JXPath provides APIs for traversal of graphs of JavaBeans, DOM and other types of objects using the XPath syntax.
If you are not familiar with the XPath syntax, start with XPath Tutorial by W3Schools.
See also XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0 - that's the official standard.
XPath is the official expression language of XSLT. In XSLT, you mostly use XPath to access various elements of XML documents. You can do that with JXPath as well. In addition, you can read and write properties of JavaBeans, get and set elements of arrays, collections, maps, transparent containers, various context objects in Servlets etc. In other words, JXPath applies the concepts of XPath to alternate object models.
You can also have JXPath create new objects if needed.
        The central class in the JXPath architecture is
        JXPathContext.
        Most of the APIs discussed in this document have to do with the
        JXPathContext class.
      
JXPath uses JavaBeans introspection to enumerate and access JavaBeans properties.
        The interpretation of the XPath syntax in the context of Java
        object graphs is quite intuitive: the "child"
        axis of XPath is mapped to JavaBean properties. In fact, 
        the "attribute:" axis is mapped exactly the same way,
        so the "child::" and "attribute:" axes
        can be used interchangeably with JavaBeans.
      
JXPath can be used to access properties of a JavaBean.
public class Employee {
    public String getFirstName(){
       ...
    }
}
Employee emp = new Employee();
...
JXPathContext context = JXPathContext.newContext(emp);
String fName = (String)context.getValue("firstName");
          In this example, we are using JXPath to access a property
          of the emp  bean. In this simple case the
          invocation of JXPath is equivalent to invocation of
          getFirstName()  on the bean.
        
          Note that using the XPath "@firstName" instead of 
          "firstName" would produce the same result, because the 
          "child::" and "attribute::" axes are equivalent.
        
          The context.getValue(xpath)  method throws
          an exception if the supplied XPath does not map to an
          existing property. This constraint can be relaxed by
          calling context.setLenient(true). In the
          lenient mode the method merely returns null if the path
          maps to nothing.
        
JXPath can traverse object graphs:
 public class Employee {
    public Address getHomeAddress(){
       ...
    }
 }
 public class Address {
    public String getStreetNumber(){
       ...
    }
 }
 Employee emp = new Employee();
 ...
 JXPathContext context = JXPathContext.newContext(emp);
 String sNumber = (String)context.getValue("homeAddress/streetNumber");
 In this case XPath is used to access a property of a nested bean.
A property identified by the XPath does not have to be a "leaf" property. For instance, we can extract the whole Address object in above example:
    Address addr = (Address)context.getValue("homeAddress");
 JXPath can extract elements from arrays and collections.
 public class Integers {
    public int[] getNumbers(){
       ...
    }
 }
 Integers ints = new Integers();
 ...
 JXPathContext context = JXPathContext.newContext(ints);
 Integer thirdInt = (Integer)context.getValue("numbers[3]");
 A collection can be an arbitrary array or an instance of java.util.Collection. JXPath also supports indexed properties according to the JavaBeans specification.
Note: in XPath the first element of a collection has index 1, not 0.
          JXPath can retrieve multiple objects from a graph. Note
          that the method called in this case is not getValue,
          but iterate.
        
 public class Author {
    public Book[] getBooks(){
       ...
    }
 }
 Author auth = new Author();
 ...
 JXPathContext context = JXPathContext.newContext(auth);
 Iterator threeBooks = context.iterate("books[position() < 4]");
 This returns an iterator over at most three books from the array of all books written by the author.
          JXPath supports maps. To get a value use its key as the name in 
          a child::name construct.
        
