String escape into XML

C#.NetXmlVisual Studio-2008Escaping

C# Problem Overview


Is there any C# function which could be used to escape and un-escape a string, which could be used to fill in the content of an XML element?

I am using VSTS 2008 + C# + .Net 3.0.

EDIT 1: I am concatenating simple and short XML file and I do not use serialization, so I need to explicitly escape XML character by hand, for example, I need to put a<b into <foo></foo>, so I need escape string a<b and put it into element foo.

C# Solutions


Solution 1 - C#

Solution 2 - C#

public static string XmlEscape(string unescaped)
{
    XmlDocument doc = new XmlDocument();
    XmlNode node = doc.CreateElement("root");
    node.InnerText = unescaped;
    return node.InnerXml;
}

public static string XmlUnescape(string escaped)
{
    XmlDocument doc = new XmlDocument();
    XmlNode node = doc.CreateElement("root");
    node.InnerXml = escaped;
    return node.InnerText;
}

Solution 3 - C#

EDIT: You say "I am concatenating simple and short XML file and I do not use serialization, so I need to explicitly escape XML character by hand".

I would strongly advise you not to do it by hand. Use the XML APIs to do it all for you - read in the original files, merge the two into a single document however you need to (you probably want to use XmlDocument.ImportNode), and then write it out again. You don't want to write your own XML parsers/formatters. Serialization is somewhat irrelevant here.

If you can give us a short but complete example of exactly what you're trying to do, we can probably help you to avoid having to worry about escaping in the first place.


Original answer

It's not entirely clear what you mean, but normally XML APIs do this for you. You set the text in a node, and it will automatically escape anything it needs to. For example:

LINQ to XML example:

using System;
using System.Xml.Linq;

class Test
{
    static void Main()
    {
        XElement element = new XElement("tag",
                                        "Brackets & stuff <>");
        
        Console.WriteLine(element);
    }
}

DOM example:

using System;
using System.Xml;

class Test
{
    static void Main()
    {
        XmlDocument doc = new XmlDocument();
        XmlElement element = doc.CreateElement("tag");
        element.InnerText = "Brackets & stuff <>";
        Console.WriteLine(element.OuterXml);
    }
}

Output from both examples:

<tag>Brackets &amp; stuff &lt;&gt;</tag>

That's assuming you want XML escaping, of course. If you're not, please post more details.

Solution 4 - C#

Thanks to @sehe for the one-line escape:

var escaped = new System.Xml.Linq.XText(unescaped).ToString();

I add to it the one-line un-escape:

var unescapedAgain = System.Xml.XmlReader.Create(new StringReader("<r>" + escaped + "</r>")).ReadElementString();

Solution 5 - C#

George, it's simple. Always use the XML APIs to handle XML. They do all the escaping and unescaping for you.

Never create XML by appending strings.

Solution 6 - C#

And if you want, like me when I found this question, to escape XML node names, like for example when reading from an XML serialization, use the easiest way:

XmlConvert.EncodeName(string nameToEscape)

It will also escape spaces and any non-valid characters for XML elements.

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.security.securityelement.escape%28VS.80%29.aspx

Solution 7 - C#

Another take based on John Skeet's answer that doesn't return the tags:

void Main()
{
	XmlString("Brackets & stuff <> and \"quotes\"").Dump();
}

public string XmlString(string text)
{
	return new XElement("t", text).LastNode.ToString();
} 

This returns just the value passed in, in XML encoded format:

Brackets &amp; stuff &lt;&gt; and "quotes"

Solution 8 - C#

WARNING: Necromancing

Still Darin Dimitrov's answer + System.Security.SecurityElement.Escape(string s) isn't complete.

In XML 1.1, the simplest and safest way is to just encode EVERYTHING.
Like &#09; for \t.
It isn't supported at all in XML 1.0.
For XML 1.0, one possible workaround is to base-64 encode the text containing the character(s).

