Difference between revisions of "Xml grep"
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$ xmllint --xpath '*/sentence/text()' corpus.xml |
$ xmllint --xpath '*/sentence/text()' corpus.xml |
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</pre> |
</pre> |
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==But I want XML awk/sed/diff/patch/join/etc.!== |
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To do more complex xml munging, you might want to install [http://xmlstar.sourceforge.net/ XML Starlet]. |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 12:22, 29 May 2013
When working with xml, you'll often want to grep out an element that spans several lines. This can be hacked with awk or perl, but a more elegant solution is to use the parser in libxml2 (which is a requirement when installing apertium, so should be installed on your system already). This lets you use a simple version of XPath expressions to grep out full XML elements, without falling for the tempation to parse XML with regex.
Specifying the full path and the full pardef name:
$ xmllint --xpath '/dictionary/pardefs/pardef[@n="gen__apos"]' apertium-eo-en.en.dix <pardef n="gen__apos"> <e> <p><l/> <r/></p></e> <e> <p><l>'</l> <r><j/>'<s n="gen"/></r></p></e> </pardef>
But for dix files, it should be the same if you specify a relative path:
$ xmllint --xpath '//pardef[@n="gen__apos"]' apertium-eo-en.en.dix <pardef n="gen__apos"> <e> <p><l/> <r/></p></e> <e> <p><l>'</l> <r><j/>'<s n="gen"/></r></p></e> </pardef>
You can also search for substrings by using the 'contains' function:
$ xmllint --xpath '//pardef[contains(@n,"_adj")]' apertium-eo-en.en.dix <pardef n="expensive__adj"> <e> <p><l/> <r><s n="adj"/></r></p></e> </pardef> <pardef n="ca__adj">… # etc; gives all the adj pardefs
To get all c attributes:
$ xmllint --xpath '//@c' apertium-eo-en.en.dix
To get c attributes only from <e> elements:
$ xmllint --xpath '//e/@c' apertium-eo-en.en.dix
To get all attributes of the e element that has the lm "cake":
$ xmllint --xpath '//e[lm="cake"]/@*' apertium-eo-en.en.dix
To get the second dictionary section:
$ xmllint --xpath '/dictionary/section[2]/' apertium-eo-en.en.dix
(or section[position()=2])
Some corpora are formatted in XML and put e.g. the real text contents inside a particular element. Say the corpus puts all text inside <sentence> elements, you can grep them out with:
$ xmllint --xpath '*/sentence/text()' corpus.xml
But I want XML awk/sed/diff/patch/join/etc.!
To do more complex xml munging, you might want to install XML Starlet.