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how open xml file on libreoffice



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9















anyone know how to open xml file ? maybe with libreoffice ?
If I use libreoffice I just see only the text format of xml, with all tags and so on.









share


















  • 1





    Hi do you wish to edit the file or just view it? You can use gedit help.ubuntu.com/community/gedit ubuntu's build in text editor.

    – gman
    Feb 25 '14 at 12:07













  • XML files are text files, so any text editor can open it. But if you want to perform XML validation on it, then you need some XML editor that will also load the XSD file related to the XML and perform the validation (check that you enter the correct tag with the correct value type).

    – Benoit
    Mar 14 '14 at 14:42






  • 1





    And what exactly were you expecting? It's an XML file!

    – terdon
    Mar 15 '14 at 21:08
















9















anyone know how to open xml file ? maybe with libreoffice ?
If I use libreoffice I just see only the text format of xml, with all tags and so on.









share


















  • 1





    Hi do you wish to edit the file or just view it? You can use gedit help.ubuntu.com/community/gedit ubuntu's build in text editor.

    – gman
    Feb 25 '14 at 12:07













  • XML files are text files, so any text editor can open it. But if you want to perform XML validation on it, then you need some XML editor that will also load the XSD file related to the XML and perform the validation (check that you enter the correct tag with the correct value type).

    – Benoit
    Mar 14 '14 at 14:42






  • 1





    And what exactly were you expecting? It's an XML file!

    – terdon
    Mar 15 '14 at 21:08














9












9








9


6






anyone know how to open xml file ? maybe with libreoffice ?
If I use libreoffice I just see only the text format of xml, with all tags and so on.









share














anyone know how to open xml file ? maybe with libreoffice ?
If I use libreoffice I just see only the text format of xml, with all tags and so on.







libreoffice xml





share












share










share



share










asked Feb 25 '14 at 11:57









LuigiLuigi

192138




192138








  • 1





    Hi do you wish to edit the file or just view it? You can use gedit help.ubuntu.com/community/gedit ubuntu's build in text editor.

    – gman
    Feb 25 '14 at 12:07













  • XML files are text files, so any text editor can open it. But if you want to perform XML validation on it, then you need some XML editor that will also load the XSD file related to the XML and perform the validation (check that you enter the correct tag with the correct value type).

    – Benoit
    Mar 14 '14 at 14:42






  • 1





    And what exactly were you expecting? It's an XML file!

    – terdon
    Mar 15 '14 at 21:08














  • 1





    Hi do you wish to edit the file or just view it? You can use gedit help.ubuntu.com/community/gedit ubuntu's build in text editor.

    – gman
    Feb 25 '14 at 12:07













  • XML files are text files, so any text editor can open it. But if you want to perform XML validation on it, then you need some XML editor that will also load the XSD file related to the XML and perform the validation (check that you enter the correct tag with the correct value type).

    – Benoit
    Mar 14 '14 at 14:42






  • 1





    And what exactly were you expecting? It's an XML file!

    – terdon
    Mar 15 '14 at 21:08








1




1





Hi do you wish to edit the file or just view it? You can use gedit help.ubuntu.com/community/gedit ubuntu's build in text editor.

– gman
Feb 25 '14 at 12:07







Hi do you wish to edit the file or just view it? You can use gedit help.ubuntu.com/community/gedit ubuntu's build in text editor.

– gman
Feb 25 '14 at 12:07















XML files are text files, so any text editor can open it. But if you want to perform XML validation on it, then you need some XML editor that will also load the XSD file related to the XML and perform the validation (check that you enter the correct tag with the correct value type).

– Benoit
Mar 14 '14 at 14:42





XML files are text files, so any text editor can open it. But if you want to perform XML validation on it, then you need some XML editor that will also load the XSD file related to the XML and perform the validation (check that you enter the correct tag with the correct value type).

– Benoit
Mar 14 '14 at 14:42




1




1





And what exactly were you expecting? It's an XML file!

