This is probably a mind numbingly brain dead question.. But how do I
generate the following:
<p>Current date:<br/>2000-01-01</p>
..using ElementTree? The <p> element kind of needs two text blocks,
as far as I can tell?
--
Kind regards,
Jan Danielsson
Use the .tail attribute on the br element:
In [1]: from xml.etree import ElementTree as ET
In [4]: p = ET.Element('p')
In [5]: p.text = 'Current date:'
In [6]: br = ET.SubElement(p, 'br')
In [7]: br.tail = '2000-01-01'
In [8]: ET.dump(p)
<p>Current date:<br />2000-01-01</p>
--
Robert Kern
"I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma
that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it had
an underlying truth."
-- Umberto Eco
That did the trick. Thanks!
> This is probably a mind numbingly brain dead question.. But how do I
> generate the following:
>
> <p>Current date:<br/>2000-01-01</p>
>
> ..using ElementTree? The <p> element kind of needs two text blocks,
> as far as I can tell?
No, the date string goes into br's tail:
py> import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET
py> p=ET.fromstring
py> p=ET.fromstring("<p>Current date:<br/>2000-01-01</p>")
py> p
<Element p at b6a850>
py> p.text
'Current date:'
py> p.tail
py> p[0]
<Element br at b6aa58>
py> p[0].text
py> p[0].tail
'2000-01-01'
See <http://effbot.org/zone/element-infoset.htm> about infosets and the
"mixed content" simplified model.
--
Gabriel Genellina