 public class Employee {
    private Map addressMap = new HashMap();
    {
        addressMap.put("home", new Address(...));
        addressMap.put("office", new Address(...));
    }
    public Map getAddresses(){
       return addressMap;
    }
    ...
 }
 Employee emp = new Employee();
 JXPathContext context = JXPathContext.newContext(emp);
 String homeZipCode =
        (String)context.getValue("addresses/home/zipCode");
 Often you will need to use the alternative syntax for accessing Map elements:
 String homeZipCode = (String)context.
        getValue("addresses[@name='home']/zipCode");
 Unlike a child name in XPath, the value of the "name" attribute does not have to be a properly formed identifier. Also, in this case the key can be an expression, e.g. a variable.
The attribute "name" can be used not only with Maps, but with JavaBeans as well. The value of this attribute represents the name of a property.
Note: At this point JXPath only supports Maps that use strings for keys.
Note:  JXPath supports the extended notion of Map: any
          object similar to Map, i.e. having some kind of API for accessing
          values by key, can be handled by JXPath
          provided that its class is registered with the
          JXPathIntrospector.
          The term JXPath uses for such objects is "objects with Dynamic Properties".
        
JXPath supports DynaBeans as well. DynaBeans are treated exactly the same way as JavaBeans.
          JXPath supports access to DOM and JDOM Nodes. The DOM/JDOM node can be
          the context node of JXPathContext or it can be a value of a
          property, element of a collection, value of a variable etc.
          Let's say we have a path "$foo/bar/baz".
          It will find the desired node if, for instance, the value of the variable
          "foo" is a JavaBean, whose property "bar" contains a DOM/JDOM
          Node, which has a child element named "baz".
        
The intepretation of XPath over DOM/JDOM structures is implemented in accordance with the XPath specification.
          JXPathContext has two similar sets of APIs: 
          getValue(xpath)/iterate(xpath) and
          selectSingleNode(xpath)/selectNodes(xpath).  
          With JavaBeans and similar Java object
          models, these sets of APIs are effectively equivalent. However, with DOM/JDOM
          there is a difference: selectSingleNode(xpath) and
          selectNodes(xpath) return Nodes, while
          getValue() and iterate(xpath) return textual contents
          of those nodes. 
        
Consider the following XML document:
    <?xml version="1.0" ?>
    <address>
      <street>Orchard Road</street>
    </address>
          With the same XPath, getValue("/address/street"), will
          return the string "Orchard Road", 
          while selectSingleNode("/address/street") -
          an object of type Element (DOM or JDOM, depending on the
          type of parser used). The returned Element is, of course,
          <street>Orchard Road</street>.
        
          When using namespaces, it is important to remember that XPath matches 
          qualified names (QNames) based on the namespace URI, not on the prefix. 
          Therefore the XPath
          "//foo:bar" may not find a node named "foo:bar" if the prefix
          "foo" in the context of the node and in the execution context 
          of the XPath are mapped to different URIs.  Conversely, "//foo:bar"
          will find the node named "biz:bar", if "foo" in the
          execution context and "biz" in the node context are mapped
          to the same URI.
        
          In order to use a namespace prefix with JXPath, that prefix should be
          known to JXPathContext. JXPathContext knows about namespace prefixes
          declared on the document element of the context node (the one passed
          to JXPathContext.newContext(node)), as well as the ones 
          explicitly registered using the 
          JXPathContext.registerNamespace(prefix, namespaceURI) method.
        
A Container is an object implementing an indirection mechanism transparent to JXPath.
          For example, if property "foo"  of the
          context node has a Container as its value, the XPath "foo"
          will produce the contents of that Container, not the
          container itself.
        
          An example of a useful container is
          XMLDocumentContainer.
          When you create an XMLDocumentContainer, you give it a
          pointer to an XML file (a URL  or a
          javax.xml.transform.Source). It will read
          and parse the XML file only when it is accessed. You can
          create XMLDocumentContainers for various XML documents that
          may or may not be accessed by XPaths. If they are, they
          will be automatically read, parsed and traversed. If they
          are not- they won't be read at all. Of course, once XMLDocumentContainer
          has read its XML file, it will cache the parse results for
          a future use.
        
