The Java Developers Almanac 1.4


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Home > List of Packages > org.w3c.dom  [30 examples] > Getting Nodes  [5 examples]

e1073. Getting the Root Element in a DOM Document

The root element of an XML file is not the same as the root element of a DOM document. In particular, the XML root element is a child of the DOM's root element. The reason is that the XML root element can have siblings, such as a DocumentType or a Comment node. The XML root node can be found by looking for an element node among the children of the DOM's root node. However, there is a convenient method, Document.getDocumentElement(), that does the same thing. This example demonstrates both methods:
    // Create a document; this method is implemented in
    // e510 The Quintessential Program to Create a DOM Document from an XML File
    Document doc = parseXmlFile("infilename.xml", false);
    
    Element root = null;
    
    // Get the XML root node by examining the children nodes
    NodeList list = doc.getChildNodes();
    for (int i=0; i<list.getLength(); i++) {
        if (list.item(i) instanceof Element) {
            root = (Element)list.item(i);
            break;
        }
    }
    
    // Get the XML root node the easy way
    root = doc.getDocumentElement();

 Related Examples
e527. Getting a Node Relative to Another Node in a DOM Document
e528. Getting the Notations in a DOM Document
e529. Getting the Declared Entities in a DOM Document
e530. Getting the Value of an Entity Reference in a DOM Document

See also: Adding and Removing Nodes    Element Attributes    Elements    Text Nodes    XPath   


© 2002 Addison-Wesley.