Wayne, First, you should uncheck the Detailed Response option, it's not necessary.
It's causing you to have an XML document inside of another XML document, which complicates processing. Once you do that, @DOM the result. The colons separate the namespace from the node name. You can use "*:" to mean "any namespace". This is usually required because TS doesn't have full namespace support. This tag: <@ELEMENTVALUE dom xpath='//*:countryName'> Should return the name of the country (untested). You can read that xpath as: // = anywhere in the document *: = any namespace in the document countryName = an element named 'countryName' Note that if there were more than one countryName node, you might have to use a more specific xpath. Robert -----Original Message----- From: Wayne Irvine [mailto:wa...@byteserve.com.au] Sent: Tuesday, March 11, 2014 12:10 AM To: TeraScript-Talk@terascript.com Subject: TeraScript-Talk: Trying to work out what country I'm in. Another XML question. I'm writing a small taf to determine the country of origin of the browser by IP address. I'm using the hostip.info API. http://bigreviewtv.byteserve.com.au/ipcountry.taf This returns httpData: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1" ?> <!DOCTYPE DETAILED_RESPONSE_SYSTEM > <HTTP_RESPONSE Version="0x02000002"> <STATUS> <CODE>200</CODE> <TEXT>OK</TEXT> </STATUS> <HEADER NAME="Date"><![CDATA[Tue, 11 Mar 2014 04:08:31 GMT]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="Server"><![CDATA[LiteSpeed]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="Connection"><![CDATA[close]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="X-Powered-By"><![CDATA[PHP/5.4.16]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="Content-Type"><![CDATA[text/xml; charset=iso-8859-1]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="Expires"><![CDATA[Wed, 12 Mar 2014 04:08:31 GMT]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="Last-Modified"><![CDATA[Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="Cache-Control"><![CDATA[public, max-age=86400]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="Pragma"><![CDATA[!invalid]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="Access-Control-Allow-Origin"><![CDATA[*]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="Content-Length"><![CDATA[921]]></HEADER> <HEADER NAME="Vary"><![CDATA[User-Agent]]></HEADER> <BODY><![CDATA[<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1" ?> <HostipLookupResultSet version="1.0.1" xmlns:gml="http://www.opengis.net/gml" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="http://www.hostip.info/api/hostip-1.0.1.xsd"> <gml:description>This is the Hostip Lookup Service</gml:description> <gml:name>hostip</gml:name> <gml:boundedBy> <gml:Null>inapplicable</gml:Null> </gml:boundedBy> <gml:featureMember> <Hostip> <ip>203.24.144.202</ip> <gml:name>Sydney</gml:name> <countryName>AUSTRALIA</countryName> <countryAbbrev>AU</countryAbbrev> <!-- Co-ordinates are available as lng,lat --> <ipLocation> <gml:pointProperty> <gml:Point srsName="http://www.opengis.net/gml/srs/epsg.xml#4326"> <gml:coordinates>151,-34</gml:coordinates> </gml:Point> </gml:pointProperty> </ipLocation> </Hostip> </gml:featureMember> </HostipLookupResultSet> ]]></BODY> </HTTP_RESPONSE> I am stuck defining the @ELEMENTVALUE string to pull out the value of country. I think the colons on gml data is messing things up. Wayne Irvine w: http://www.byteserve.com.au/ p: +61 2 9960 6099 m: 0409 960 609 ---------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from this list, please send an email to lists...@terascript.com with "unsubscribe terascript-talk" in the body. ---------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from this list, please send an email to lists...@terascript.com with "unsubscribe terascript-talk" in the body.