– terdon
Mar 15 '14 at 21:08





And what exactly were you expecting? It's an XML file!

– terdon
Mar 15 '14 at 21:08










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















13














If the file is an XML table, you can open it in LibreOffice Calc through the Data > XML Source menu. Inside it, you just need to open the XML file, point to the table you're importing on the left column and specify a destination in your sheet in the right text field. Example:



enter image description here





share


























  • What is an "xml table"? How do I find out if my file is one or has one? When I open a file like that, I see nothing in the "Map to document" window, though I see "<s:Table> lines in it. It comes from SOE Software's Clarity Election Night Reporting tool, e.g. the detail.xls file zipped inside results.enr.clarityelections.com/CO/63746/183083/reports/…

    – nealmcb
    Nov 12 '16 at 15:13













  • Cool, this works in LibreOffice Calc 5.1 with sitemap.xml from a sitemap generator service. I can choose which column to be shown in the sheet. Thanks Waldir.

    – Ade Malsasa Akbar
    May 3 '18 at 8:28











  • Quite, what is an XML table? Is it a collection of repeated nodes all of which have the same set of attributes in a two- or three-level structure? Is it converted to a table with each row corresponding to one of the first-level nodes?

    – PJTraill
    2 hours ago













  • When I try this (in LibreOffice Calc 6.1.3.2 on Open Suse Leap), XML source is greyed out in the Data menu – do I have to do something else first?

    – PJTraill
    2 hours ago











  • Some documentation at wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Calc/XMLSource , as referenced in the Help (but it says nothing about ungreying the menu entry).

    – PJTraill
    2 hours ago





















2














You can also use basex from the software center.



sudo apt-get install basex



BaseX is a very fast and light-weight, yet powerful XML database and XPath/XQuery processor, including support for the latest W3C Full Text and Update Recommendations. It supports large XML instances and offers a highly interactive front-end (basexgui).




I don't have it installed but it has really high ratings from the software center.






share|improve this answer
























  • Practical and ugly ;)

    – A.B.
    Apr 28 '15 at 14:58



















1














The default Gedit text editor is capable of opening the file - I also suggest you try Bluefish, which can do XML as well HTML and other languages. It also does auto-completion, and highlighting.



Here are examples of the above editors based on this:



Bluefish screenshot



enter image description hereN.B. With Gedit, you have to add some of the above by changing a few settings and activating a few plugins.






share|improve this answer

































    1














    XML Copy Editor is a fast, free, validating XML editor. It features DTD/XML Schema/RELAX NG validation, XSLT, XPath, pretty-printing, syntax highlighting, folding, tag completion/locking, and a spelling/style check. XML Copy Editor can be installed from the Ubuntu Software Center.



    XML Copy Editor debugger (xmlcopyeditor-dbg) is an optional add-on for XML Copy Editor that can also be installed from the Ubuntu Software Center.



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer

































      0














      In case you don't succeed with LibreOffice, try using SoftMaker FreeOffice. This free office suite has much better import and export filters that let you run Microsoft Office formats faithfully. The whole office suite is feature-packed, but needs only 58MB. It's well coded, very fast and reliable. Here's the link where to get it:



      www.freeoffice.com






      share|improve this answer
























      • Kingsoft Office is also worth a try: wpscommunity.org

        – s3lph
        Mar 14 '14 at 15:52



















      0














      You may find XMLStarlet useful, if you are familiar with XPATH concepts (or prepared to learn them).



      This is a command-line tool which can select data from an XML file on the basis of the types of elements and the values of their attributes or those of related elements. I am not sure if it is easy to generate a CSV file or other suitable for loading into LibreOffice (if that is your aim), or whether you would need to transform it a little first. (I shall try to remember to update this if I find out more.)



