Elementflow is a Python library for generating XML as a stream. Some existing XML producing libraries (like ElementTree, lxml) build a whole XML tree in memory and then serialize it. It might be inefficient for moderately large XML payloads (think of a content-oriented Web service producing lots of XML data output). Python's built-in xml.sax.saxutils.XMLGenerator is very low-level and requires closing elements by hand.
Also, most XML libraries, to be honest, suck when dealing with namespaces.
Basic XML generation:
import elementflow
file = open('text.xml', 'w') # can be any object with .write() method
with elementflow.xml(file, u'root') as xml:
xml.element(u'item', attrs={u'key': u'value'}, text=u'text')
with xml.container(u'container', attrs={u'key': u'value'}):
xml.text(u'text')
xml.element(u'subelement', text=u'subelement text')
Using with
is required to properly close container elements. The library
expects unicode strings on input and produces utf-8 encoded output (you may
omit those "u"s for pure ASCII strings if you want to, Python will convert
them automatically).
XML with namespaces:
with elementflow.xml(file, 'root', namespaces={'': 'urn:n', 'n1': 'urn:n1'}) as xml:
xml.element('item')
with xml.container('container', namespaces={'n2': 'urn:n2'):
xml.element('n1:subelement')
xml.element('n2:subelement')
Elements with namespaces are defined using prefixes. You can define namespaces at the root level and for any container. The library will check for namespace prefixes that wasn't defined beforehand and will raise ValueError in that case.
Pretty-printing is also supported:
with elementflow.xml(file, 'root', indent=True):
# ...
In some cases it's more convenient to have such XML producer as a Python iterator. This is easily done by wrapping XML generation code into a generator function:
def g():
xml = elementflow.xml(elementflow.Queue(), 'root')
with xml:
for item in collection:
xml.element(...)
yield xml.file.pop()
yield xml.file.pop()
elementflow.Queue()
is a temporary buffer that accepts data from an XML
generator and is cleared upon calling .pop() on it. You also might want to
yield data from the iterator only when this buffer reaches a certain size:
if len(xml.file) > BUFSIZE:
yield xml.file.pop()