I'm generating XML from a SQL Server table.
This is my code:
;WITH XMLNAMESPACES
(
'http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance' AS xsi
--,DEFAULT 'http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance' -- xmlns
)
SELECT
'T_Contracts' AS "@tableName",
(SELECT * FROM T_Contracts
FOR XML PATH('row'), TYPE, ELEMENTS xsinil)
FOR XML PATH('table'), TYPE, ELEMENTS xsinil
I want the result to look like this (note: attribute tableName
on the root element):
<table xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" tableName="T_Contracts">
<row>
<VTR_UID>779FE899-4E81-4D8C-BF9B-3F17BC1DF146</VTR_UID>
<VTR_MDT_ID>0</VTR_MDT_ID>
<VTR_VTP_UID xsi:nil="true" />
<VTR_Nr>0050/132251</VTR_Nr>
</row>
</table>
But it duplicates the XSI namespace on the row element...
<table xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" tableName="T_Contracts">
<row xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<VTR_UID>779FE899-4E81-4D8C-BF9B-3F17BC1DF146</VTR_UID>
<VTR_MDT_ID>0</VTR_MDT_ID>
<VTR_VTP_UID xsi:nil="true" />
<VTR_Nr>0050/132251</VTR_Nr>
</row>
</table>
What's the correct way to add an attribute to the root element, and only the root element ?
Note
NULL-values must be returned as <columnName xsi:nil="true" />
and not be omitted.
(And no xml.modify
after the select)
Please note that this is NOT a duplicate of an existing question.
This annoying behaviour of repeated namespaces with sub-queries was a reported issue for more than 10 years on MS-Connect with thousands of votes. This platform was dismissed, so was this issue and there is no perspective that MS will ever solve this.
Just to be fair: It is not wrong to repeat the namespace declaration. It's just bloating the string-based output...
Even stranger is the the unsupported attribute on a root level node...
Well, if you need a head-ache, you might look into
OPTION EXPLICIT
:-)The accepted answer by Marc Guillot will not produce
xsi:nil="true"
attributes as you seem to need them. It will just wrap your result with the appropriate root node.Finally: This cannot be solved with XML methods, you can try this:
Update: Found a way, see below...
The result
The idea in short:
>
and useSTUFF()
there...UPDATE
Heureka, I just found a way, to create this without swithing to string, but it's clumsy :-)
The result