Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

I have some parsed Nokogiri::XML::Document objects that I want to print as JSON.

I can go the route of making it a string, parsing it into a hash, with active-record or Crack and then Hash.to_json; but that is both ugly and depending on way too manay libraries.

Is there not a simpler way?

As per request in the comment, for example the XML <root a="b"><a>b</a></root> could be represented as JSON:

<root a="b"><a>b</a></root> #=> {"root":{"a":"b"}}
<root foo="bar"><a>b</a></root> #=> {"root":{"a":"b","foo":"bar"}}

That is what I get with Crack now too. And, sure, collisions between entities and child-tags are a potential problem, but I build most of the XML myself, so it is easiest for me to avoid these collisions alltogether :)

share|improve this question
What is the "correct"/desired JSON representation for <root a="b"><a>b</a></root>? – Phrogz Jun 27 '11 at 15:29
It does not really matter. I will update the question to explain that. – berkes Jun 27 '11 at 15:38

2 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

Here's one way to do it. As noted by my comment, the 'right' answer depends on what your output should be. There is no canonical representation of XML nodes in JSON, and hence no such capability is built into the libraries involved:

require 'nokogiri'
require 'json'
class Nokogiri::XML::Node
  def to_json(*a)
    {"$name"=>name}.tap do |h|
      kids = children.to_a
      h.merge!(attributes)
      h.merge!("$text"=>text) unless text.empty?
      h.merge!("$kids"=>kids) unless kids.empty?
    end.to_json(*a)
  end
end
class Nokogiri::XML::Document
  def to_json(*a); root.to_json(*a); end
end
class Nokogiri::XML::Text
  def to_json(*a); text.to_json(*a); end
end
class Nokogiri::XML::Attr
  def to_json(*a); value.to_json(*a); end
end

xml = Nokogiri::XML '<root a="b" xmlns:z="zzz">
  <z:a>Hello <b z:x="y">World</b>!</z:a>
</root>'
puts xml.to_json
{
  "$name":"root",
  "a":"b",
  "$text":"Hello World!",
  "$kids":[
    {
      "$name":"a",
      "$text":"Hello World!",
      "$kids":[
        "Hello ",
        {
          "$name":"b",
          "x":"y",
          "$text":"World",
          "$kids":[
            "World"
          ]
        },
        "!"
      ]
    }
  ]
}

Note that the above completely ignores namespaces, which may or may not be what you want.


Converting to JsonML

Here's another alternative that converts to JsonML. While this is a lossy conversion (it does not support comment nodes, DTDs, or namespace URLs) and the format is a little bit "goofy" by design (the first child element is at [1] or [2] depending on whether or not attributes are present), it does indicate namespace prefixes for elements and attributes:

require 'nokogiri'
require 'json'
class Nokogiri::XML::Node
  def namespaced_name
    "#{namespace && "#{namespace.prefix}:"}#{name}"
  end
end
class Nokogiri::XML::Element
  def to_json(*a)
    [namespaced_name].tap do |parts|
      unless attributes.empty?
        parts << Hash[ attribute_nodes.map{ |a| [a.namespaced_name,a.value] } ]
      end
      parts.concat(children.select{|n| n.text? ? (n.text=~/\S/) : n.element? })
    end.to_json(*a)
  end
end
class Nokogiri::XML::Document
  def to_json(*a); root.to_json(*a); end
end
class Nokogiri::XML::Text
  def to_json(*a); text.to_json(*a); end
end
class Nokogiri::XML::Attr
  def to_json(*a); value.to_json(*a); end
end

xml = Nokogiri::XML '<root a="b" xmlns:z="zzz">
  <z:a>Hello <b z:x="y">World</b>!</z:a>
</root>'
puts xml.to_json
#=> ["root",{"a":"b"},["z:a","Hello ",["b",{"z:x":"y"},"World"],"!"]]
share|improve this answer
Added JsonML conversion. – Phrogz May 8 '12 at 19:50

This works for me:

Hash.from_xml(@nokogiri_object.to_xml).to_json
share|improve this answer
Using that example, this is what is produced {"root":{"foo":"bar","a":"b"}} – Carson Reinke Apr 23 at 13:54

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.