On 1/28/11, Stefan Behnel <stefan...@behnel.de> wrote: > Alex Hall, 28.01.2011 14:25: >> On 1/28/11, Stefan Behnel wrote: >>> Alex Hall, 28.01.2011 14:09: >>>> On 1/28/11, Stefan Behnel wrote: >>>>> Alex Hall, 27.01.2011 23:23: >>>>>> self.id=root.find("id").text >>>>>> self.name=root.find("name).text >>>>> >>>>> There's a findtext() method on Elements for this purpose. >>>>> >>>> I thought that was used to search for the text of an element? I want >>>> to get the text, whatever it may be, not search for it. Or am I >>>> misunderstanding the function? >>> >>> What do you think 'find()' does? Use the Source, Luke. ;) >> Here is what I am thinking: >> element.find("tagname"): returns an element with the tag name, the >> first element with that name to be found. You can then use the usual >> properties and methods on this element. >> element.findtext("text"): returns the first element found that has a >> value of "text". Take this example: >> <root> >> <a>some text</a> >> </root> >> Now you get the root, then call: >> root.find("a") #returns the "a" element >> root.findtext("some text") #also returns the "a" element > > Ah, ok, then you should read the documentation: > > http://docs.python.org/library/xml.etree.elementtree.html#xml.etree.ElementTree.Element.findtext I had been reading documentation, but not that page. Thanks. > > findtext() does what find() does, except that it returns the text value of > the Element instead of the Element itself. > > It basically spells out to "find text of element matching(path)". Well, this will make life easier... > > Stefan > > _______________________________________________ > Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org > To unsubscribe or change subscription options: > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor >
-- Have a great day, Alex (msg sent from GMail website) mehg...@gmail.com; http://www.facebook.com/mehgcap _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor