
244
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000245\begin{methoddesc}[Node]{insertBefore}{newChild, refChild}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000246Insert a new child node before an existing child. It must be the case
247that \var{refChild} is a child of this node; if not,
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000248\exception{ValueError} is raised. \var{newChild} is returned.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000249\end{methoddesc}
250
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000251\begin{methoddesc}[Node]{removeChild}{oldChild}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000252Remove a child node. \var{oldChild} must be a child of this node; if
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000253not, \exception{ValueError} is raised. \var{oldChild} is returned on
254success. If \var{oldChild} will not be used further, its
255\method{unlink()} method should be called.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000256\end{methoddesc}
257
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000258\begin{methoddesc}[Node]{replaceChild}{newChild, oldChild}
259Replace an existing node with a new node. It must be the case that
260\var{oldChild} is a child of this node; if not,
261\exception{ValueError} is raised.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000262\end{methoddesc}
263
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000264\begin{methoddesc}[Node]{normalize}{}
265Join adjacent text nodes so that all stretches of text are stored as
266single \class{Text} instances. This simplifies processing text from a
267DOM tree for many applications.
268\versionadded{2.1}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000269\end{methoddesc}
270
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000271\begin{methoddesc}[Node]{cloneNode}{deep}
272Clone this node. Setting \var{deep} means to clone all child nodes as
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000273well. This returns the clone.
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000274\end{methoddesc}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000275
276
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000277\subsubsection{NodeList Objects \label{dom-nodelist-objects}}
278
279A \class{NodeList} represents a sequence of nodes. These objects are
280used in two ways in the DOM Core recommendation: the
281\class{Element} objects provides one as it's list of child nodes, and
282the \method{getElementsByTagName()} and
283\method{getElementsByTagNameNS()} methods of \class{Node} return
284objects with this interface to represent query results.
285
286The DOM Level 2 recommendation defines one method and one attribute
287for these objects:
288
289\begin{methoddesc}[NodeList]{item}{i}
290 Return the \var{i}'th item from the sequence, if there is one, or
291 \code{None}. The index \var{i} is not allowed to be less then zero
292 or greater than or equal to the length of the sequence.
293\end{methoddesc}
294
295\begin{memberdesc}[NodeList]{length}
296 The number of nodes in the sequence.
297\end{memberdesc}
298
299In addition, the Python DOM interface requires that some additional
300support is provided to allow \class{NodeList} objects to be used as
301Python sequences. All \class{NodeList} implementations must include
302support for \method{__len__()} and \method{__getitem__()}; this allows
303iteration over the \class{NodeList} in \keyword{for} statements and
304proper support for the \function{len()} built-in function.
305
306If a DOM implementation supports modification of the document, the
307\class{NodeList} implementation must also support the
308\method{__setitem__()} and \method{__delitem__()} methods.
309
310
311\subsubsection{DocumentType Objects \label{dom-documenttype-objects}}
312
313Information about the notations and entities declared by a document
314(including the external subset if the parser uses it and can provide
315the information) is available from a \class{DocumentType} object. The
316\class{DocumentType} for a document is available from the
317\class{Document} object's \member{doctype} attribute.
318
319\class{DocumentType} is a specialization of \class{Node}, and adds the
320following attributes:
321
322\begin{memberdesc}[DocumentType]{publicId}
323 The public identifier for the external subset of the document type
324 definition. This will be a string or \code{None}.
325\end{memberdesc}
326
327\begin{memberdesc}[DocumentType]{systemId}
328 The system identifier for the external subset of the document type
329 definition. This will be a URI as a string, or \code{None}.
330\end{memberdesc}
331
332\begin{memberdesc}[DocumentType]{internalSubset}
333 A string giving the complete internal subset from the document.
334\end{memberdesc}
335
336\begin{memberdesc}[DocumentType]{name}
337 The name of the root element as given in the \code{DOCTYPE}
338 declaration, if present. If the was no \code{DOCTYPE} declaration,
339 this will be \code{None}.
340\end{memberdesc}
341
342\begin{memberdesc}[DocumentType]{entities}
343 This is a \class{NamedNodeMap} giving the definitions of external
344 entities. For entity names defined more than once, only the first
345 definition is provided (others are ignored as required by the XML
346 recommendation). This may be \code{None} if the information is not
347 provided by the parser, or if no entities are defined.
348\end{memberdesc}
349
350\begin{memberdesc}[DocumentType]{notations}
351 This is a \class{NamedNodeMap} giving the definitions of notations.
352 For notation names defined more than once, only the first definition
353 is provided (others are ignored as required by the XML
354 recommendation). This may be \code{None} if the information is not
355 provided by the parser, or if no notations are defined.
356\end{memberdesc}
357
358
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000359\subsubsection{Document Objects \label{dom-document-objects}}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000360
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000361A \class{Document} represents an entire XML document, including its
362constituent elements, attributes, processing instructions, comments
363etc. Remeber that it inherits properties from \class{Node}.
364
365\begin{memberdesc}[Document]{documentElement}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000366The one and only root element of the document.
367\end{memberdesc}
368
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000369\begin{methoddesc}[Document]{createElement}{tagName}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000370Create and return a new element node. The element is not inserted
371into the document when it is created. You need to explicitly insert
372it with one of the other methods such as \method{insertBefore()} or
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000373\method{appendChild()}.
374\end{methoddesc}
375
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000376\begin{methoddesc}[Document]{createElementNS}{namespaceURI, tagName}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000377Create and return a new element with a namespace. The
378\var{tagName} may have a prefix. The element is not inserted into the
379document when it is created. You need to explicitly insert it with
380one of the other methods such as \method{insertBefore()} or
381\method{appendChild()}.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000382\end{methoddesc}
383
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000384\begin{methoddesc}[Document]{createTextNode}{data}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000385Create and return a text node containing the data passed as a
386parameter. As with the other creation methods, this one does not
387insert the node into the tree.
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000388\end{methoddesc}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000389
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000390\begin{methoddesc}[Document]{createComment}{data}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000391Create and return a comment node containing the data passed as a
392parameter. As with the other creation methods, this one does not
393insert the node into the tree.
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000394\end{methoddesc}
395
396\begin{methoddesc}[Document]{createProcessingInstruction}{target, data}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000397Create and return a processing instruction node containing the
398\var{target} and \var{data} passed as parameters. As with the other
399creation methods, this one does not insert the node into the tree.
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000400\end{methoddesc}
401
402\begin{methoddesc}[Document]{createAttribute}{name}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000403Create and return an attribute node. This method does not associate
404the attribute node with any particular element. You must use
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000405\method{setAttributeNode()} on the appropriate \class{Element} object
406to use the newly created attribute instance.
407\end{methoddesc}
408
409\begin{methoddesc}[Document]{createAttributeNS}{namespaceURI, qualifiedName}
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000410Create and return an attribute node with a namespace. The
411\var{tagName} may have a prefix. This method does not associate the
412attribute node with any particular element. You must use
413\method{setAttributeNode()} on the appropriate \class{Element} object
414to use the newly created attribute instance.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000415\end{methoddesc}
416
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000417\begin{methoddesc}[Document]{getElementsByTagName}{tagName}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000418Search for all descendants (direct children, children's children,
419etc.) with a particular element type name.
420\end{methoddesc}
421
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000422\begin{methoddesc}[Document]{getElementsByTagNameNS}{namespaceURI, localName}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000423Search for all descendants (direct children, children's children,
424etc.) with a particular namespace URI and localname. The localname is
425the part of the namespace after the prefix.
426\end{methoddesc}
427
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000428
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000429\subsubsection{Element Objects \label{dom-element-objects}}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000430
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000431\class{Element} is a subclass of \class{Node}, so inherits all the
432attributes of that class.
433
434\begin{memberdesc}[Element]{tagName}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000435The element type name. In a namespace-using document it may have
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000436colons in it. The value is a string.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000437\end{memberdesc}
438
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000439\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{getElementsByTagName}{tagName}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000440Same as equivalent method in the \class{Document} class.
441\end{methoddesc}
442
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000443\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{getElementsByTagNameNS}{tagName}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000444Same as equivalent method in the \class{Document} class.
445\end{methoddesc}
446
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000447\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{getAttribute}{attname}
448Return an attribute value as a string.
449\end{methoddesc}
450
451\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{getAttributeNode}{attrname}
452Return the \class{Attr} node for the attribute named by
453\var{attrname}.
454\end{methoddesc}
455
456\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{getAttributeNS}{namespaceURI, localName}
457Return an attribute value as a string, given a \var{namespaceURI} and
458\var{localName}.
459\end{methoddesc}
460
461\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{getAttributeNodeNS}{namespaceURI, localName}
462Return an attribute value as a node, given a \var{namespaceURI} and
463\var{localName}.
464\end{methoddesc}
465
466\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{removeAttribute}{attname}
467Remove an attribute by name. No exception is raised if there is no
468matching attribute.
