This lesson teaches you to
- Choose a Parser
- Analyze the Feed
- Instantiate the Parser
- Read the Feed
- Parse XML
- Skip Tags You Don't Care About
- Consume XML Data
You should also read
Try it out
NetworkUsage.zip
Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a set of rules for encoding documents in machine-readable form. XML is a popular format for sharing data on the internet. Websites that frequently update their content, such as news sites or blogs, often provide an XML feed so that external programs can keep abreast of content changes. Uploading and parsing XML data is a common task for network-connected apps. This lesson explains how to parse XML documents and use their data.
Choose a Parser
We recommend
XmlPullParser
, which is an efficient and
maintainable way to parse XML on Android. Historically Android has had two
implementations of this interface:
-
KXmlParser
viaXmlPullParserFactory.newPullParser()
. -
ExpatPullParser
, viaXml.newPullParser()
.
Either choice is fine. The
example in this section uses
ExpatPullParser
, via
Xml.newPullParser()
.
Analyze the Feed
The first step in parsing a feed is to decide which fields you're interested in. The parser extracts data for those fields and ignores the rest.
Here is an excerpt from the feed that's being parsed in the sample app. Each
post to
StackOverflow.com
appears in the
feed as an
entry
tag that contains several nested tags:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:creativeCommons="http://backend.userland.com/creativeCommonsRssModule" ..."> <title type="text">newest questions tagged android - Stack Overflow</title> ... <entry> ... </entry> <entry> <id>http://stackoverflow.com/q/9439999</id> <re:rank scheme="http://stackoverflow.com">0</re:rank> <title type="text">Where is my data file?</title> <category scheme="http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag?tagnames=android&sort=newest/tags" term="android"/> <category scheme="http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag?tagnames=android&sort=newest/tags" term="file"/> <author> <name>cliff2310</name> <uri>http://stackoverflow.com/users/1128925</uri> </author> <link rel="alternate" href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9439999/where-is-my-data-file" /> <published>2012-02-25T00:30:54Z</published> <updated>2012-02-25T00:30:54Z</updated> <summary type="html"> <p>I have an Application that requires a data file...</p> </summary> </entry> <entry> ... </entry> ... </feed>
The sample app
extracts data for the
entry
tag and its nested tags
title
,
link
, and
summary
.
Instantiate the Parser
The next step is to
instantiate a parser and kick off the parsing process. In this snippet, a parser
is initialized to not process namespaces, and to use the provided
InputStream
as its input. It starts the parsing process with a call to
nextTag()
and invokes the
readFeed()
method, which extracts and processes the data the app is
interested in:
public class StackOverflowXmlParser { // We don't use namespaces private static final String ns = null; public Listparse(InputStream in) throws XmlPullParserException, IOException { try { XmlPullParser parser = Xml.newPullParser(); parser.setFeature(XmlPullParser.FEATURE_PROCESS_NAMESPACES, false); parser.setInput(in, null); parser.nextTag(); return readFeed(parser); } finally { in.close(); } } ... }
Read the Feed
The
readFeed()
method does the actual work of processing the
feed. It looks for elements tagged "entry" as a starting point for recursively
processing the feed. If a tag isn't an
entry
tag, it skips it. Once the whole
feed has been recursively processed,
readFeed()
returns a
List
containing the entries (including nested data members) it
extracted from the feed. This
List
is then returned by the
parser.
private ListreadFeed(XmlPullParser parser) throws XmlPullParserException, IOException { List entries = new ArrayList (); parser.require(XmlPullParser.START_TAG, ns, "feed"); while (parser.next() != XmlPullParser.END_TAG) { if (parser.getEventType() != XmlPullParser.START_TAG) { continue; } String name = parser.getName(); // Starts by looking for the entry tag if (name.equals("entry")) { entries.add(readEntry(parser)); } else { skip(parser); } } return entries; }
Parse XML
The steps for parsing an XML feed are as follows:
-
As described in
Analyze the Feed
, identify the tags you want to include in your app. This
example extracts data for the
entry
tag and its nested tagstitle
,link
, andsummary
. -
Create the following methods:
-
A "read" method for each tag you're interested in. For example,
readEntry()
,readTitle()
, and so on. The parser reads tags from the input stream. When it encounters a tag namedentry
,title
,link
orsummary
, it calls the appropriate method for that tag. Otherwise, it skips the tag. -
Methods to extract data for each different type of tag and to advance the
parser to the next tag. For example:
-
For the
title
andsummary
tags, the parser callsreadText()
. This method extracts data for these tags by callingparser.getText()
. -
For the
link
tag, the parser extracts data for links by first determining if the link is the kind it's interested in. Then it usesparser.getAttributeValue()
to extract the link's value. -
For the
entry
tag, the parser callsreadEntry()
. This method parses the entry's nested tags and returns anEntry
object with the data memberstitle
,link
, andsummary
.
