Working with Elements
Elements within an XML document are represented by IXMLDOMElement
objects. Just as elements can contain elements, text, comments, processing instructions, CDATA sections, and entity references within XML documents, these objects can contain IXMLDOMElement
, IXMLDOMText
, IXMLDOMComment
, IXMLDOMProcessingInstruction
, IXMLDOMCDATASection
, and IXMLDOMEntityReference
objects.
Elements do not store attributes directly as children, however. Attributes can be retrieved or modified by name using the getAttribute
and setAttribute
methods, or manipulated as an IXMLDOMNamedNodeMap
through the attributes
property.
Creating an element requires that you already have created a DOMDocument
object, as the createElement
method belongs to DOMDocument
. Although you can create and manipulate elements without adding them to the node list of DOMDocument
, these elements will disappear as soon as the program completes and will not be persisted in XML documents. Generally, you'll want to assign elements a place in the document tree shortly after creation.
Examples
The following are script examples.
JScript
The following JScript code creates a DOMDocument
object, and then uses that DOMDocument
object to create an IXMLDOMElement
object, which is then appended to the DOMDocument
to be the root element of the document.
var xmlDoc = new ActiveXObject("Msxml2.DOMDocument.6.0");
var rootElement=xmlDoc.createElement("memo");
xmlDoc.appendChild(rootElement);
VBScript
Set xmlDoc = CreateObject
("Msxml2.DOMDocument.6.0")
Set rootElement=xmlDoc.createElement
("memo")
xmlDoc.appendChild
(rootElement)
For more information about properties and methods of IXMLDOMElement
, see IXMLDOMElement.