How can I check for the existence of an element with Groovy's XmlSlurper?

Josh Brown picture Josh Brown · Jan 26, 2009 · Viewed 31.9k times · Source

I'm trying to determine whether an XML element exists with Groovy's XmlSlurper. Is there a way to do this? For example:

<foo>
  <bar/>
</foo>

How do I check whether the bar element exists?

Answer

Ted Naleid picture Ted Naleid · Jan 27, 2009

The API is a little screwy, but I think that there are a couple of better ways to look for children. What you're getting when you ask for "xml.bar" (which exists) or "xml.quux" which doesn't, is a groovy.util.slurpersupport.NodeChildren object. Basically a collection of nodes meeting the criteria that you asked for.

One way to see if a particular node exists is to check for the size of the NodeChildren is the expected size:

def text = "<foo><bar/></foo>"
def xml = new XmlSlurper().parseText(text)
assert 1 == xml.bar.size()
assert 0 == xml.quux.size()

Another way would be to use the find method and see if the name of the node that gets returned (unfortunately something is always returned), is the one you were expecting:

def text = "<foo><bar/></foo>"
def xml = new XmlSlurper().parseText(text)
assert ("bar" == xml.children().find( {it.name() == "bar"})?.name())
assert ("quux" != xml.children().find( {it.name() == "quux"})?.name())