Let's say we have the the following XML file, which is stored as a Java resource.
    <?xml version="1.0" ?>
    <vendor>
      <location id="store101">
        <address>
          <street>Orchard Road</street>
        </address>
      </location>
      <location id="store102">
        <address>
          <street>Tangerine Drive</street>
        </address>
      </location>
    </vendor>
Here's the code that makes use of XMLDocumentContainer.
 class Company {
    private Container locations = null;
    public Container getLocations(){
        if (locations == null){
            URL url = getClass().getResource("Vendor.xml");
            locations = new XMLDocumentContainer(url);
        }
        return locations;
    }
 }
 ...
 context = JXPathContext.newContext(new Company());
 ...
 String street = (String)context.getValue(
                "locations/vendor/location[@id = 'store102']//street");
Like was described before, this code will implicitly open and parse the XML file and find a value in it according to the XPath.
          Functions id() and key() can be
          used with JXPath, however most of the time that requires custom
          coding.
        
          The only situation where no custom coding is needed is when
          you want to use the id() function and you have
          a DOM Node as the context node of the JXPathContext. In
          this case, JXPath will use the standard behavior of DOM.
        
          In order to evaluate the id() function, JXPath
          calls a delegate object that should be implemented and installed
          on the JXPathContext.  The object should implement the
          IdentityManager
          interface.
        
          Similarly, the key() function relies on a custom
          implementation of the
          KeyManager
          interface.
        
The interpretation of XPath over XML models like DOM and JDOM is governed by the XPath standard. There is no official standard for the interpretation of XPaths on other types of models: beans, maps etc. This part describes how JXPath performs such interpretation.
In DOM/JDOM the definition of a node's parent is clear: a Node always points to its parent. XML is a strict tree, so there always exactly one parent for every node except the root.
With other models the situation is more complex. An general object model can not be described as a tree. In many cases it is a complicated graph with many paths to the same node and even referential cycles where node A is node B's child, but also node B is node A's child. Even if the graph is a strict tree, a node of that tree may not have a pointer to its parent.
          Because of all these issues, JXPath abandons the static notion
          of a parent/child relationship in favor of a dynamic one.
          When an XPath is evaluated, the engine performs a series of searches
          and computations in so called evaluation contexts.  For example,
          when the "/foo/bar" path is evaluated, JXPath first looks
          for a node named "foo" in the root evaluation context.
          If such a node is found, the interpreter forms a new context
          for the discovered node and searches for a node named "bar" in
          that context.
        
This chain of contexts is used in JXPath to define the parent-child relationship. Parent is the base node of the previous evaluation context in the chain. A more appropriate name for the "parent::" axis would then be "step back".
          Consider this example.  The evaluated path is
          "foo//bar/../baz".  In the process of evaluating of this
          path, the engine will walk the graph forming chains of context like
          "/foo/a/b/c/bar".  Once a node with the name "bar" is found,
          the engine will "step back": in our case it will go back to the
          "/foo/a/b/c" context and then look for the node with
          the name "baz" in that context.
        
          Exercise: think about how the path
          "//foo[../@name='bar']" would be interpreted.
        
Solution:
"../@name='bar'", step back
              to the previous context, which is the context of
              the node "biz" to see if it has an attribute called "name". If so,
              compare the value of that attribute to "bar". If it is equal,
              include the current "foo" node in the result set.
            The dynamic interpretation of the parent/child relationship affects most axes including "parent::", "ancestor::", "preceding::", "following::" etc.
The XPath standard defines the term "document order" as the order in which pieces of XML follow each other in the textual representation. This definition is not applicable directly to non-XML models.
Results of many types of xpaths depend on the document order, so we cannot leave it as "unpredictable" or "undefined" for such nodes as JavaBeans or Maps. In order to have a predictable order, JXPath sorts properties of beans and keys of maps alphabetically.
For JavaBeans and Maps the "attribute::" axis is interpreted the same as the "child::" axis.
The only distinctions are "xml:lang", "xml:space", and "name".
          Attribute xml:lang refers to the name of the locale
          associated with the node.  In XML the xml:lang attribute
          can be specifed for an element explicitly. In non-XML models,
          the locale is associated with the whole JXPathContext.  Unless
          explicitly set it is the application's default locale.
        
