XmlTextWriter.Indentation Property
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Gets or sets how many IndentChars to write for each level in the hierarchy when Formatting is set to Formatting.Indented
.
public:
property int Indentation { int get(); void set(int value); };
public int Indentation { get; set; }
member this.Indentation : int with get, set
Public Property Indentation As Integer
Property Value
Number of IndentChars
for each level. The default is 2.
Exceptions
Setting this property to a negative value.
Examples
The following example writes an XML fragment.
#using <System.Xml.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::IO;
using namespace System::Xml;
int main()
{
//Create a writer to write XML to the console.
XmlTextWriter^ writer = nullptr;
writer = gcnew XmlTextWriter( Console::Out );
//Use indentation for readability.
writer->Formatting = Formatting::Indented;
writer->Indentation = 4;
//Write an element (this one is the root).
writer->WriteStartElement( "book" );
//Write the title element.
writer->WriteStartElement( "title" );
writer->WriteString( "Pride And Prejudice" );
writer->WriteEndElement();
//Write the close tag for the root element.
writer->WriteEndElement();
//Write the XML to file and close the writer.
writer->Close();
}
using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Xml;
public class Sample
{
public static void Main()
{
//Create a writer to write XML to the console.
XmlTextWriter writer = null;
writer = new XmlTextWriter (Console.Out);
//Use indentation for readability.
writer.Formatting = Formatting.Indented;
writer.Indentation = 4;
//Write an element (this one is the root).
writer.WriteStartElement("book");
//Write the title element.
writer.WriteStartElement("title");
writer.WriteString("Pride And Prejudice");
writer.WriteEndElement();
//Write the close tag for the root element.
writer.WriteEndElement();
//Write the XML to file and close the writer.
writer.Close();
}
}
Option Explicit
Option Strict
Imports System.IO
Imports System.Xml
Public Class Sample
Public Shared Sub Main()
'Create a writer to write XML to the console.
Dim writer As XmlTextWriter = Nothing
writer = New XmlTextWriter(Console.Out)
'Use indentation for readability.
writer.Formatting = Formatting.Indented
writer.Indentation = 4
'Write an element (this one is the root).
writer.WriteStartElement("book")
'Write the title element.
writer.WriteStartElement("title")
writer.WriteString("Pride And Prejudice")
writer.WriteEndElement()
'Write the close tag for the root element.
writer.WriteEndElement()
'Write the XML to file and close the writer.
writer.Close()
End Sub
End Class
Remarks
Note
Starting with the .NET Framework 2.0, we recommend that you create XmlWriter instances by using the XmlWriter.Create method and the XmlWriterSettings class to take advantage of new functionality.
Indentation is performed on following node types: DocumentType
, Element
, Comment
, ProcessingInstruction
, and CDATASection
. All other node types are not affected. The XmlTextWriter
does not indent the internal DTD subset. However, you could do the following to apply formatting to the internal DTD subset.
String name = "Employees";
String pubid = null;
String sysid = null;
String subset =
@"
<!ELEMENT Employees (Employee)+>
<!ELEMENT Employee EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST Employee firstname CDATA #REQUIRED>
<!ENTITY Company 'Microsoft'>]>
";
XmlTextWriter tw = new XmlTextWriter(Console.Out);
tw.WriteDocType(name, pubid, sysid, subset);
Applies to
See also
.NET