Reputation: 12726
I'm relatively new to java and android, in my android application I need to get an XML file, transform it and show it to a user.
I know how to parse XML, but I don't want to parse it and generate views after. I'd like to transform it to an HTML and display in a WebView.
I'm trying to find something on the Internet but can't find anything.
How can I do it? Any ideas or links will be appreciated,
thanks
Upvotes: 0
Views: 7888
Reputation: 12302
Use XSLT, XSLT convert your XML in to HTML that we can display in Android Webview. This question will help.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2411
Please see the complete working example, created as a part of "AndStatus" application. It uses XSLT to show localized (!) Application Change Log in a WebView of the HelpActivity.
The working example consists of these parts:
The small utility class without any dependencies (i.e. it may be easily reused) which has this function:
/**
The example of its usage: See HelpActivity.java
The XML file to be transformed: changes.xml and the corresponding XSL stylesheet: changesxsl.xsl
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 28004
The usual tool to use for transforming XML to HTML is XSLT. Search SO for XSLT tutorial and you'll get some good results.
Here is another question showing how one developer used XSLT on Android. You can also search for examples of the use of Transformer in Java, as in this helpful article:
// JAXP reads data using the Source interface
Source xmlSource = new StreamSource(xmlFile);
Source xsltSource = new StreamSource(xsltFile);
// the factory pattern supports different XSLT processors
TransformerFactory transFact =
TransformerFactory.newInstance();
Transformer trans = transFact.newTransformer(xsltSource);
trans.transform(xmlSource, new StreamResult(System.out));
Update:
For older versions of the Android java API:
This article shows how to use a SAX parser to parse the input XML, then use XmlSerializer to output XML. The latter could easily output whatever XHTML you want. Both are available since API level 1.
Unfortunately I don't see a way to do XPath in API level 3, but if your input XML isn't too complex you should be able to code your own transformations. I know you "don't want to parse it and generate view after", but if you mean you don't want to even use an XML parser that's provided by Android, then I don't know of any alternative.
Update 2: I just learned about XOM, which supports a subset of XPath. This question shows someone using XOM on Android (to write XML) with API level 4. You could take advantage of the XPath features, as well as the serialization features. It requires a small external library, XOM's jar. I don't know if it's compatible with API level 3.
Upvotes: 3