      The examples given in the Wikipedia article (link above) show the command as xml (e.g. xml sel for a selection), but in my case (OpenSuse Leap) it is xmlstarlet, which is also the package to install; I do not know what the situation is for Ubuntu.





      share








      New contributor




      PJTraill is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.





















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        6 Answers
        6






        active

        oldest

        votes








        6 Answers
        6






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        13














        If the file is an XML table, you can open it in LibreOffice Calc through the Data > XML Source menu. Inside it, you just need to open the XML file, point to the table you're importing on the left column and specify a destination in your sheet in the right text field. Example:



        enter image description here





        share


























        • What is an "xml table"? How do I find out if my file is one or has one? When I open a file like that, I see nothing in the "Map to document" window, though I see "<s:Table> lines in it. It comes from SOE Software's Clarity Election Night Reporting tool, e.g. the detail.xls file zipped inside results.enr.clarityelections.com/CO/63746/183083/reports/…

          – nealmcb
          Nov 12 '16 at 15:13













        • Cool, this works in LibreOffice Calc 5.1 with sitemap.xml from a sitemap generator service. I can choose which column to be shown in the sheet. Thanks Waldir.

          – Ade Malsasa Akbar
          May 3 '18 at 8:28











        • Quite, what is an XML table? Is it a collection of repeated nodes all of which have the same set of attributes in a two- or three-level structure? Is it converted to a table with each row corresponding to one of the first-level nodes?

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago













        • When I try this (in LibreOffice Calc 6.1.3.2 on Open Suse Leap), XML source is greyed out in the Data menu – do I have to do something else first?

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago











        • Some documentation at wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Calc/XMLSource , as referenced in the Help (but it says nothing about ungreying the menu entry).

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago


















        13














        If the file is an XML table, you can open it in LibreOffice Calc through the Data > XML Source menu. Inside it, you just need to open the XML file, point to the table you're importing on the left column and specify a destination in your sheet in the right text field. Example:



        enter image description here





        share


























        • What is an "xml table"? How do I find out if my file is one or has one? When I open a file like that, I see nothing in the "Map to document" window, though I see "<s:Table> lines in it. It comes from SOE Software's Clarity Election Night Reporting tool, e.g. the detail.xls file zipped inside results.enr.clarityelections.com/CO/63746/183083/reports/…

          – nealmcb
          Nov 12 '16 at 15:13













        • Cool, this works in LibreOffice Calc 5.1 with sitemap.xml from a sitemap generator service. I can choose which column to be shown in the sheet. Thanks Waldir.

          – Ade Malsasa Akbar
          May 3 '18 at 8:28











        • Quite, what is an XML table? Is it a collection of repeated nodes all of which have the same set of attributes in a two- or three-level structure? Is it converted to a table with each row corresponding to one of the first-level nodes?

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago













        • When I try this (in LibreOffice Calc 6.1.3.2 on Open Suse Leap), XML source is greyed out in the Data menu – do I have to do something else first?

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago











        • Some documentation at wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Calc/XMLSource , as referenced in the Help (but it says nothing about ungreying the menu entry).

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago
















        13












        13








        13







        If the file is an XML table, you can open it in LibreOffice Calc through the Data > XML Source menu. Inside it, you just need to open the XML file, point to the table you're importing on the left column and specify a destination in your sheet in the right text field. Example:



        enter image description here





        share















        If the file is an XML table, you can open it in LibreOffice Calc through the Data > XML Source menu. Inside it, you just need to open the XML file, point to the table you're importing on the left column and specify a destination in your sheet in the right text field. Example:



        enter image description here






        share













        share


        share








        edited Apr 28 '15 at 15:01

























        answered Apr 28 '15 at 14:46









        Waldir LeoncioWaldir Leoncio

        1,64042138




        1,64042138













        • What is an "xml table"? How do I find out if my file is one or has one? When I open a file like that, I see nothing in the "Map to document" window, though I see "<s:Table> lines in it. It comes from SOE Software's Clarity Election Night Reporting tool, e.g. the detail.xls file zipped inside results.enr.clarityelections.com/CO/63746/183083/reports/…

          – nealmcb
          Nov 12 '16 at 15:13













        • Cool, this works in LibreOffice Calc 5.1 with sitemap.xml from a sitemap generator service. I can choose which column to be shown in the sheet. Thanks Waldir.

