Share via


How to: Create a Tree from an XmlReader

This topic shows how to create an XML tree directly from an XmlReader. To create an XElement from an XmlReader, you must position the XmlReader on an element node. The XmlReader will skip comments and processing instructions, but if the XmlReader is positioned on a text node, an error will be thrown. To avoid such errors, always position the XmlReader on an element before you create an XML tree from the XmlReader.

Example

This example uses the following XML document: Sample XML File: Books (LINQ to XML).

The following code creates an T:System.Xml.XmlReader object, and then reads nodes until it finds the first element node. It then loads the XElement object.

XmlReader r = XmlReader.Create("books.xml");
while (r.NodeType != XmlNodeType.Element)
    r.Read();
XElement e = XElement.Load(r);
Console.WriteLine(e);
Dim r As XmlReader = XmlReader.Create("books.xml")
Do While r.NodeType <> XmlNodeType.Element
    r.Read()
Loop
Dim e As XElement = XElement.Load(r)
Console.WriteLine(e)

This example produces the following output:

<Catalog>
   <Book id="bk101">
      <Author>Garghentini, Davide</Author>
      <Title>XML Developer's Guide</Title>
      <Genre>Computer</Genre>
      <Price>44.95</Price>
      <PublishDate>2000-10-01</PublishDate>
      <Description>An in-depth look at creating applications 
      with XML.</Description>
   </Book>
   <Book id="bk102">
      <Author>Garcia, Debra</Author>
      <Title>Midnight Rain</Title>
      <Genre>Fantasy</Genre>
      <Price>5.95</Price>
      <PublishDate>2000-12-16</PublishDate>
      <Description>A former architect battles corporate zombies, 
      an evil sorceress, and her own childhood to become queen 
      of the world.</Description>
   </Book>
</Catalog>

See Also

Concepts

Parsing XML

Build Date:

2012-08-02