//string EncodedXml = SpecialXmlEscape("привет мир");
//Console.WriteLine(EncodedXml);
//string DecodedXml = XmlUnescape(EncodedXml);
//Console.WriteLine(DecodedXml);
public static string SpecialXmlEscape(string input)
{
    //string content = System.Xml.XmlConvert.EncodeName("\t");
    //string content = System.Security.SecurityElement.Escape("\t");
    //string strDelimiter = System.Web.HttpUtility.HtmlEncode("\t"); // XmlEscape("\t"); //XmlDecode("&#09;");
    //strDelimiter = XmlUnescape("&#59;");
    //Console.WriteLine(strDelimiter);
    //Console.WriteLine(string.Format("&#{0};", (int)';'));
    //Console.WriteLine(System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.HeaderName);
    //Console.WriteLine(System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.HeaderName);

    
    string strXmlText = "";

    if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(input))
        return input;


    System.Text.StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();

    for (int i = 0; i < input.Length; ++i)
    {
        sb.AppendFormat("&#{0};", (int)input[i]);
    }

    strXmlText = sb.ToString();
    sb.Clear();
    sb = null;

    return strXmlText;
} // End Function SpecialXmlEscape

XML 1.0:

public static string Base64Encode(string plainText)
{
    var plainTextBytes = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(plainText);
    return System.Convert.ToBase64String(plainTextBytes);
}

public static string Base64Decode(string base64EncodedData)
{
    var base64EncodedBytes = System.Convert.FromBase64String(base64EncodedData);
    return System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetString(base64EncodedBytes);
}

Solution 9 - C#

Following functions will do the work. Didn't test against XmlDocument, but I guess this is much faster.

public static string XmlEncode(string value)
{
    System.Xml.XmlWriterSettings settings = new System.Xml.XmlWriterSettings 
    {
        ConformanceLevel = System.Xml.ConformanceLevel.Fragment
    };

    StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();

    using (var writer = System.Xml.XmlWriter.Create(builder, settings))
    {
        writer.WriteString(value);
    }

    return builder.ToString();
}

public static string XmlDecode(string xmlEncodedValue)
{
    System.Xml.XmlReaderSettings settings = new System.Xml.XmlReaderSettings
    {
        ConformanceLevel = System.Xml.ConformanceLevel.Fragment
    };

    using (var stringReader = new System.IO.StringReader(xmlEncodedValue))
    {
        using (var xmlReader = System.Xml.XmlReader.Create(stringReader, settings))
        {
            xmlReader.Read();
            return xmlReader.Value;
        }
    }
}

Solution 10 - C#

Using a third-party library (Newtonsoft.Json) as alternative:

public static string XmlEscape(string unescaped)
{
    if (unescaped == null) return null;
    return JsonConvert.SerializeObject(unescaped); ;
}

public static string XmlUnescape(string escaped)
{
    if (escaped == null) return null;
    return JsonConvert.DeserializeObject(escaped, typeof(string)).ToString();
}

Examples of escaped string:

a<b ==> "a&lt;b"

<foo></foo> ==> "foo&gt;&lt;/foo&gt;"

NOTE: In newer versions, the code written above may not work with escaping, so you need to specify how the strings will be escaped:

public static string XmlEscape(string unescaped)
{
    if (unescaped == null) return null;
    return JsonConvert.SerializeObject(unescaped, new JsonSerializerSettings()
    {
        StringEscapeHandling = StringEscapeHandling.EscapeHtml
    });
}

Examples of escaped string:

a<b ==> "a\u003cb"

<foo></foo> ==> "\u003cfoo\u003e\u003c/foo\u003e"

Solution 11 - C#

SecurityElementEscape does this job for you

Use this method to replace invalid characters in a string before using the string in a SecurityElement. If invalid characters are used in a SecurityElement without being escaped, an ArgumentException is thrown.

The following table shows the invalid XML characters and their escaped equivalents.

enter image description here

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.security.securityelement.escape?view=net-5.0

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionGeorge2View Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - C#TWAView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - C#Darin DimitrovView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - C#Jon SkeetView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - C#Keith RobertsonView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - C#John SaundersView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - C#CharlieBrownView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - C#Rick StrahlView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - C#Stefan SteigerView Answer on Stackoverflow
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Solution 11 - C#AllmanToolView Answer on Stackoverflow