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Dieses Dokument verwendet PHP-Handbuch für chinesische Websites Freigeben
(PHP 5, PHP 7)
$name
[, string $value
[, string $namespaceURI
]] )$name
)$name
)$namespaceURI
, string $localName
)$namespaceURI
, string $localName
)$name
)$namespaceURI
, string $localName
)$name
)$namespaceURI
, string $localName
)$name
)$oldnode
)$namespaceURI
, string $localName
)$name
, string $value
)$attr
)$attr
)$namespaceURI
, string $qualifiedName
, string $value
)$name
, bool $isId
)$attr
, bool $isId
)$namespaceURI
, string $localName
, bool $isId
)$newnode
)$exclusive
[, bool $with_comments
[, array $xpath
[, array $ns_prefixes
]]]] )$uri
[, bool $exclusive
[, bool $with_comments
[, array $xpath
[, array $ns_prefixes
]]]] )$deep
] )$newnode
[, DOMNode $refnode
] )$namespaceURI
)$node
)$feature
, string $version
)$prefix
)$namespaceURI
)$oldnode
)$newnode
, DOMNode $oldnode
)Not implemented yet, always return NULL
The element name
Note:
The DOM extension uses UTF-8 encoding. Use utf8_encode() and utf8_decode() to work with texts in ISO-8859-1 encoding or Iconv for other encodings.
[#1] johnny [2014-03-03 15:48:39]
Get html of a node
$html .= $dom->saveHTML($node);
[#2] Janne Enberg [2013-11-07 11:02:33]
This page doesn't list the inherited properties from DOMNode, e.g. the quite important textContent property. It would be immensely helpful if it would list those as well.
[#3] felix dot klee at inka dot de [2013-02-26 15:23:08]
How to rename an element and preserve attributes:
<?php
// Changes the name of element $element to $newName.
function renameElement($element, $newName) {
$newElement = $element->ownerDocument->createElement($newName);
$parentElement = $element->parentNode;
$parentElement->insertBefore($newElement, $element);
$childNodes = $element->childNodes;
while ($childNodes->length > 0) {
$newElement->appendChild($childNodes->item(0));
}
$attributes = $element->attributes;
while ($attributes->length > 0) {
$attribute = $attributes->item(0);
if (!is_null($attribute->namespaceURI)) {
$newElement->setAttributeNS('http://www.w3.org/2000/xmlns/',
'xmlns:'.$attribute->prefix,
$attribute->namespaceURI);
}
$newElement->setAttributeNode($attribute);
}
$parentElement->removeChild($element);
}
function prettyPrint($d) {
$d->formatOutput = true;
echo '<pre>'.htmlspecialchars($d->saveXML()).'</pre>';
}
$d = new DOMDocument( '1.0' );
$d->loadXML('<?xml version="1.0"?>
<library>
<data a:foo="1" x="bar" xmlns:a="http://example.com/a">
<invite>
<username>jmansa</username>
<userid>1</userid>
</invite>
<update>1</update>
</data>
</library>');
$xpath = new DOMXPath($d);
$elements = $xpath->query('/library/data');
if ($elements->length == 1) {
$element = $elements->item(0);
renameElement($element, 'invites');
}
prettyPrint($d);
?>
[#4] loopduplicate at burningtoken dot com [2011-04-22 02:34:05]
This works perfect for me as well:
<?php $xml = $domElement->ownerDocument->saveXML($domElement); ?>
[#5] Anonymous [2010-12-24 08:22:23]
you can use DOMNode::nodeValue
DOMElement inherits this public property.
$elem->nodeValue
[#6] dpetroff ( at ) gmail.com [2010-12-04 23:24:44]
Hi!
Combining all th comments, the easiest way to get inner HTML of the node is to use this function:
<?php
function get_inner_html( $node ) {
$innerHTML= '';
$children = $node->childNodes;
foreach ($children as $child) {
$innerHTML .= $child->ownerDocument->saveXML( $child );
}
return $innerHTML;
}
?>
[#7] nawaman at gmail dot com [2009-09-03 20:08:11]
The following code shows can text-only content be extracted from a document.
