The org.xml.sax.helpers.DefaultHandler
class is the base class for "listeners" in SAX 2.0.
As shown briefly in the first text on SAX in this tutorial, you create a subclass of DefaultHandler
and override certain inherited methods in this subclass. In this text I will show a very simple example of a DefaultHandler
subclass, which just prints out detail about the XML file. Here is the code:
public class SaxHandler extends DefaultHandler { public void startDocument() throws SAXException { System.out.println("start document : "); } public void endDocument() throws SAXException { System.out.println("end document : "); } public void startElement(String uri, String localName, String qName, Attributes attributes) throws SAXException { System.out.println("start element : " + qName); } public void endElement(String uri, String localName, String qName) throws SAXException { System.out.println("end element : " + qName); } public void characters(char ch[], int start, int length) throws SAXException { System.out.println("start characters : " + new String(ch, start, length)); } }
When you run this code, with this file as input:
<root> <child> <grandchild>text 1</grandchild> </child> <child> <grandchild>text 2</grandchild> </child> </root>
... you get the following output printed to the System.out:
start document : start element : root characters : start element : child characters : start element : grandchild characters : text 1 end element : grandchild characters : end element : child characters : start element : child characters : start element : grandchild characters : text 2 end element : grandchild characters : end element : child characters : end element : root end document :
This is the sequence in which the SAXParser
calls the corresponding methods in the SaxHandler
instance, when processing the XML file shown above.
You may have noticed that sometimes the characters()
method prints out a line break. This is because thecharacters()
method is called by the SAXParser
with the whitespace characters that are located between the end of the parent element begin tag, and the child begin tag. In other words, the white space characters marked here using dots (...):
<root>...
....<child>
</child>
There are also sometimes whitespace characters located after the end of an element end tag, and until the beginning of the next sibling tag, or the beginning of the end tag of the parent element.
Processing Instructions
The DefaultHandler
class also has a method for when XML processing instructions are found in the XML file. Here is how that method looks:
public void processingInstruction(String target, String data) throws SAXException { }
You don't very often use processing instructions, so I won't get into more detail about it here. Now that you know it is here, you can play with it yourself.
Exceptions
The DefaultHandler
class has three methods you can override to handle exceptions encountered during the XML parsing. Here they are:
public void warning(SAXParseException e) throws SAXException { } public void error(SAXParseException e) throws SAXException { } public void fatalError(SAXParseException e) throws SAXException { }
Java SAX DefaultHandler
The org.xml.sax.helpers.DefaultHandler
class is the base class for "listeners" in SAX 2.0.
As shown briefly in the first text on SAX in this tutorial, you create a subclass of DefaultHandler
and override certain inherited methods in this subclass. In this text I will show a very simple example of a DefaultHandler
subclass, which just prints out detail about the XML file. Here is the code:
public class SaxHandler extends DefaultHandler { public void startDocument() throws SAXException { System.out.println("start document : "); } public void endDocument() throws SAXException { System.out.println("end document : "); } public void startElement(String uri, String localName, String qName, Attributes attributes) throws SAXException { System.out.println("start element : " + qName); } public void endElement(String uri, String localName, String qName) throws SAXException { System.out.println("end element : " + qName); } public void characters(char ch[], int start, int length) throws SAXException { System.out.println("start characters : " + new String(ch, start, length)); } }
When you run this code, with this file as input:
<root> <child> <grandchild>text 1</grandchild> </child> <child> <grandchild>text 2</grandchild> </child> </root>
... you get the following output printed to the System.out:
start document : start element : root characters : start element : child characters : start element : grandchild characters : text 1 end element : grandchild characters : end element : child characters : start element : child characters : start element : grandchild characters : text 2 end element : grandchild characters : end element : child characters : end element : root end document :
This is the sequence in which the SAXParser
calls the corresponding methods in the SaxHandler
instance, when processing the XML file shown above.
You may have noticed that sometimes the characters()
method prints out a line break. This is because thecharacters()
method is called by the SAXParser
with the whitespace characters that are located between the end of the parent element begin tag, and the child begin tag. In other words, the white space characters marked here using dots (...):
<root>... ....<child> </child>
There are also sometimes whitespace characters located after the end of an element end tag, and until the beginning of the next sibling tag, or the beginning of the end tag of the parent element.
Processing Instructions
The DefaultHandler
class also has a method for when XML processing instructions are found in the XML file. Here is how that method looks:
public void processingInstruction(String target, String data) throws SAXException { }
You don't very often use processing instructions, so I won't get into more detail about it here. Now that you know it is here, you can play with it yourself.
Exceptions
The DefaultHandler
class has three methods you can override to handle exceptions encountered during the XML parsing. Here they are:
public void warning(SAXParseException e) throws SAXException { } public void error(SAXParseException e) throws SAXException { } public void fatalError(SAXParseException e) throws SAXException { }
Let's say that the parser encounters an illegal XML entity (like ¬Legal;). The SAXParser
will then call thefatalError()
method, before breaking the parsing.
If a less dangerous error occurs, the SAXParser
may just call the error()
or warning()
method. That way you can collect all the errors in a list, and return them all at once, instead of one by one, as they are met.
Additional Methods
The DefaultHandler
has more methods you can override. Check out the JavaDoc for more details on those methods.