"Peter Otten" wrote in message news:npn25e$s5n$1...@blaine.gmane.org...
Frank Millman wrote:
As you have to keep the "<", why bother?
If you mean why don't I convert the '<' to '<', the answer is that I do
- I just omitted to say so. However, explicit is better than implicit :-)
Doesn't that make the XML document invalid or changes it in an
irreversible way? How would you know whether
"<foo><bar/></foo>"
started out as
"<foo><bar/></foo>"
or
"<foo><bar/></foo>"
?
I cheat ;-)
It is *my* XML, and I know that I only use the offending characters inside
attributes, and attributes are the only place where double-quote marks are
allowed.
So this is my conversion routine -
lines = string.split('"') # split on attributes
for pos, line in enumerate(lines):
if pos%2: # every 2nd line is an attribute
lines[pos] = line.replace('<', '<').replace('>', '>')
return '"'.join(lines)
Frank
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list