          Since version 1.3, the xml:space attribute can be used
          in an XML model to direct JXPath's interpretation of embedded
          whitespace among XML content and nested text. In previous versions
          this data was trimmed, and this has been preserved as the default
          behavior for reasons of backward compatibility. Specifying
          xml:space="preserve" will cause JXPath to preserve
          whitespace. Keep in mind that it is possible to specify default
          attribute values using DTD or XML schema, so that there exists a
          straightforward and standards-based way to enable whitespace
          preservation by default at the document or element level.
        
          The name attribute is primarily used when
          working with Maps.  Often elements of a Map can be retrieved
          using the "child::" axis.  For example, if "foo" in "foo/bar"
          refers to a Map then the path extracts from the map the value for the key
          "bar".  The syntax of XPath requires that a child name be a properly
          formed identifier.  Now, what if the key we are looking for is "?%$",
          which is not an identifier.  In this case we can use the "name"
          attribute like this:  "foo[@name='?%$']".  This path
          is not interpreted as "find a 'foo' that has the name '?%$'". It is
          interpreted as "find a 'foo' and get the value for the key '?%$'"
          from it.  This interpretation is used for maps and beans only.
          In the case of XML, "name" is treated like any other attribute.
        
Exceptions thrown by accessor methods are treated differently depending on the evaluated XPath and the particular method used to do the evaluation.
        The basic idea is that if JXPath is looking for something by
        iterating over all properties of a bean and during that iteration
        an accessor method for one of these properties throws an exception,
        JXPath ignores the exception and moves on to the next property.
        This could happen if the method is iterate() or
        if the path contains search axes like "descendant::", "ancestor::" etc.
      
In all other cases, an exception thrown by an accessor method is wrapped into a JXPathException and re-thrown.
JXPath can also be used to modify parts of object graphs: property values, values for keys in Maps. It can in some cases create intermediate nodes in object graphs.
JXPath can be used to modify property values.
 public class Employee {
    public Address getAddress() {
       ...
    }
    public void setAddress(Address address) {
       ...
    }
 }
 Employee emp = new Employee();
 Address addr = new Address();
 ...
 JXPathContext context = JXPathContext.newContext(emp);
 context.setValue("address", addr);
 context.setValue("address/zipCode", "90190");
 
          JXPath can be used to create new objects. First, create a
          subclass of
          AbstractFactory
          and install it on the JXPathContext. Then call
          jxPathContext.createPath(xpath).
          JXPathContext will invoke your AbstractFactory when it
          discovers that an intermediate node of the path is null.
          It will not override existing nodes.
        
 public class AddressFactory extends AbstractFactory {
    public boolean createObject(JXPathContext context, Pointer pointer,
                                Object parent, String name, int index){
     if ((parent instanceof Employee) && name.equals("address"){
       ((Employee)parent).setAddress(new Address());
       return true;
     }
     return false;
   }
 }
 JXPathContext context = JXPathContext.newContext(emp);
 context.setFactory(new AddressFactory());
 context.createPath("address");
          You can also combine creating a path with setting the value
          of the leaf: the createPathAndSetValue(path, value)
          method is used for that.
        
 context.createPathAndSetValue("address/zipCode", "90190");
Note that it only makes sense to use the automatic creation of nodes with very simple paths. In fact, JXPath will not attempt to create intermediate nodes for paths that don't follow these three rules:
"foo/bar/@baz"
            "[@name = expr]"
              construct, e.g. "map[@name='key1'][4/2]".
            "$object/child".
            JXPath supports the notion of variables. The XPath syntax for accessing variables is "$varName".
 public class Author {
    public Book[] getBooks(){
       ...
    }
 }
 Author auth = new Author();
 ...
 JXPathContext context = JXPathContext.newContext(auth);
 context.getVariables().declareVariable("index", new Integer(2));
 Book secondBook = (Book)context.getValue("books[$index]");
 You can also set variables using JXPath:
 context.setValue("$index", new Integer(3));
 Note:  generally speaking, you can only change  the
        value of an existing variable this way, you cannot define
        a new variable. If you do want to be able to define a new variable
        dynamically, implement a defineVariable()
        method on your custom AbstractFactory and call
        createPathAndSetValue()  rather than
        setValue(). The restrictions described in the
        "Creating Objects" section still apply.
      
