append.XMLNode.RdThis appends one or more XML nodes as children of an existing node.
append.XMLNode(to, ...)
append.xmlNode(to, ...)the XML node to which the sub-nodes are to be added.
the sub-nodes which are to be added to the to node.
If this is a list of XMLNode objects (e.g. create by a call to
lapply), then that list is used.
append.xmlNode is a generic function with method append.XMLNode
for class "XMLNode" and default method base::append.
This seems historical and users may as well use append.XMLNode
directly.
The original to node containing its new children nodes.
[<-.XMLNode
[[<-.XMLNode
[.XMLNode
[[.XMLNode
# Create a very simple representation of a simple dataset.
# This is just an example. The result is
# <data numVars="2" numRecords="3">
# <varNames>
# <string>
# A
# </string>
# <string>
# B
# </string>
# </varNames>
# <record>
# 1.2 3.5
# </record>
# <record>
# 20.2 13.9
# </record>
# <record>
# 10.1 5.67
# </record>
# </data>
n = xmlNode("data", attrs = c("numVars" = 2, numRecords = 3))
n = append.xmlNode(n, xmlNode("varNames", xmlNode("string", "A"), xmlNode("string", "B")))
n = append.xmlNode(n, xmlNode("record", "1.2 3.5"))
n = append.xmlNode(n, xmlNode("record", "20.2 13.9"))
n = append.xmlNode(n, xmlNode("record", "10.1 5.67"))
print(n)
#> <data numVars="2" numRecords="3">
#> <varNames>
#> <string>A</string>
#> <string>B</string>
#> </varNames>
#> <record>1.2 3.5</record>
#> <record>20.2 13.9</record>
#> <record>10.1 5.67</record>
#> </data>
if (FALSE) { # \dontrun{
tmp <- lapply(references, function(i) {
if(!inherits(i, "XMLNode"))
i <- xmlNode("reference", i)
i
})
r <- xmlNode("references")
r[["references"]] <- append.xmlNode(r[["references"]], tmp)
} # }