-
For the
-
A helper
skip()
method that's recursive. For more discussion of this topic, see Skip Tags You Don't Care About .
-
A "read" method for each tag you're interested in. For example,
This snippet shows how the parser parses entries, titles, links, and summaries.
public static class Entry { public final String title; public final String link; public final String summary; private Entry(String title, String summary, String link) { this.title = title; this.summary = summary; this.link = link; } } // Parses the contents of an entry. If it encounters a title, summary, or link tag, hands them off // to their respective "read" methods for processing. Otherwise, skips the tag. private Entry readEntry(XmlPullParser parser) throws XmlPullParserException, IOException { parser.require(XmlPullParser.START_TAG, ns, "entry"); String title = null; String summary = null; String link = null; while (parser.next() != XmlPullParser.END_TAG) { if (parser.getEventType() != XmlPullParser.START_TAG) { continue; } String name = parser.getName(); if (name.equals("title")) { title = readTitle(parser); } else if (name.equals("summary")) { summary = readSummary(parser); } else if (name.equals("link")) { link = readLink(parser); } else { skip(parser); } } return new Entry(title, summary, link); } // Processes title tags in the feed. private String readTitle(XmlPullParser parser) throws IOException, XmlPullParserException { parser.require(XmlPullParser.START_TAG, ns, "title"); String title = readText(parser); parser.require(XmlPullParser.END_TAG, ns, "title"); return title; } // Processes link tags in the feed. private String readLink(XmlPullParser parser) throws IOException, XmlPullParserException { String link = ""; parser.require(XmlPullParser.START_TAG, ns, "link"); String tag = parser.getName(); String relType = parser.getAttributeValue(null, "rel"); if (tag.equals("link")) { if (relType.equals("alternate")){ link = parser.getAttributeValue(null, "href"); parser.nextTag(); } } parser.require(XmlPullParser.END_TAG, ns, "link"); return link; } // Processes summary tags in the feed. private String readSummary(XmlPullParser parser) throws IOException, XmlPullParserException { parser.require(XmlPullParser.START_TAG, ns, "summary"); String summary = readText(parser); parser.require(XmlPullParser.END_TAG, ns, "summary"); return summary; } // For the tags title and summary, extracts their text values. private String readText(XmlPullParser parser) throws IOException, XmlPullParserException { String result = ""; if (parser.next() == XmlPullParser.TEXT) { result = parser.getText(); parser.nextTag(); } return result; } ... }
Skip Tags You Don't Care About
One of the steps in the XML parsing described above is for the parser to skip tags it's not interested in. Here is the parser's
skip()
method:
private void skip(XmlPullParser parser) throws XmlPullParserException, IOException { if (parser.getEventType() != XmlPullParser.START_TAG) { throw new IllegalStateException(); } int depth = 1; while (depth != 0) { switch (parser.next()) { case XmlPullParser.END_TAG: depth--; break; case XmlPullParser.START_TAG: depth++; break; } } }
This is how it works:
-
It throws an exception if the current event isn't a
START_TAG
. -
It consumes the
START_TAG
, and all events up to and including the matchingEND_TAG
. -
To make sure that it stops at the correct
END_TAG
and not at the first tag it encounters after the originalSTART_TAG
, it keeps track of the nesting depth.
Thus if the current element has nested elements, the value of
depth
won't be 0 until the parser has consumed all events between
the original
START_TAG
and its matching
END_TAG
. For
example, consider how the parser skips the
<author>
element,
which has 2 nested elements,
<name>
and
<uri>
:
-
The first time through the
while
loop, the next tag the parser encounters after<author>
is theSTART_TAG
for<name>
. The value fordepth
is incremented to 2. -
The second time through the
while
loop, the next tag the parser encounters is theEND_TAG
</name>
. The value fordepth
is decremented to 1. -
The third time through the
while
loop, the next tag the parser encounters is theSTART_TAG
<uri>
. The value fordepth
is incremented to 2. -
The fourth time through the
while
loop, the next tag the parser encounters is theEND_TAG
</uri>
. The value fordepth
is decremented to 1. -
The fifth time and final time through the
while
loop, the next tag the parser encounters is theEND_TAG
</author>
. The value fordepth
is decremented to 0, indicating that the<author>
element has been successfully skipped.
Consume XML Data
The example application fetches and parses the XML feed within an
AsyncTask
. This takes the processing off the main UI thread. When
processing is complete, the app updates the UI in the main activity
(
NetworkActivity
).
In the excerpt shown below, the
loadPage()
method does the
following:
- Initializes a string variable with the URL for the XML feed.
