DOMDocument::createElement
(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
DOMDocument::createElement — 新しい要素ノードを作成する
説明
この関数は、DOMElement クラスの新しいインスタンスを作成します。 このノードは、( DOMNode::appendChild() などで) 挿入されない限り、ドキュメント内にあらわれません。
パラメータ
localName
-
要素のタグ名。
value
-
要素の値。デフォルトでは、空の要素が作成されます。 その後に DOMElement::$nodeValue で値を設定することも可能です。
指定した値はすべてそのまま用いますが、エンティティ参照 < と > だけはエスケープします。& は手動でエスケープする必要があることに注意しましょう。 そうしないと、エンティティ参照の開始とみなされてしまいます。また、" はエスケープされません。
戻り値
新しい DOMElement クラスの新しいインスタンス、
あるいはエラーが発生した場合は false
を返します。
例
例1 新しい要素を作成し、ルートとして挿入する
<?php
$dom = new DOMDocument('1.0', 'utf-8');
$element = $dom->createElement('test', 'This is the root element!');
// 新しい要素をルート (ドキュメントの子要素) として挿入する
$dom->appendChild($element);
echo $dom->saveXML();
?>
上の例の出力は以下となります。
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <test>This is the root element!</test>
例2 & をエスケープせずに value
に渡す例
<?php
$dom = new DOMDocument('1.0', 'utf-8');
$element = $dom->createElement('foo', 'me & you');
$dom->appendChild($element);
echo $dom->saveXML();
?>
上の例の出力は、 たとえば以下のようになります。
Warning: DOMDocument::createElement(): unterminated entity reference you in /in/BjTCg on line 4 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <foo/>
注意
注意:
value
は エスケープされません。 エスケープに対応した テキストノードを作るには DOMDocument::createTextNode() を使います。
参考
- DOMNode::appendChild() - 子要素群の最後に新しい子要素を追加する
- DOMDocument::createAttribute() - 新しい属性を作成する
- DOMDocument::createAttributeNS() - 関連付けられた名前空間に新しい属性を作成する
- DOMDocument::createCDATASection() - 新しい cdata ノードを作成する
- DOMDocument::createComment() - 新しい comment ノードを作成する
- DOMDocument::createDocumentFragment() - 新しい文書片を作成する
- DOMDocument::createElementNS() - 関連付けられた名前空間に新しい要素を作成する
- DOMDocument::createEntityReference() - 新しいエンティティ参照ノードを作成する
- DOMDocument::createProcessingInstruction() - 新しい PI ノードを作成する
- DOMDocument::createTextNode() - 新しいテキストノードを作成する
+add a note
User Contributed Notes 9 notes
mikek dot nospam at nospam dot muonics dot com ¶
17 years ago
With regard to the note below about needing htmlentities to avoid warnings about unterminated entity references, I thought it worthwhile to mention that that you don't need to with createTextNode and DOMText::__construct. If you mix both methods of setting text nodes and do (or don't) apply htmlentities consistently to all data to be displayed, you'll get &s (or warnings and badly-formed xml).
It's probably in one's best interest to extend DOMElement and DOMDocument so that it creates a DOMText node and appends it, rather than passing it up to the DOMElement constructor. Otherwise, good luck using (or not using) htmlentities in all the right places in your code, especially as code changes get made.
<?php
class XDOMElement extends DOMElement {
function __construct($name, $value = null, $namespaceURI = null) {
parent::__construct($name, null, $namespaceURI);
}
}
class XDOMDocument extends DOMDocument {
function __construct($version = null, $encoding = null) {
parent::__construct($version, $encoding);
$this->registerNodeClass('DOMElement', 'XDOMElement');
}
function createElement($name, $value = null, $namespaceURI = null) {
$element = new XDOMElement($name, $value, $namespaceURI);
$element = $this->importNode($element);
if (!empty($value)) {
$element->appendChild(new DOMText($value));
}
return $element;
}
}
$doc1 = new XDOMDocument();
$doc1_e1 = $doc1->createElement('foo', 'bar & baz');
$doc1->appendChild($doc1_e1);
echo $doc1->saveXML();
$doc2 = new XDOMDocument();
$doc2_e1 = $doc2->createElement('foo');
$doc2->appendChild($doc2_e1);
$doc2_e1->appendChild($doc2->createTextNode('bar & baz'));
echo $doc2->saveXML();
?>
Text specified in createElement:
<?xml version=""?>
<foo>bar & baz</foo>
Text added via createTextNode:
<?xml version=""?>
<foo>bar & baz</foo>
yasindagli at gmail dot com ¶
15 years ago
To create elements with attributes,
<?php
function createElement($domObj, $tag_name, $value = NULL, $attributes = NULL)
{
$element = ($value != NULL ) ? $domObj->createElement($tag_name, $value) : $domObj->createElement($tag_name);
if( $attributes != NULL )
{
foreach ($attributes as $attr=>$val)
{
$element->setAttribute($attr, $val);
}
}
return $element;
}
$dom = new DOMDocument('1.0', 'utf-8');
$elm = createElement($dom, 'foo', 'bar', array('attr_name'=>'attr_value'));
$dom->appendChild($elm);
echo $dom->saveXML();
?>
outputs :
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<foo attr_name="attr_value">bar</foo>
sergsokolenko at gmail dot com ¶
17 years ago
To avoid warning message "unterminated entity reference" you may use htmlentities() for escaping supplied value:
<?php
//...
