Ack. Of course I meant the subject to be "XML namespace as an attribute". I happen to be using lxml.etree. (Long day, I guess...)
S On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 4:25 PM Skip Montanaro <skip.montan...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Much of XML makes no sense to me. Namespaces are one thing. If I'm > parsing a document where namespaces are defined at the top level, then > adding namespaces=root.nsmap works when calling the xpath method. I > more-or-less get that. > > What I don't understand is how I'm supposed to search for a tag when > the namespace appears to be defined as an attribute of the tag itself. > I have some SOAP XML I'm trying to parse. It looks roughly like this: > > <s: Envelope xmlns:a="..." xmlns:s="..."> > <s:Header> > ... > </s:Header> > <s:Body> > <Tag xmlns="http://some/new/path"> > ... > </Tag> > </s:Body> > > If the document is "doc", I can find the body like so: > > body = doc.xpath(".//Body" namespaces=doc.nsmap) > > I don't understand how to find Tag, however. When I iterate over the > body's children, printing them out, I see that Tag's name is actually: > > {http://some/new/path}Tag > > yet that namespace is unknown to me until I find Tag. It seems I'm > stuck in a chicken-and-egg situation. Without knowing that > http://some/new/path namespace, is there a way to cleanly find all > instances of Tag? > > Thx, > > Skip -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list