When a variable contains a JavaBean or a collection, you can traverse the bean or collection as well:
 ...
 context.getVariables().declareVariable("book", myBook);
 String title = (String)context.getValue("$book/title);
 Book array[] = new Book[]{...};
 context.getVariables().declareVariable("books", array);
 String title = (String)context.getValue("$books[2]/title);
 By default, JXPathContext creates a HashMap of variables. However, you can substitute a custom implementation of the Variables interface to make JXPath work with an alternative source of variables. For example, you can define implementations of Variables that cover a servlet context, HTTP request or any similar structure.
See the org.apache.commons.jxpath.servlet package for an example of just that.
        The org.apache.commons.jxpath.servlet  package
        contains classes that make it easy to use XPath to access
        values in various sevlet contexts: "page" (for JSPs),
        "request", "session" and "application".
      
        See static methods of the class
        JXPathServletContexts.
        They allocate various servlet-related JXPathContexts.
      
          The JXPathContext returned by
          getPageContext(PageContext pageContext)
          provides access to all scopes via the
          PageContext.findAttribute()  method. Thus,
          an expression like "foo"  will first look
          for the attribute named "foo"  in the
          "page"  context, then the "request"
          context, then the "session"  one and
          finally in the "application"  context.
        
          If you need to limit the attibute lookup to just one scope,
          you can use the pre-definded variables "page",
          "request", "session"  and
          "application". For example, the
          expression "$session/foo"  extracts the
          value of the session  attribute named "foo".
        
          The
          getRequestContext(ServletRequest request, ServletContext servletContext)
          method will give you a context that checks the request
          scope first, then (if there is a session) the session
          context, then the application context.
        
          The
          getSessionContext(HttpSession session, ServletContext servletContext)
          method will give you a context that checks the session
          context, then the application context.
        
          Finally,
          getApplicationContext(ServletContext servletContext)
          method will give you a context that checks the application
          context.
        
All these methods cache the JXPathContexts they create within the corresponding scopes. Subsequent calls use the JXPathContexts created earlier.
        Often, rather than getting a node in the object graph, you need to 
        find out where in the graph that node is.  In such situations you
        will need to employ Pointers. A Pointer is an object that
        represents the specific location in the object graph. Effectively,
        it is a simple XPath leading from the context root to the selected
        node. That simple XPath can be used to repeatedly acquire the same
        node of the graph without performing a costly search. 
        Let's say, you invoke the JXPath search process by calling the 
        getPointer() method:
      
Pointer ptr = context.getPointer("//address[zipCode='90190']")
System.out.println(ptr);
         This code will find the address with zipCode = 90190 and
         return a Pointer describing that node's location. The printed line 
         will look something like this:
         /vendor[2]/location[1]/address[3].  It
         provides an unambiguous description of the node's location in the object graph
         and a fast XPath leading directly to that node.
       
Here's another example:
Pointer ptr = context.getPointer("employees[$i]/addresses[$j]")
        Let's say, at the time of execution the value of the variable i is 1 
        and j = 3. If we call ptr.asPath(), it returns a simple 
        XPath: "/employees[1]/addresses[3]"; this path does not
        have a dependency on the variables, it will remain the same when the
        variables change.
      
If you need to perform an exhaustive search for all nodes in the graph matching a certain XPath, you can get JXPath to produce an iterator returning pointers for all of discovered locations:
Iterator homeAddresses = context.iteratePointers("//employee/address[@name='home']");
Each Pointer returned by the iterator will represent a home address object in the graph.
It is a good idea to use pointers whenever you need to access the same node of a graph repeatedly.
JXPath is optimized to interpret XPaths produced by Pointers much faster than many other types of XPaths.
If you need to evaluate multiple paths relative to a certain node in the object graph, you might want to create a relative JXPathContext.
        First, obtain the pointer for the location that is supposed to be the root
        the relative context. Then obtain the relative context by calling
        context.getRelativeContext(pointer).
      
