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A toolkit for convenient and expressive XPath operations based on lxml.

Project description

xpath-kit

PyPI Version License: MIT Python Versions

xpath-kit is a powerful Python library that provides a fluent, object-oriented, and Pythonic interface for building and executing XPath queries on top of lxml. It transforms complex, error-prone XPath string composition into a highly readable and maintainable chain of objects and methods.

Say goodbye to messy, hard-to-read XPath strings:

div[@id="main" and contains(@class, "content")]/ul/li[position()=1]

And say hello to a more intuitive and IDE-friendly way of writing queries:

E.div[(A.id == "main") & A.class_.contains("content")] / E.ul / E.li[1]


✨ Features

  • 🐍 Fluent & Pythonic Interface: Chain methods and operators (/, //, [], &, |, ==, >) to build complex XPath expressions naturally using familiar Python logic.
  • 💡 Smart Builders: Use E (elements), A (attributes), and F (functions) for a highly readable syntax with excellent IDE autocompletion support.
  • 📖 Superb Readability & Maintainability: Complex queries become self-documenting. It's easier to understand, debug, and modify your selectors.
  • 💪 Powerful Predicate Logic: Easily create sophisticated predicates for attributes, text, and functions. Gracefully handle multi-class selections with any(), all(), and none().
  • 🔩 Convenient DOM Manipulation: The result objects are powerful wrappers around lxml elements, allowing for easy DOM traversal and manipulation (e.g., append, remove, parent, next_sibling).
  • 🔒 Fully Type-Hinted: The entire library is fully type-hinted for an unmatched developer experience and static analysis with modern IDEs.
  • ⚙️ HTML & XML Support: Seamlessly parse both document types with html() and xml() entry points.

🚀 Installation

Install xpath-kit from PyPI using pip:

pip install xpath-kit

The library requires lxml as a dependency, which will be installed automatically.


🏁 Quick Start

Here's a simple example of how to use xpath-kit to parse a piece of HTML and extract information.

from xpathkit import html, E, A, F

html_content = """
<html>
  <body>
    <div id="main">
      <h2>Article Title</h2>
      <p>This is the first paragraph.</p>
      <ul class="item-list">
        <li class="item active">Item 1</li>
        <li class="item">Item 2</li>
        <li class="item disabled">Item 3</li>
      </ul>
    </div>
  </body>
</html>
"""

# 1. Parse the HTML content
root = html(html_content)

# 2. Build a query to find the <li> element with both "item" and "active" classes
# XPath: .//ul[contains(@class, "item-list")]/li[contains(@class, "item") and contains(@class, "active")]
query = E.ul[A.class_.contains("item-list")] / E.li[A.class_.all("item", "active")]

# 3. Execute the query and get a single element
active_item = root.descendant(query)

# Print its content and attributes
print(f"Tag: {active_item.tag}")
print(f"Text: {active_item.string()}")
print(f"Class attribute: {active_item['class']}")

# --- Output ---
# Tag: li
# Text: Item 1
# Class attribute: item active

# 4. Build a more complex query: find all <li> elements whose class does NOT contain 'disabled'
# XPath: .//li[not(contains(@class, "disabled"))]
query_enabled = E.li[F.not_(A.class_.contains("disabled"))]

# 5. Execute the query and process the list of results
enabled_items = root.descendants(query_enabled)
item_texts = enabled_items.map(lambda item: item.string())
print(f"\nEnabled items: {item_texts}")

# --- Output ---
# Enabled items: ['Item 1', 'Item 2']

📚 Core Concepts

1. Parsing Entrypoints

Use the html() or xml() functions to start. They accept a string, bytes, or a file path.

from xpathkit import html, xml

# Parse an HTML string
root_html = html("<div><p>Hello</p></div>")

# Parse an XML file
root_xml = xml(path="data.xml")

2. The Smart Builders (E, A, F)

These are the heart of xpath-kit, making expression building effortless.

  • E (Element): Builds element nodes. E.g., E.div, E.a, or custom tags E["my-tag"].
  • A (Attribute): Builds attribute nodes within predicates. E.g., A.id, A.href, or custom attributes A["data-id"].
  • F (Function): Builds XPath functions. E.g., F.contains(), F.not_(), F.position(), or any custom function: F["name"](arg1, ...).

Note: Since class and for are reserved keywords in Python, use a trailing underscore: A.class_ and A.for_.