          – Ade Malsasa Akbar
          May 3 '18 at 8:28











        • Quite, what is an XML table? Is it a collection of repeated nodes all of which have the same set of attributes in a two- or three-level structure? Is it converted to a table with each row corresponding to one of the first-level nodes?

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago













        • When I try this (in LibreOffice Calc 6.1.3.2 on Open Suse Leap), XML source is greyed out in the Data menu – do I have to do something else first?

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago











        • Some documentation at wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Calc/XMLSource , as referenced in the Help (but it says nothing about ungreying the menu entry).

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago





















        • What is an "xml table"? How do I find out if my file is one or has one? When I open a file like that, I see nothing in the "Map to document" window, though I see "<s:Table> lines in it. It comes from SOE Software's Clarity Election Night Reporting tool, e.g. the detail.xls file zipped inside results.enr.clarityelections.com/CO/63746/183083/reports/…

          – nealmcb
          Nov 12 '16 at 15:13













        • Cool, this works in LibreOffice Calc 5.1 with sitemap.xml from a sitemap generator service. I can choose which column to be shown in the sheet. Thanks Waldir.

          – Ade Malsasa Akbar
          May 3 '18 at 8:28











        • Quite, what is an XML table? Is it a collection of repeated nodes all of which have the same set of attributes in a two- or three-level structure? Is it converted to a table with each row corresponding to one of the first-level nodes?

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago













        • When I try this (in LibreOffice Calc 6.1.3.2 on Open Suse Leap), XML source is greyed out in the Data menu – do I have to do something else first?

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago











        • Some documentation at wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Calc/XMLSource , as referenced in the Help (but it says nothing about ungreying the menu entry).

          – PJTraill
          2 hours ago



















        What is an "xml table"? How do I find out if my file is one or has one? When I open a file like that, I see nothing in the "Map to document" window, though I see "<s:Table> lines in it. It comes from SOE Software's Clarity Election Night Reporting tool, e.g. the detail.xls file zipped inside results.enr.clarityelections.com/CO/63746/183083/reports/…

        – nealmcb
        Nov 12 '16 at 15:13







        What is an "xml table"? How do I find out if my file is one or has one? When I open a file like that, I see nothing in the "Map to document" window, though I see "<s:Table> lines in it. It comes from SOE Software's Clarity Election Night Reporting tool, e.g. the detail.xls file zipped inside results.enr.clarityelections.com/CO/63746/183083/reports/…

        – nealmcb
        Nov 12 '16 at 15:13















        Cool, this works in LibreOffice Calc 5.1 with sitemap.xml from a sitemap generator service. I can choose which column to be shown in the sheet. Thanks Waldir.

        – Ade Malsasa Akbar
        May 3 '18 at 8:28





        Cool, this works in LibreOffice Calc 5.1 with sitemap.xml from a sitemap generator service. I can choose which column to be shown in the sheet. Thanks Waldir.

        – Ade Malsasa Akbar
        May 3 '18 at 8:28













        Quite, what is an XML table? Is it a collection of repeated nodes all of which have the same set of attributes in a two- or three-level structure? Is it converted to a table with each row corresponding to one of the first-level nodes?

        – PJTraill
        2 hours ago







        Quite, what is an XML table? Is it a collection of repeated nodes all of which have the same set of attributes in a two- or three-level structure? Is it converted to a table with each row corresponding to one of the first-level nodes?

        – PJTraill
        2 hours ago















        When I try this (in LibreOffice Calc 6.1.3.2 on Open Suse Leap), XML source is greyed out in the Data menu – do I have to do something else first?