 JXPathContext context = JXPathContext.newContext(bean);
 Pointer addressPtr = context.getPointer("/employees[1]/addresses[2]");
 JXPathContext relativeContext = 
              context.getRelativeContext(addressPtr);
 // Evaluate relative path 
 String zipCode = (String)relativeContext.getValue("zipCode");
 // Evaluate absolute path
 String name = (String)relativeContext.getValue("/employees[1]/name");
 // Use the parent axis to locate the employee for the current address
 Double salary = (Double)relativeContext.getValue("../salary");
 JXPath supports standard XPath functions right out of the box. It also supports "standard" extension functions, which are basically a bridge to Java, as well as entirely custom extension functions.
Using the standard extension functions, you can call methods on objects, static methods on classes and create objects using any constructors. All class names should be fully qualified.
Here's how you can create new objects:
 Book book = (Book)context.
   getValue("com.myco.books.Book.new('John Updike')");
Here's how you can call static methods:
 Book book = (Book)context.
   getValue("com.myco.books.Book.getBestBook('John Updike')");
Here's how you can call regular methods:
 String firstName = (String)context.
   getValue("getAuthorsFirstName($book)");
 As you can see, the target of the method is specified as the first parameter of the function.
          Collections of custom extension functions can be
          implemented as
          Functions
          objects or as Java classes, whose methods become extension
          functions.
        
Let's say the following class implements various formatting operations:
 public class Formats {
    public static String date(Date d, String pattern){
        return new SimpleDateFormat(pattern).format(d);
    }
    ...
 }
We can register this class with a JXPathContext:
 context.setFunctions(new ClassFunctions(Formats.class, "format"));
 ...
 context.getVariables().declareVariable("today", new Date());
 String today =
     (String)context.getValue("format:date($today, 'MM/dd/yyyy')");
You can also register whole packages of Java classes using PackageFunctions.
          Also, see
          FunctionLibrary,
          which is a class that allows you to register multiple sets
          of extension functions with the same JXPathContext.
        
          A custom function can get access to the context in which it
          is being evaluated. ClassFunctions and PackageFunctions
          have special support for methods and constructors that have
          ExpressionContext
          as the first argument. When such an extension function is
          invoked, it is passed an object that implements the
          ExpressionContext interface. The function can then gain
          access to the "current" object in the currently evaluated
          context.
        
public class MyExtensionFunctions {
   public static boolean isDate(ExpressionContext context){
      Pointer pointer = context.getContextNodePointer();
      if (pointer == null){
        return false;
      }
      return pointer.getValue() instanceof Date;
   }
   ...
}
You can then register this extension function using ClassFunctions and call it like this:
  "//.[myext:isDate()]"
This expression will find all nodes of the graph that are dates.
         There are two ways a collection can be passed to an extension function:
         as a NodeSet
         or as a Collection proper.  If the argument type is declared
         as NodeSet, JXPath will pass a NodeSet object, otherwise it will take values
         out of the node set and pass those to the function as a regular collection.
         NodeSet, in addition to providing access to the values, also provides access
         to pointers.
         Note that a collection is often passed to an extension function by value and
         cannot be modified.
        
public class MyExtensionFunctions {
   ...
   public static boolean contains(NodeSet nodeSet, Object value){
      Iterator iter = nodeSet.getPointers().iterator();
      while (iter.hasNext()) {
          Pointer item = (Pointer)iter.next();
          if (item.getValue().equals(value)){
            return true;
          }
      }
      return false;
   }
   
