The problem is this: I have an XML fragment like so:
<fragment>text1 <a>inner1 </a>text2 <b>inner2</b> <c>t</c>ext3</fragment>
For the result, I want to remove all <a>
- and <c>
-Tags, but retain their (text)-contents, and childnodes just as they are. Also, the <b>
-Element should be left untouched. The result should then look thus
<fragment>text1 inner<d>1</d> text2 <b>inner2</b> text3</fragment>
For the time being, I'll revert to a very dirty trick: I'll etree.tostring the fragment, remove the offending tags via regex, and replace the original fragment with the etree.fromstring result of this (not the real code, but should go something like this):
from lxml import etree
fragment = etree.fromstring("<fragment>text1 <a>inner1 </a>text2 <b>inner2</b> <c>t</c>ext3</fragment>")
fstring = etree.tostring(fragment)
fstring = fstring.replace("<a>","")
fstring = fstring.replace("</a>","")
fstring = fstring.replace("<c>","")
fstring = fstring.replace("</c>","")
fragment = etree.fromstring(fstring)
I know that I can probably use xslt to achieve this, and I know that lxml can make use of xslt, but there has to be a more lxml native approach?
For reference: I've tried getting there with lxml's element.replace, but since I want to insert text where there was an element node before, I don't think I can do that.