$dom->createElement('name', htmlentities($text))
//...
?>
funkathustra ¶
12 years ago
Although the built-in DOM functions are great, since they're designed to support generic XML, generating HTML DOMs becomes particularly verbose. I ended up writing this function to drastically speed things up.
Instead of calling something like
<?php
$div = $dom->createElement("div");
$div->setAttribute("class","MyClass");
$div->setAttribute("id","MyID");
$someOtherDiv->appendChild($div);
?>
you can accomplish the same thing with:
<?php
$div = newElement("div", $someOtherDiv, "class=MyClass;id=MyID");
?>
The "key1=value;key2=value" syntax is really fast to use, but obviously doesn't hold up if your content has those characters in it. So, you can also pass it an array:
<?php
$div = newElement("div", $someOtherDiv, array("class","MyClass"));
?>
Or an array of arrays, representing different attributes:
<?php
$div = newElement("form", $someOtherDiv, array(array("method","get"), array("action","/refer/?id=5");
?>
Here's the function:
<?php
function newElement($type, $insertInto = NULL, $params=NULL, $content="")
{
$tempEl = $this->dom->createElement($type, $content);
if(gettype($params) == "string" && strlen($params) > 0)
{
$attributesCollection =split(";", $params);
foreach($attributesCollection as $attribute)
{
$keyvalue = split("=", $attribute);
$tempEl->setAttribute($keyvalue[0], $keyvalue[1]);
}
}
if(gettype($params) == "array")
{
if(gettype($params[0]) == "array")
{
foreach($params as $attribute)
{
$tempEl->setAttribute($attribute[0], $attribute[1]);
}
} else {
$tempEl->setAttribute($params[0], $params[1]);
}
}
?>
tschmieder at bitworks dot de ¶
9 years ago
Remember:
If you want to perform multiple actions with a new node, you may need to create a copy of it before
means:
## Create an address to an unique memory block !
$td = $dom->createElement('td');
## Change some things in this original unique pattern
$td->setAttribute('class', 'saldo');
## clone the unique pattern to two own one's
$td1 = clone $td;
$td2 = clone $td;
## alter properties in each one
$td1->nodeValue = 'Ich bin die erste neue Node';
$td2->nodeValue = 'Ich bin die zweite neue Node';
## find the parent element
$tr = $dom->getElementById('t001-tr001');
## find the first and the last child (here only for clearity)
$first = $tr->firstChild;
$last = $tr->lastChild;
## produce the new nodes
$newtd1 = $tr->insertBefore($td1, $first);
$newtd2 = $tr->appendChild($td2);
conclusion:
YOU NEED AN ORIGINAL NEW NODE FOR EACH ACTION!
lars dot c dot magnusson at gmail dot com ¶
14 years ago
You may think insertBefore and insertAfter is a direct alternative for appendChild, this is not the case.
<?php
$dom = new DOMDocument();
$dom->load($file);
$dom->appendChild($newNode); //Works fine
$dom->insertBefore($newNode, $refNode); //Will fail
$refNode->parentNode->insertBefore($newNode, $refNode); // thanx to yasindagli (first post)
?>
estill at gvtc dot com ¶
17 years ago
Note that the second parameter (value), although convenient, is non-standard. You should create elements like this instead:
<?php
$doc = new DOMDocument('1.0', 'iso-8859-1');
$root = $doc->createElement('test');
$doc->appendChild($root);
$root_text = $doc->createTextNode('This is the root element!');
$root->appendChild($root_text);
print $doc->saveXML();
?>
Or, alternatively, extend the DOMDocument class and add your own custom, convenience method to avoid intruding on the standard:
<?php
class CustomDOMDocument extends DOMDocument {
function createElementWithText($name, $child_text) {
// Creates an element with a child text node
// @param string $name element tag name
// @param string $child_text child node text
// @return object new element
$element = $this->createElement($name);
$element_text = $this->createTextNode($child_text);
$element->appendChild($element_text);
return $element;
}
}
$doc = new CustomDOMDocument('1.0', 'iso-8859-1');
$root = $doc->createElementWithText('test', 'This is the root element!');
$doc->appendChild($root);
print $doc->saveXML();
?>
Also use caution with (or avoid) the 'DOMElement->nodeValue' property. It can return some unexpected values and changing its value will replace (remove) all descendants of the element with a single text node. It's also non-standard; according to the DOM spec it should return NULL.
chris AT cmbuckley DOT co DOT uk ¶
15 years ago
Note that the NUL character "\0" is not in the list of invalid characters for $name, so no error is triggered, but the tag name will be truncated at the null byte:
<?php
$dom = new DOMDocument('1.0', 'utf-8');
$el = $dom->createElement('foo' . "\0" . 'bar', 'Hello World');
echo $el->tagName; // outputs "foo"
?>
dignat at yahoo dot com ¶
7 years ago
To create an element with DomDocument and to escape ampersand in the value.
Do this:
$element = new DOMDocument('1.0', 'UTF-8');
$test = $element->createElement('text');
$test ->appendChild($element->createElement('name'))
->appendChild($element->createtextNode('& I am ampersand');