469\end{methoddesc}
470
471\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{removeAttributeNode}{oldAttr}
472Remove and return \var{oldAttr} from the attribute list, if present.
473If \var{oldAttr} is not present, \exception{NotFoundErr} is raised.
474\end{methoddesc}
475
476\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{removeAttributeNS}{namespaceURI, localName}
477Remove an attribute by name. Note that it uses a localName, not a
478qname. No exception is raised if there is no matching attribute.
479\end{methoddesc}
480
481\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{setAttribute}{attname, value}
482Set an attribute value from a string.
483\end{methoddesc}
484
485\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{setAttributeNode}{newAttr}
486Add a new attibute node to the element, replacing an existing
487attribute if necessary if the \member{name} attribute matches. If a
488replacement occurs, the old attribute node will be returned. If
489\var{newAttr} is already in use, \exception{InuseAttributeErr} will be
490raised.
491\end{methoddesc}
492
493\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{setAttributeNodeNS}{newAttr}
494Add a new attibute node to the element, replacing an existing
495attribute if necessary if the \member{namespaceURI} and
496\member{localName} attributes match. If a replacement occurs, the old
497attribute node will be returned. If \var{newAttr} is already in use,
498\exception{InuseAttributeErr} will be raised.
499\end{methoddesc}
500
501\begin{methoddesc}[Element]{setAttributeNS}{namespaceURI, qname, value}
502Set an attribute value from a string, given a \var{namespaceURI} and a
503\var{qname}. Note that a qname is the whole attribute name. This is
504different than above.
505\end{methoddesc}
506
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000507
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000508\subsubsection{Attr Objects \label{dom-attr-objects}}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000509
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000510\class{Attr} inherits from \class{Node}, so inherits all its
511attributes.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000512
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000513\begin{memberdesc}[Attr]{name}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000514The attribute name. In a namespace-using document it may have colons
515in it.
516\end{memberdesc}
517
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000518\begin{memberdesc}[Attr]{localName}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000519The part of the name following the colon if there is one, else the
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000520entire name. This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000521\end{memberdesc}
522
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000523\begin{memberdesc}[Attr]{prefix}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000524The part of the name preceding the colon if there is one, else the
525empty string.
526\end{memberdesc}
527
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000528
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000529\subsubsection{NamedNodeMap Objects \label{dom-attributelist-objects}}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000530
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000531\class{NamedNodeMap} does \emph{not} inherit from \class{Node}.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000532
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000533\begin{memberdesc}[NamedNodeMap]{length}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000534The length of the attribute list.
535\end{memberdesc}
536
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000537\begin{methoddesc}[NamedNodeMap]{item}{index}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000538Return an attribute with a particular index. The order you get the
539attributes in is arbitrary but will be consistent for the life of a
540DOM. Each item is an attribute node. Get its value with the
541\member{value} attribbute.
542\end{methoddesc}
543
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000544There are also experimental methods that give this class more mapping
545behavior. You can use them or you can use the standardized
546\method{getAttribute*()}-family methods on the \class{Element} objects.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000547
548
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000549\subsubsection{Comment Objects \label{dom-comment-objects}}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000550
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000551\class{Comment} represents a comment in the XML document. It is a
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000552subclass of \class{Node}, but cannot have child nodes.
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000553
554\begin{memberdesc}[Comment]{data}
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000555The content of the comment as a string. The attribute contains all
556characters between the leading \code{<!-}\code{-} and trailing
557\code{-}\code{->}, but does not include them.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000558\end{memberdesc}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000559
560
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000561\subsubsection{Text and CDATASection Objects \label{dom-text-objects}}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000562
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000563The \class{Text} interface represents text in the XML document. If
564the parser and DOM implementation support the DOM's XML extension,
565portions of the text enclosed in CDATA marked sections are stored in
566\class{CDATASection} objects. These two interfaces are identical, but
567provide different values for the \member{nodeType} attribute.
568
569These interfaces extend the \class{Node} interface. They cannot have
570child nodes.
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000571
572\begin{memberdesc}[Text]{data}
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000573The content of the text node as a string.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000574\end{memberdesc}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000575
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000576\strong{Note:} The use of a \class{CDATASection} node does not
577indicate that the node represents a complete CDATA marked section,
578only that the content of the node was part of a CDATA section. A
579single CDATA section may be represented by more than one node in the
580document tree. There is no way to determine whether two adjacent
581\class{CDATASection} nodes represent different CDATA marked sections.