        – PJTraill
        2 hours ago





        When I try this (in LibreOffice Calc 6.1.3.2 on Open Suse Leap), XML source is greyed out in the Data menu – do I have to do something else first?

        – PJTraill
        2 hours ago













        Some documentation at wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Calc/XMLSource , as referenced in the Help (but it says nothing about ungreying the menu entry).

        – PJTraill
        2 hours ago







        Some documentation at wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Calc/XMLSource , as referenced in the Help (but it says nothing about ungreying the menu entry).

        – PJTraill
        2 hours ago















        2














        You can also use basex from the software center.



        sudo apt-get install basex



        BaseX is a very fast and light-weight, yet powerful XML database and XPath/XQuery processor, including support for the latest W3C Full Text and Update Recommendations. It supports large XML instances and offers a highly interactive front-end (basexgui).




        I don't have it installed but it has really high ratings from the software center.






        share|improve this answer
























        • Practical and ugly ;)

          – A.B.
          Apr 28 '15 at 14:58
















        2














        You can also use basex from the software center.



        sudo apt-get install basex



        BaseX is a very fast and light-weight, yet powerful XML database and XPath/XQuery processor, including support for the latest W3C Full Text and Update Recommendations. It supports large XML instances and offers a highly interactive front-end (basexgui).




        I don't have it installed but it has really high ratings from the software center.






        share|improve this answer
























        • Practical and ugly ;)

          – A.B.
          Apr 28 '15 at 14:58














        2












        2








        2







        You can also use basex from the software center.



        sudo apt-get install basex



        BaseX is a very fast and light-weight, yet powerful XML database and XPath/XQuery processor, including support for the latest W3C Full Text and Update Recommendations. It supports large XML instances and offers a highly interactive front-end (basexgui).




        I don't have it installed but it has really high ratings from the software center.






        share|improve this answer













        You can also use basex from the software center.



        sudo apt-get install basex



        BaseX is a very fast and light-weight, yet powerful XML database and XPath/XQuery processor, including support for the latest W3C Full Text and Update Recommendations. It supports large XML instances and offers a highly interactive front-end (basexgui).




        I don't have it installed but it has really high ratings from the software center.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Mar 14 '14 at 16:55









        PartoParto

        9,5841967105




        9,5841967105













        • Practical and ugly ;)

          – A.B.
          Apr 28 '15 at 14:58



















        • Practical and ugly ;)

          – A.B.
          Apr 28 '15 at 14:58

















        Practical and ugly ;)

        – A.B.
        Apr 28 '15 at 14:58





        Practical and ugly ;)

        – A.B.
        Apr 28 '15 at 14:58











        1














        The default Gedit text editor is capable of opening the file - I also suggest you try Bluefish, which can do XML as well HTML and other languages. It also does auto-completion, and highlighting.



        Here are examples of the above editors based on this:



        Bluefish screenshot



        enter image description hereN.B. With Gedit, you have to add some of the above by changing a few settings and activating a few plugins.






        share|improve this answer






























          1














          The default Gedit text editor is capable of opening the file - I also suggest you try Bluefish, which can do XML as well HTML and other languages. It also does auto-completion, and highlighting.



          Here are examples of the above editors based on this:



          Bluefish screenshot



          enter image description hereN.B. With Gedit, you have to add some of the above by changing a few settings and activating a few plugins.






          share|improve this answer




























            1












            1








            1







            The default Gedit text editor is capable of opening the file - I also suggest you try Bluefish, which can do XML as well HTML and other languages. It also does auto-completion, and highlighting.



            Here are examples of the above editors based on this:



            Bluefish screenshot



            enter image description hereN.B. With Gedit, you have to add some of the above by changing a few settings and activating a few plugins.






            share|improve this answer















            The default Gedit text editor is capable of opening the file - I also suggest you try Bluefish, which can do XML as well HTML and other languages. It also does auto-completion, and highlighting.