3. Path Selection (/ and //)

Use the division operators to define relationships between elements.

  • /: Selects a direct child.
  • //: Selects a descendant at any level.
# Selects a <p> that is a direct child of a <div>
# XPath: div/p
query_child = E.div / E.p

# Selects an <a> that is a descendant of the <body>
# XPath: body//a
query_descendant = E.body // E.a

You can also use a string directly after an element for simple cases:

# Equivalent to E.div / E.span
query = E.div / "span"

This is convenient for simple queries without predicates or attributes.

4. Predicates ([])

Use square brackets [] on an element to add filtering conditions. This is where xpath-kit truly shines.

Attribute Predicates with A

# Find a div with id="main"
# XPath: //div[@id="main"]
query = E.div[A.id == "main"]

# Find an <a> that has an href attribute
# XPath: //a[@href]
query_has_href = E.a[A.href]

# Find an <li> whose class contains "item" but NOT "disabled"
# XPath: //li[contains(@class,"item") and not(contains(@class,"disabled"))]
query = E.li[A.class_.contains("item") & F.not_(A.class_.contains("disabled"))]

Text/Value Predicates

To query against the string value of a node (.), import the dot class.

from xpathkit import dot

# Find an <h1> whose text is exactly "Welcome"
# XPath: //h1[.="Welcome"]
query = E.h1[dot() == "Welcome"]

# Find a <p> whose text contains the word "paragraph"
# XPath: //p[contains(., "paragraph")]
query_contains = E.p[dot().contains("paragraph")]

Functional Predicates with F

Use F to call any standard XPath function inside a predicate.

# Select the first list item
# XPath: //li[position()=1]
query_first = E.li[F.position() == 1]

# Select the last list item
# XPath: //li[last()]
query_last = E.li[F.last()]

Combining Predicates with & and |

  • &: Logical and
  • |: Logical or
# Find an <a> with href="/home" AND a target attribute
# XPath: //a[@href="/home" and @target]
query_and = E.a[(A.href == "/home") & A.target]

# Find a <div> with id="sidebar" OR class="nav"
# XPath: //div[@id="sidebar" or contains(@class,"nav")]
query_or = E.div[(A.id == "sidebar") | A.class_.contains("nav")]

Important: Due to Python's operator precedence, it's highly recommended to wrap combined conditions in parentheses ().

Positional Predicates

Use integers (1-based) or negative integers (from the end) directly.

# Select the second <li>
# XPath: //li[2]
query = E.li[2]

# Select the last <li> (equivalent to F.last())
# XPath: //li[last()]
query_last = E.li[-1]

5. Working with Results

  • .child()/.descendant() return a single XPathElement.
  • .children()/.descendants() return an Union[XPathElementList, str, float, bool, List[str]].

XPathElement (Single Result)

  • .tag: The element's tag name (e.g., 'div').
  • .attr: A dictionary of all attributes.
  • element['name']: Access an attribute directly.
  • .string(): Get the concatenated text of the element and all its children (string(.)).
  • .text(): Get a list of only the element's direct text nodes (./text()).
  • .parent(): Get the parent element.
  • .next_sibling() / .prev_sibling(): Get adjacent sibling elements.
  • .xpath(query): Execute a raw string or a constructed query within the context of this element.

XPathElementList (Multiple Results)

  • .one(): Ensures the list contains exactly one element and returns it; otherwise, raises an error.
  • .first() / .last(): Get the first or last element; raises an error if the list is empty.
  • len(element_list): Get the number of elements.
  • .filter(func): Filter the list based on a function.
  • .map(func): Apply a function to each element and return a list of the results.
  • Can be iterated over directly: for e in my_list: ...
  • Supports slicing and indexing: my_list[0], my_list[-1]

6. DOM Manipulation

Modify the document tree with ease.

from xpathkit import XPathElement, E, A

# Assuming 'root' is a parsed XPathElement
# Find the <ul> element
ul = root.descendant(E.ul)

# Create and append a new <li>
new_li = XPathElement.create("li", attr={"class": "new-item"}, text="Item 4")
ul.append(new_li)

# Remove an element
item_to_remove = ul.child(E.li[A.class_.contains("disabled")])
if item_to_remove:
    ul.remove(item_to_remove)

# Print the modified HTML
print(root.tostring())

📄 License

This project is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for details.

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