XPath SelectNodes in .NET

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Solution 1

Simply: a leading // means "at any level" in the same document as the selected node.

From the spec:

  • //para selects all the para descendants of the document root and thus selects all para elements in the same document as the context node
  • .//para selects the para element descendants of the context node

Solution 2

Specifying .//C will achieve what you want, otherwise, the XPath starts from the document root rather than the current node.

The confusion is in the definition of // from the XPath standard as follows:

// is short for /descendant-or-self::node()/. For example, //para is short for /descendant-or-self::node()/child::para and so will select any para element in the document (even a para element that is a document element will be selected by //para since the document element node is a child of the root node); div//para is short for div/descendant-or-self::node()/child::para and so will select all para descendants of div children.

Because // is short for /descendant-or-self::node()/ it starts at the document level unless you specify a node at the start.

Solution 3

//C is all C nodes in the entire document

/E//C would be only C nodes under E

/C would be only the root C node

See the xpath syntax reference

Solution 4

In the XPATH Specification you will find under 2.5 the following statement:

//para selects all the para descendants of the document root and thus selects all para elements in the same document as the context node

i.e. the behaviour you observe is valid. You should do something like "/E//C"

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Gordon Thompson
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Gordon Thompson

I work in many languages such as C/Java/C#/Perl currently cutting my teeth on ASP.NET but I'm sure that'll change in 10 minutes time :) Edit : Have discovered JQuery and realised that I can do stuff in a day using JQuery and WebServices that took me a week to do in ASP.NET. Very happy :)

Updated on July 09, 2022

Comments

  • Gordon Thompson
    Gordon Thompson almost 2 years
    <Document>
      <A> 
        <B> 
          <C></C>
        </B>
      </A>
      <E>
       <F>
        <C></C>
       </F>
       <G>
        <C></C>
      </G>
     </E>
    </Document>
    

    If i load the above XML into an XmlDocument and do a SelectSingleNode on A using the XPath query //C

    XmlNode oNode = oDocument.SelectSingleNode("E");
    XmlNodeList oNodeList = oNode.SelectNodes("//C");
    

    why does it return nodes from Under B when what I would expect to happen would that it only return nodes from under E

    Make sense?

    Edit : How would i make it only return from that node onwards?