            Here are examples of the above editors based on this:



            Bluefish screenshot



            enter image description hereN.B. With Gedit, you have to add some of the above by changing a few settings and activating a few plugins.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Feb 25 '14 at 13:07

























            answered Feb 25 '14 at 13:00









            WilfWilf

            21.8k1167131




            21.8k1167131























                1














                XML Copy Editor is a fast, free, validating XML editor. It features DTD/XML Schema/RELAX NG validation, XSLT, XPath, pretty-printing, syntax highlighting, folding, tag completion/locking, and a spelling/style check. XML Copy Editor can be installed from the Ubuntu Software Center.



                XML Copy Editor debugger (xmlcopyeditor-dbg) is an optional add-on for XML Copy Editor that can also be installed from the Ubuntu Software Center.



                enter image description here






                share|improve this answer






























                  1














                  XML Copy Editor is a fast, free, validating XML editor. It features DTD/XML Schema/RELAX NG validation, XSLT, XPath, pretty-printing, syntax highlighting, folding, tag completion/locking, and a spelling/style check. XML Copy Editor can be installed from the Ubuntu Software Center.



                  XML Copy Editor debugger (xmlcopyeditor-dbg) is an optional add-on for XML Copy Editor that can also be installed from the Ubuntu Software Center.



                  enter image description here






                  share|improve this answer




























                    1












                    1








                    1







                    XML Copy Editor is a fast, free, validating XML editor. It features DTD/XML Schema/RELAX NG validation, XSLT, XPath, pretty-printing, syntax highlighting, folding, tag completion/locking, and a spelling/style check. XML Copy Editor can be installed from the Ubuntu Software Center.



                    XML Copy Editor debugger (xmlcopyeditor-dbg) is an optional add-on for XML Copy Editor that can also be installed from the Ubuntu Software Center.



                    enter image description here






                    share|improve this answer















                    XML Copy Editor is a fast, free, validating XML editor. It features DTD/XML Schema/RELAX NG validation, XSLT, XPath, pretty-printing, syntax highlighting, folding, tag completion/locking, and a spelling/style check. XML Copy Editor can be installed from the Ubuntu Software Center.



                    XML Copy Editor debugger (xmlcopyeditor-dbg) is an optional add-on for XML Copy Editor that can also be installed from the Ubuntu Software Center.



                    enter image description here







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Apr 30 '15 at 14:11

























                    answered Apr 30 '15 at 13:47









                    karelkarel

                    60.6k13132155




                    60.6k13132155























                        0














                        In case you don't succeed with LibreOffice, try using SoftMaker FreeOffice. This free office suite has much better import and export filters that let you run Microsoft Office formats faithfully. The whole office suite is feature-packed, but needs only 58MB. It's well coded, very fast and reliable. Here's the link where to get it:



                        www.freeoffice.com






                        share|improve this answer
























                        • Kingsoft Office is also worth a try: wpscommunity.org

                          – s3lph
                          Mar 14 '14 at 15:52
















                        0














                        In case you don't succeed with LibreOffice, try using SoftMaker FreeOffice. This free office suite has much better import and export filters that let you run Microsoft Office formats faithfully. The whole office suite is feature-packed, but needs only 58MB. It's well coded, very fast and reliable. Here's the link where to get it:



                        www.freeoffice.com






                        share|improve this answer
























                        • Kingsoft Office is also worth a try: wpscommunity.org

                          – s3lph
                          Mar 14 '14 at 15:52














                        0












                        0








                        0







                        In case you don't succeed with LibreOffice, try using SoftMaker FreeOffice. This free office suite has much better import and export filters that let you run Microsoft Office formats faithfully. The whole office suite is feature-packed, but needs only 58MB. It's well coded, very fast and reliable. Here's the link where to get it:



