Thanks Stefan (decided to continue with a new thread name), I basically wants to create a loop that creates a tree, appends it to the previous tree and write it all to one file...If that makes sense.
At the moment my tree is something like this: """ <Signal name="abcde"> <Description>WhatEver</Description> </Signal> """ Now I want to read a dictionary from somewhere and put new values in the name and description. I know how to do that. Now I want to create a loop that creates a new tree: """ <Signal name="qazwsx"> <Description>HowDee</Description> </Signal> """ Now I want to append these to the data I want to write to a single xml file. """ <Signal name="abcde"> <Description>WhatEver</Description> </Signal> <Signal name="qazwsx"> <Description>HowDee</Description> </Signal> """ I was thinking of creating a new root element and appending each as a subelement and then writing the root element to the file... I just need some pointers on how to do that. Thanks Johan -----Original Message----- From: tutor-bounces+johan=accesstel.com...@python.org [mailto:tutor-bounces+johan=accesstel.com...@python.org] On Behalf Of Stefan Behnel Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2009 7:23 PM To: tutor@python.org Subject: Re: [Tutor] XML: changing value of elements Hi, a new question usually merits a new thread. Especially after a longer time, replies to older threads tend to remain unread as people simply don't scroll down far enough to notice them. You were lucky. :) Johan Geldenhuys wrote: > I have another question about writing the xml tree to a file. > > Now, I have parsed and changed my xml tree, but I want to create the same > tree multiple times with different values and write it to one file. > > > Let's use this code: > > import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET > doc = ET.parse('signal1.xml') > signal_node = doc.getroot()[0] > signal_node.set('name', 'Test_Name') > > I have this in a function and it returns the signal_node everytime I call > it, but with a different values. > > So, How do I take the returned xml and write that to one xml file? I'm not sure what you mean here. Do you mean: "multiple XML trees into a single file"? Or each in its own file? BTW, you don't need to re-parse the tree if all you want is to modify it and write it back out. You can either keep changing the tree and write it out multiple times, or deep-copy it (or parts of it) and start over for each step. Although I guess that parsing might be faster than deep-copying, especially for ElementTree. Stefan _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.387 / Virus Database: 270.13.16/2240 - Release Date: 07/15/09 17:58:00 _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor