Operators and Special Characters
XPath expressions are constructed using the operators and special characters shown in the following table.
|
Child operator; selects immediate children of the left-side collection. When this path operator appears at the start of the pattern, it indicates that children should be selected from the root node. |
|
Recursive descent; searches for the specified element at any depth. When this path operator appears at the start of the pattern, it indicates recursive descent from the root node. |
|
Indicates the current context. |
|
The parent of the current context node. |
|
Wildcard; selects all elements regardless of the element name. |
|
Attribute; prefix for an attribute name. |
|
Attribute wildcard; selects all attributes regardless of name. |
|
Namespace separator; separates the namespace prefix from the element or attribute name. |
|
Groups operations to explicitly establish precedence. |
|
Applies a filter pattern. |
|
Subscript operator; used for indexing within a collection. |
|
Performs addition. |
|
Performs subtraction. |
|
Performs floating-point division according to IEEE 754. |
|
Performs multiplication. |
|
Returns the remainder from a truncating division. |
This table does not include Boolean and set operators, which are listed in Boolean, Comparison, and Set Expressions or Set Operations.
Precedence order (from highest precedence to lowest) is defined as indicated in the following table.
Precedence | Character | Purpose |
---|---|---|
1 |
|
Grouping |
2 |
|
Filters |
3 |
|
Path operations |
The group operator, ()
, is applicable only at the top-level path expression. For example, (//author/degree | //author/name)
is a valid grouping operation, but //author/(degree | name)
is not.
The filter pattern operators ([]
) have a higher precedence than the path operators (/
and //
). For example, the expression //comment()[3]
selects all comments with an index equal to 3 relative to the comment's parent anywhere in the document. This differs from the expression (//comment())[3]
, which selects the third comment from the set of all comments relative to the parent. The first expression can return more than one comment, while the latter can return only one comment.
These operators and special characters are described in detail throughout this reference.
Path Operators
The collection of elements of a certain type can be determined using the path operators (/
and //
). These operators take as their arguments a "left side" collection on which to perform the selection and a "right side" collection indicating which elements to select. The child operator (/
) selects from immediate children of the left-side collection, while the descendant operator (//
) selects from arbitrary descendants of the left-side collection. In effect, //
can be considered a substitute for one or more levels of hierarchy.
Note that the path operators change the context as the query is performed. By stringing path operators together, users can traverse the document tree.
Examples
Expression | Refers to |
---|---|
|
All |
|
All |
|
All |
|
All |
|
All |
Wildcard Character
An element can be referenced without using its name by substituting the wildcard (*
) collection. The *
collection refers to all elements that are children of the current context, regardless of the tag name.
Examples
Expression | Refers to |
---|---|
|
All element children of |
|
All |
|
All grandchildren elements of the current context. |
|
The |
|
All elements from the |
Note that the pattern *:book
is not supported.
Attributes
XPath denotes attribute names with the @
symbol. Attributes and child elements are treated impartially, and capabilities are equivalent between the two types wherever possible.
Note |
---|
Attributes cannot contain child elements, so syntax errors occur when path operators are applied to attributes. In addition, you cannot apply an index to attributes because, by definition, no order is defined for attributes. |
Examples
Expression | Refers to |
---|---|
|
The |
|
The |
|
The |
Note that the following example is not valid, because an attribute cannot have any children.
price/@exchange/total
Finding Multiple Attributes
All attributes of an element can be returned using @*
. This is potentially useful for applications that treat attributes as fields in a record.
Examples
Expression | Refers to |
---|---|
|
All attributes of the current context node. |
|
All attributes from the |
Note that the pattern @*:title
is not supported.
See Also
Reference
Concepts
Set Operations
Sample XML File for XPath Syntax (inventory.xml)