SAX parser: Ignoring special characters

I think your solution is not too bad: a few lines of code to do exactly what you want. The problem is that startEntity and endEntity methods are not provided by ContentHandler interface, so you have to write a LexicalHandler which works in combination with your ContentHandler. Usually, the use of an XMLFilter is more elegant, but you have to work with entity, so you still should write a LexicalHandler. Take a look here for an introduction to the use of SAX filters.

I'd like to show you a way, very similar to yours, which allows you to separate filtering operations (wrapping & to & for instance) from output operations (or something else). I've written my own XMLFilter based on XMLFilterImpl which also implements LexicalHandler interface. This filter contains only the code related to entites escape/unescape.

public class XMLFilterEntityImpl extends XMLFilterImpl implements
        LexicalHandler {

    private String currentEntity = null;

    public XMLFilterEntityImpl(XMLReader reader)
            throws SAXNotRecognizedException, SAXNotSupportedException {
        super(reader);
        setProperty("http://xml.org/sax/properties/lexical-handler", this);
    }

    @Override
    public void characters(char[] ch, int start, int length)
            throws SAXException {
        if (currentEntity == null) {
            super.characters(ch, start, length);
            return;
        }

        String entity = "&" + currentEntity + ";";
        super.characters(entity.toCharArray(), 0, entity.length());
        currentEntity = null;
    }

    @Override
    public void startEntity(String name) throws SAXException {
        currentEntity = name;
    }

    @Override
    public void endEntity(String name) throws SAXException {
    }

    @Override
    public void startDTD(String name, String publicId, String systemId)
            throws SAXException {
    }

    @Override
    public void endDTD() throws SAXException {
    }

    @Override
    public void startCDATA() throws SAXException {
    }

    @Override
    public void endCDATA() throws SAXException {
    }

    @Override
    public void comment(char[] ch, int start, int length) throws SAXException {
    }
}

And this is my main, with a DefaultHandler as ContentHandler which receives the entity as it is according to the filter code:

public static void main(String[] args) throws ParserConfigurationException,
        SAXException, IOException {

    DefaultHandler defaultHandler = new DefaultHandler() {
        @Override
        public void characters(char[] ch, int start, int length)
                throws SAXException {
            //This method receives the entity as is
            System.out.println(new String(ch, start, length));
        }
    };

    XMLFilter xmlFilter = new XMLFilterEntityImpl(XMLReaderFactory.createXMLReader());
    xmlFilter.setContentHandler(defaultHandler);
    String xml = "<html><head><title>title</title></head><body>&amp;</body></html>";
    xmlFilter.parse(new InputSource(new StringReader(xml)));
}

And this is my output:

title
&amp;

Probably you don't like it, anyway this is an alternative solution.

I'm sorry, but with SaxParser I think you don't have a more elegant way.

You should also consider switching to StaxParser: it's very easy to do what you want with XMLInputFactory.IS_REPLACING_ENTITY_REFERENCE set to false. If you like this solution, you should take a look here.


If you supply a LexicalHandler as a callback to the SAX parser, it will inform you of the start and end of every entity reference using startEntity() and endEntity() callbacks.

(Note that the JavaDoc at http://download.oracle.com/javase/1.5.0/docs/api/org/xml/sax/ext/LexicalHandler.html talks of "entities" when the correct term is "entity references").

Note also that there is no way to get a SAX parser to tell you about numeric character references such as &#x1234;. Applications are supposed to treat these in exactly the same way as the original character, so you really shouldn't be interested in them.