I would need to remove anything between XML tags, especially whitespace and newlines.
For example removing whitespace and newslines from:
</node> \n<node id="whatever">
to get:
</node><node id="whatever">
This is not meant for parsing XML by hand, but rather to prepare XML data before it's getting parsed by a tool. To be more specific, I'm using Hpricot (Ruby) to parse XML and unfortunately we're currently stuck on version 0.6.164, so ... I don't know about more recent versions, but this one often returns weird nodes (Objects) that only contain whitespace and line breaks. So the idea is to clean up the XML before converting it into an Hpricot document. Alternative solutions appreciated.
An example from a test: NoMethodError: undefined method `children' for "\n ":Hpricot::Text
The interesting part here is not the NoMethodError, because that's just fine, but that the Hpricot::Text element only contains a newline and nothing more.
Please don't use regular expressions to parse XML. It's horribly error prone.
Use a proper XML library, which will make this trivial. There are XML libraries available for just about every programming platform you could ask for - there's really no excuse to use a regular expression for XML.
A solution is to select all "blank" text nodes and remove them.
doc = Nokogiri(xml_source)
doc.xpath('//text()[not(normalize-space())]').remove
It is generally not a good idea to parse XML using regular expressions. One of the major benefits of XML is that there are dozens of well-tested parsers out there for any language/framework that you might ever want. There are some tricky rules within XML that prevent any regular expression from being able to properly parse XML.
That said, something like:
s/>.*?</></gs
(that is perl syntax) might do what you want. That says take anything from a greater than up to a less than, and strip it away. The "g" at the end says to perform the substitution as many times as needed, and the "s" makes the "." match all characters INCLUDING newlines (otherwise newlines would not be included, so the pattern would need to be run once for each line, and it would not cover tags that span multiple lines).
You shouldn't use regex to parse XML or HTML, it's just not reliable and there are way too many edge cases. You should use a XML/HTML parser for this kind of stuff instead.
Don't use regex. Try parsing the XML into a DOM, and manipulating from there (what language/framework are you using?);