Use the following methods in a JavaCompute node to create new
elements in a message tree:
- createElementAsFirstChild()
- createElementAsLastChild()
- createElementBefore()
- createElementAfter()
The method returns a reference to the newly-created element. Each method
has three overloaded forms:
- createElement...(int type)
- Creates a blank element of the specified type. Valid generic types are:
- MbElement.TYPE_NAME. This type of element has only a name, for example
an XML element.
- MbElement.TYPE_VALUE. This type of element has only a value, for example
XML text that is not contained within an XML element.
- MbElement.TYPE_NAME_VALUE. This type of element has both a name and a
value, for example an XML attribute.
Specific type values can also be assigned. The meaning of this type
information is dependent on the parser. Element name and value information
must be assigned using the setName() and setValue() methods.
- createElement...(int type, String name, Object value)
- Method for setting the name and value of the element at creation time.
- createElement...(String parserName)
- A special form of createElement...() that is only used to create top-level
parser elements.
This example Java code adds a new chapter element to
the XML example given in
Accessing elements in a message tree from a JavaCompute node:
MbElement root = outMessage.getRootElement();
MbElement document = root.getLastChild().getFirstChild();
MbElement chapter2 = document.createElementAsLastChild(MbElement.TYPE_NAME,"Chapter",null);
// add title attribute
MbElement title2 = chapter2.createElementAsFirstChild(MbElement.TYPE_NAME_VALUE,
"title", "Message Flows");
This produces the following XML output:
<document>
<chapter title="Introduction">
Some text.
</chapter>
<chapter title="Message Flows"/>
</document>