582
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000583
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000584\subsubsection{ProcessingInstruction Objects \label{dom-pi-objects}}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000585
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000586Represents a processing instruction in the XML document; this inherits
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000587from the \class{Node} interface and cannot have child nodes.
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000588
589\begin{memberdesc}[ProcessingInstruction]{target}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000590The content of the processing instruction up to the first whitespace
Fred Drake9a29dd62000-12-08 06:54:51 +0000591character. This is a read-only attribute.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000592\end{memberdesc}
593
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000594\begin{memberdesc}[ProcessingInstruction]{data}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000595The content of the processing instruction following the first
596whitespace character.
597\end{memberdesc}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000598
599
Fred Drakebc9c1b12000-12-13 17:38:02 +0000600\subsubsection{Exceptions \label{dom-exceptions}}
601
602\versionadded{2.1}
603
604The DOM Level 2 recommendation defines a single exception,
605\exception{DOMException}, and a number of constants that allow
606applications to determine what sort of error occurred.
607\exception{DOMException} instances carry a \member{code} attribute
608that provides the appropriate value for the specific exception.
609
610The Python DOM interface provides the constants, but also expands the
611set of exceptions so that a specific exception exists for each of the
612exception codes defined by the DOM. The implementations must raise
613the appropriate specific exception, each of which carries the
614appropriate value for the \member{code} attribute.
615
616\begin{excdesc}{DOMException}
617 Base exception class used for all specific DOM exceptions. This
618 exception class cannot be directly instantiated.
619\end{excdesc}
620
621\begin{excdesc}{DomstringSizeErr}
622 Raised when a specified range of text does not fit into a string.
623 This is not known to be used in the Python DOM implementations, but
624 may be received from DOM implementations not written in Python.
625\end{excdesc}
626
627\begin{excdesc}{HierarchyRequestErr}
628 Raised when an attempt is made to insert a node where the node type
629 is not allowed.
630\end{excdesc}
631
632\begin{excdesc}{IndexSizeErr}
633 Raised when an index or size parameter to a method is negative or
634 exceeds the allowed values.
635\end{excdesc}
636
637\begin{excdesc}{InuseAttributeErr}
638 Raised when an attempt is made to insert an \class{Attr} node that
639 is already present elsewhere in the document.
640\end{excdesc}
641
642\begin{excdesc}{InvalidAccessErr}
643 Raised if a parameter or an operation is not supported on the
644 underlying object.
645\end{excdesc}
646
647\begin{excdesc}{InvalidCharacterErr}
648 This exception is raised when a string parameter contains a
649 character that is not permitted in the context it's being used in by
650 the XML 1.0 recommendation. For example, attempting to create an
651 \class{Element} node with a space in the element type name will
652 cause this error to be raised.
653\end{excdesc}
654
655\begin{excdesc}{InvalidModificationErr}
656 Raised when an attempt is made to modify the type of a node.
657\end{excdesc}
658
659\begin{excdesc}{InvalidStateErr}
660 Raised when an attempt is made to use an object that is not or is no
661 longer usable.
662\end{excdesc}
663
664\begin{excdesc}{NamespaceErr}
665 If an attempt is made to change any object in a way that is not
666 permitted with regard to the
667 \citetitle[http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/]{Namespaces in XML}
668 recommendation, this exception is raised.
669\end{excdesc}
670
671\begin{excdesc}{NotFoundErr}
672 Exception when a node does not exist in the referenced context. For
673 example, \method{NamedNodeMap.removeNamedItem()} will raise this if
674 the node passed in does not exist in the map.
675\end{excdesc}
676
677\begin{excdesc}{NotSupportedErr}
678 Raised when the implementation does not support the requested type
679 of object or operation.
680\end{excdesc}
681
682\begin{excdesc}{NoDataAllowedErr}
683 This is raised if data is specified for a node which does not
684 support data.
685 % XXX a better explanation is needed!
686\end{excdesc}
687
688\begin{excdesc}{NoModificationAllowedErr}
689 Raised on attempts to modify an object where modifications are not
690 allowed (such as for read-only nodes).
691\end{excdesc}
692
693\begin{excdesc}{SyntaxErr}
694 Raised when an invalid or illegal string is specified.
695 % XXX how is this different from InvalidCharacterErr ???
696\end{excdesc}
697
698\begin{excdesc}{WrongDocumentErr}
699 Raised when a node is inserted in a different document than it
700 currently belongs to, and the implementation does not support
701 migrating the node from one document to the other.
702\end{excdesc}
703
704The exception codes defined in the DOM recommendation map to the
705exceptions described above according to this table:
706
707\begin{tableii}{l|l}{constant}{Constant}{Exception}
708 \lineii{DOMSTRING_SIZE_ERR}{\exception{DomstringSizeErr}}
709 \lineii{HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR}{\exception{HierarchyRequestErr}}
710 \lineii{INDEX_SIZE_ERR}{\exception{IndexSizeErr}}
711 \lineii{INUSE_ATTRIBUTE_ERR}{\exception{InuseAttributeErr}}
712 \lineii{INVALID_ACCESS_ERR}{\exception{InvalidAccessErr}}
713 \lineii{INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR}{\exception{InvalidCharacterErr}}
714 \lineii{INVALID_MODIFICATION_ERR}{\exception{InvalidModificationErr}}
715 \lineii{INVALID_STATE_ERR}{\exception{InvalidStateErr}}
716 \lineii{NAMESPACE_ERR}{\exception{NamespaceErr}}
717 \lineii{NOT_FOUND_ERR}{\exception{NotFoundErr}}
718 \lineii{NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR}{\exception{NotSupportedErr}}
719 \lineii{NO_DATA_ALLOWED_ERR}{\exception{NoDataAllowedErr}}
720 \lineii{NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR}{\exception{NoModificationAllowedErr}}
721 \lineii{SYNTAX_ERR}{\exception{SyntaxErr}}
722 \lineii{WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR}{\exception{WrongDocumentErr}}
723\end{tableii}
724
725
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000726\subsection{Conformance \label{dom-conformance}}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000727
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000728This section describes the conformance requirements and relationships
729between the Python DOM API, the W3C DOM recommendations, and the OMG
730IDL mapping for Python.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000731
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000732
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000733\subsubsection{Type Mapping \label{dom-type-mapping}}
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000734
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000735The primitive IDL types used in the DOM specification are mapped to
736Python types according to the following table.
737
738\begin{tableii}{l|l}{code}{IDL Type}{Python Type}
739 \lineii{boolean}{\code{IntegerType} (with a value of \code{0} or \code{1})}
740 \lineii{int}{\code{IntegerType}}
741 \lineii{long int}{\code{IntegerType}}
742 \lineii{unsigned int}{\code{IntegerType}}
743\end{tableii}
744
745Additionally, the \class{DOMString} defined in the recommendation is
746mapped to a Python string or Unicode string. Applications should
747be able to handle Unicode whenever a string is returned from the DOM.
748
749The IDL \keyword{null} value is mapped to \code{None}, which may be
750accepted or provided by the implementation whenever \keyword{null} is
751allowed by the API.
752
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000753
754\subsubsection{Accessor Methods \label{dom-accessor-methods}}
755
756The mapping from OMG IDL to Python defines accessor functions for IDL
757\keyword{attribute} declarations in much the way the Java mapping
758does. Mapping the IDL declarations
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000759
760\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000761readonly attribute string someValue;
762 attribute string anotherValue;
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000763\end{verbatim}
764
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000765yeilds three accessor functions: a ``get'' method for
766\member{someValue} (\method{_get_someValue()}), and ``get'' and
767``set'' methods for
768\member{anotherValue} (\method{_get_anotherValue()} and
769\method{_set_anotherValue()}). The mapping, in particular, does not
770require that the IDL attributes are accessible as normal Python
771attributes: \code{\var{object}.someValue} is \emph{not} required to
772work, and may raise an \exception{AttributeError}.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000773
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000774The Python DOM API, however, \emph{does} require that normal attribute
775access work. This means that the typical surrogates generated by
776Python IDL compilers are not likely to work, and wrapper objects may
777be needed on the client if the DOM objects are accessed via CORBA.
778While this does require some additional consideration for CORBA DOM
779clients, the implementers with experience using DOM over CORBA from
780Python do not consider this a problem. Attributes that are declared
781\keyword{readonly} may not restrict write access in all DOM
782implementations.
Fred Drake669d36f2000-10-24 02:34:45 +0000783
Fred Drakeeaf57aa2000-11-29 06:10:22 +0000784Additionally, the accessor functions are not required. If provided,
785they should take the form defined by the Python IDL mapping, but
786these methods are considered unnecessary since the attributes are
Fred Drake16942f22000-12-07 04:47:51 +0000787accessible directly from Python. ``Set'' accessors should never be
788provided for \keyword{readonly} attributes.