                        www.freeoffice.com






                        share|improve this answer













                        In case you don't succeed with LibreOffice, try using SoftMaker FreeOffice. This free office suite has much better import and export filters that let you run Microsoft Office formats faithfully. The whole office suite is feature-packed, but needs only 58MB. It's well coded, very fast and reliable. Here's the link where to get it:



                        www.freeoffice.com







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Mar 14 '14 at 14:32









                        user258232user258232

                        1




                        1













                        • Kingsoft Office is also worth a try: wpscommunity.org

                          – s3lph
                          Mar 14 '14 at 15:52



















                        • Kingsoft Office is also worth a try: wpscommunity.org

                          – s3lph
                          Mar 14 '14 at 15:52

















                        Kingsoft Office is also worth a try: wpscommunity.org

                        – s3lph
                        Mar 14 '14 at 15:52





                        Kingsoft Office is also worth a try: wpscommunity.org

                        – s3lph
                        Mar 14 '14 at 15:52











                        0














                        You may find XMLStarlet useful, if you are familiar with XPATH concepts (or prepared to learn them).



                        This is a command-line tool which can select data from an XML file on the basis of the types of elements and the values of their attributes or those of related elements. I am not sure if it is easy to generate a CSV file or other suitable for loading into LibreOffice (if that is your aim), or whether you would need to transform it a little first. (I shall try to remember to update this if I find out more.)



                        The examples given in the Wikipedia article (link above) show the command as xml (e.g. xml sel for a selection), but in my case (OpenSuse Leap) it is xmlstarlet, which is also the package to install; I do not know what the situation is for Ubuntu.





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                          0














                          You may find XMLStarlet useful, if you are familiar with XPATH concepts (or prepared to learn them).



                          This is a command-line tool which can select data from an XML file on the basis of the types of elements and the values of their attributes or those of related elements. I am not sure if it is easy to generate a CSV file or other suitable for loading into LibreOffice (if that is your aim), or whether you would need to transform it a little first. (I shall try to remember to update this if I find out more.)



                          The examples given in the Wikipedia article (link above) show the command as xml (e.g. xml sel for a selection), but in my case (OpenSuse Leap) it is xmlstarlet, which is also the package to install; I do not know what the situation is for Ubuntu.





                          share








                          New contributor




                          PJTraill is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                          Check out our Code of Conduct.























                            0












                            0








                            0







                            You may find XMLStarlet useful, if you are familiar with XPATH concepts (or prepared to learn them).



                            This is a command-line tool which can select data from an XML file on the basis of the types of elements and the values of their attributes or those of related elements. I am not sure if it is easy to generate a CSV file or other suitable for loading into LibreOffice (if that is your aim), or whether you would need to transform it a little first. (I shall try to remember to update this if I find out more.)



                            The examples given in the Wikipedia article (link above) show the command as xml (e.g. xml sel for a selection), but in my case (OpenSuse Leap) it is xmlstarlet, which is also the package to install; I do not know what the situation is for Ubuntu.





                            share








                            New contributor




                            PJTraill is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                            Check out our Code of Conduct.










                            You may find XMLStarlet useful, if you are familiar with XPATH concepts (or prepared to learn them).



                            This is a command-line tool which can select data from an XML file on the basis of the types of elements and the values of their attributes or those of related elements. I am not sure if it is easy to generate a CSV file or other suitable for loading into LibreOffice (if that is your aim), or whether you would need to transform it a little first. (I shall try to remember to update this if I find out more.)



                            The examples given in the Wikipedia article (link above) show the command as xml (e.g. xml sel for a selection), but in my case (OpenSuse Leap) it is xmlstarlet, which is also the package to install; I do not know what the situation is for Ubuntu.






                            share








                            New contributor




                            PJTraill is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                            Check out our Code of Conduct.








                            share


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                            New contributor




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                            answered 6 mins ago









                            PJTraillPJTraill

                            1013




                            1013




                            New contributor




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                            New contributor





                            PJTraill is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                            Check out our Code of Conduct.






























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