-
If the user's settings and the network connection allow it, invokes
new DownloadXmlTask().execute(url)
. This instantiates a newDownloadXmlTask
object (AsyncTask
subclass) and runs itsexecute()
method, which downloads and parses the feed and returns a string result to be displayed in the UI.
public class NetworkActivity extends Activity { public static final String WIFI = "Wi-Fi"; public static final String ANY = "Any"; private static final String URL = "http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag?tagnames=android&sort;=newest"; // Whether there is a Wi-Fi connection. private static boolean wifiConnected = false; // Whether there is a mobile connection. private static boolean mobileConnected = false; // Whether the display should be refreshed. public static boolean refreshDisplay = true; public static String sPref = null; ... // Uses AsyncTask to download the XML feed from stackoverflow.com. public void loadPage() { if((sPref.equals(ANY)) && (wifiConnected || mobileConnected)) { new DownloadXmlTask().execute(URL); } else if ((sPref.equals(WIFI)) && (wifiConnected)) { new DownloadXmlTask().execute(URL); } else { // show error } }
The
AsyncTask
subclass shown below,
DownloadXmlTask
, implements the following
AsyncTask
methods:
-
doInBackground()
executes the methodloadXmlFromNetwork()
. It passes the feed URL as a parameter. The methodloadXmlFromNetwork()
fetches and processes the feed. When it finishes, it passes back a result string. -
onPostExecute()
takes the returned string and displays it in the UI.
// Implementation of AsyncTask used to download XML feed from stackoverflow.com. private class DownloadXmlTask extends AsyncTask<String, Void, String> { @Override protected String doInBackground(String... urls) { try { return loadXmlFromNetwork(urls[0]); } catch (IOException e) { return getResources().getString(R.string.connection_error); } catch (XmlPullParserException e) { return getResources().getString(R.string.xml_error); } } @Override protected void onPostExecute(String result) { setContentView(R.layout.main); // Displays the HTML string in the UI via a WebView WebView myWebView = (WebView) findViewById(R.id.webview); myWebView.loadData(result, "text/html", null); } }
Below is the method
loadXmlFromNetwork()
that is invoked from
DownloadXmlTask
. It does the following:
-
Instantiates a
StackOverflowXmlParser
. It also creates variables for aList
ofEntry
objects (entries
), andtitle
,url
, andsummary
, to hold the values extracted from the XML feed for those fields. -
Calls
downloadUrl()
, which fetches the feed and returns it as anInputStream
. -
Uses
StackOverflowXmlParser
to parse theInputStream
.StackOverflowXmlParser
populates aList
ofentries
with data from the feed. -
Processes the
entries
List
, and combines the feed data with HTML markup. -
Returns an HTML string that is displayed in the main activity
UI by the
AsyncTask
methodonPostExecute()
.
// Uploads XML from stackoverflow.com, parses it, and combines it with // HTML markup. Returns HTML string. private String loadXmlFromNetwork(String urlString) throws XmlPullParserException, IOException { InputStream stream = null; // Instantiate the parser StackOverflowXmlParser stackOverflowXmlParser = new StackOverflowXmlParser(); List<Entry> entries = null; String title = null; String url = null; String summary = null; Calendar rightNow = Calendar.getInstance(); DateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("MMM dd h:mmaa"); // Checks whether the user set the preference to include summary text SharedPreferences sharedPrefs = PreferenceManager.getDefaultSharedPreferences(this); boolean pref = sharedPrefs.getBoolean("summaryPref", false); StringBuilder htmlString = new StringBuilder(); htmlString.append("<h3>" + getResources().getString(R.string.page_title) + "</h3>"); htmlString.append("<em>" + getResources().getString(R.string.updated) + " " + formatter.format(rightNow.getTime()) + "</em>"); try { stream = downloadUrl(urlString); entries = stackOverflowXmlParser.parse(stream); // Makes sure that the InputStream is closed after the app is // finished using it. } finally { if (stream != null) { stream.close(); } } // StackOverflowXmlParser returns a List (called "entries") of Entry objects. // Each Entry object represents a single post in the XML feed. // This section processes the entries list to combine each entry with HTML markup. // Each entry is displayed in the UI as a link that optionally includes // a text summary. for (Entry entry : entries) { htmlString.append("<p><a href='"); htmlString.append(entry.link); htmlString.append("'>" + entry.title + "</a></p>"); // If the user set the preference to include summary text, // adds it to the display. if (pref) { htmlString.append(entry.summary); } } return htmlString.toString(); } // Given a string representation of a URL, sets up a connection and gets // an input stream. private InputStream downloadUrl(String urlString) throws IOException { URL url = new URL(urlString); HttpURLConnection conn = (HttpURLConnection) url.openConnection(); conn.setReadTimeout(10000 /* milliseconds */); conn.setConnectTimeout(15000 /* milliseconds */); conn.setRequestMethod("GET"); conn.setDoInput(true); // Starts the query conn.connect(); return conn.getInputStream(); }