<?php
function getTextFromNode($Node, $Text = "") {
if ($Node->tagName == null)
return $Text.$Node->textContent;
$Node = $Node->firstChild;
if ($Node != null)
$Text = getTextFromNode($Node, $Text);
while($Node->nextSibling != null) {
$Text = getTextFromNode($Node->nextSibling, $Text);
$Node = $Node->nextSibling;
}
return $Text;
}
function getTextFromDocument($DOMDoc) {
return getTextFromNode($DOMDoc->documentElement);
}
$Doc = new DOMDocument();
$Doc->loadHTMLFile("Test.html");
echo getTextFromDocument($Doc)."\n";
?>
[#8] Daniel Morlock [2009-05-07 09:22:28]
It would be nice to have a function which converts a document/node/element into a string.
Anyways, I use the following code snippet to get the innerHTML value of a DOMNode:
<?php
function getInnerHTML($Node)
{
$Body = $Node->ownerDocument->documentElement->firstChild->firstChild;
$Document = new DOMDocument();
$Document->appendChild($Document->importNode($Body,true));
return $Document->saveHTML();
}
?>
[#9] patrick smith [2008-11-04 08:14:12]
Although it may be preferable to use the dom to manipulate elements, sometimes it's useful to actually get the innerHTML from a document element (e.g. to load into a client-side editor).
To get the innerHTML of a specific element ($elem_id) in a specific html file ($filepath):
<?php
$innerHTML = '';
$doc = new DOMDocument();
$doc->loadHTMLFile($filepath);
$elem = $doc->getElementById($elem_id);
// loop through all childNodes, getting html
$children = $elem->childNodes;
foreach ($children as $child) {
$tmp_doc = new DOMDocument();
$tmp_doc->appendChild($tmp_doc->importNode($child,true));
$innerHTML .= $tmp_doc->saveHTML();
}
?>
[#10] Pinochet [2008-10-25 05:33:34]
Hi to get the value of DOMElement just get the nodeValue public parameter (it is inherited from DOMNode):
<?php
echo $domElement->nodeValue;
?>
Everything is obvious if you now about this thing ;-)
[#11] j DOT wagner ( AT ) medieninnovation.com [2008-10-08 09:11:51]
Caveat!
It took me almost an hour to figure this out, so I hope it saves at least one of you some time.
If you want to debug your DOM tree and try var_dump() or similar you will be fooled into thinking the DOMElement that you are looking at is empty, because var_dump() says: object(DOMElement)#1 (0) { }
After much debugging I found out that all DOM objects are invisible to var_dump() and print_r(), my guess is because they are C objects and not PHP objects. So I tried saveXML(), which works fine on DOMDocument, but is not implemented on DOMElement.
The solution is simple (if you know it):
$xml = $domElement->ownerDocument->saveXML($domElement);
This will give you an XML representation of $domElement.
[#12] Severin [2008-09-14 06:18:21]
I wanted to find similar Elements - thats why I built an Xpath-String like this - maybe somebody needs it... its not very pretty - but neither is domdocument :)
<?php
$dom->load($xmlFile))
$xpathQuery = '/
?>
[#1] Fabian dot Blech at gmx dot de [2010-07-22 08:30:57]
Remember, Dom-Nodes mustn't start with a number:
allowed:
<t12345t4>Value</t12345t4>
Not allowed:
<12345t4>VALUE</12345t4>
[#2] troelskn at gmail dot com [2008-06-03 07:46:22]
Note that this function is buggy. You have to manually escape the $value argument with htmlspecialchars.
See: http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=31191
[#3] adar at darkpoetry dot de [2007-05-07 13:27:09]
If you like to view an element simply do:
<?php
echo htmlentities($element->C14N());
?>
Undocumented but found ;)