   // Alternative implementation
   public static boolean contains(List list, Object value){
      Iterator iter = list.iterator();
      while (iter.hasNext()) {
          Object item = iter.next();
          if (item.getValue().equals(value)){
            return true;
          }
      }
      return false;
   }
}
You can call this function to find all people who have a certain phone number:
  "/addressBook/contact[myext:contains(phoneNumbers, '555-5555']"
In JXPath version 1.1, a function argument declared as Object would be passed as a NodeSet. In version 1.2, this behavior was changed such that a declared argument type of Object triggers the conversion of the NodeSet to its list of values. The simplest way to avoid this conversion, thereby receiving the untouched NodeSet as the function argument, is to declare the argument as a NodeSet. For such times as this may prove impractical, however, a version 1.1-compatible TypeConverter implementation, (org.apache.commons.jxpath.util.JXPath11CompatibleTypeConverter), has been provided in version 1.3. To enable this:
TypeUtils.setTypeConverter(new JXPath11CompatibleTypeConverter());
A custom function can return a collection of arbitrary objects or a NodeSet. The simple implementation of NodeSet, BasicNodeSet, may come in handy.
JXPath automatically performs the following type conversions:
| From type | To type | Operation | 
|---|---|---|
| null | primitive | false, zero | 
| null | string | "" | 
| any non-null object | String | Calls toString() | 
| Boolean | any Number | True = 1, false = 0 | 
| any Number | any other Number | Truncates if needed | 
| String | any primitive type | Parses the string | 
| array | array | Creates a new array of the same size and converts every element | 
| array | Collection | Creates a collection and adds to it all elements of the array. Note that it will only know how to create the collection if the type is a concrete class, List or Set | 
| Collection | array | Creates a new array the same size as the collection, converts and copies every element of the collection into the array. | 
| Collection | Collection | Creates a collection and copies the source collection into the new collection. Note that it will only know how to create the collection if the type is a concrete class, List or Set | 
| non-empty array | any | Takes the first element of the array and (recursively) converts it to the needed type | 
| non-empty collection | any | Takes the first element of the array and (recursively) converts it to the needed type | 
| NodeSet | any | Extracts a list of values from the NodeSet and (recursively) converts the list to the needed type. | 
For DOM Documents JXPathContext supports internationalization XPath-style. A locale can be declared on an XML Element like this:
     <book xml:lang="fr">Les Miserables</book>
        You can then use the lang  function in XPath
        to find nodes for a specific language:
      
     "//book[lang('fr')]
        The "lang"  boolean function is supported for
        non-DOM objects as well. It tests the Locale set on the
        JXPathContext (or the default locale). See
        JXPathContext.setLocale().
      
        You can also utilize the xml:lang  attribute,
        whose value is the name of the locale, whether in a DOM
        document or outside.
      
If you need to use the same configuration (variables, functions, abstract factories, locale, leniency etc.) while interpreting XPaths with different beans, it makes sense to put the configuration in a separate context and specify that context as a parent context every time you allocate a new JXPathContext for a JavaBean. This way you don't need to waste time fully configuring every context.
 JXPathContext sharedContext = JXPathContext.newContext(null);
 sharedContext.getVariables().declareVariable("title", "Java");
 sharedContext.setFunctions(new MyExtensionFunctions());
 sharedContext.setLocale(Locale.CANADA);
 sharedContext.setFactory(new MyFactory());
 ...
 JXPathContext context = JXPathContext.newContext(sharedContext, auth);
 Iterator javaBooks =
      context.iterate("books[preprocessTitle(title) = $title]");
 When JXPath is asked to evaluate an expression for the first time, it compiles it and caches its compiled representation. This mechanism reduces the overhead caused by compilation. However, in some cases JXPath's own caching may not be sufficient- JXPath caches have limited size and they are automatically cleared once in a while.
Here's how you can precompile an XPath expression:
     CompiledExpression expr = context.compile(xpath);
     ...
     Object value = expr.getValue(context);
Use compiled expressions if you need to satisfy any of the following requirements:
JXPath can be customized on several levels.
          JXPath uses JavaBeans introspection to discover properties
          of JavaBeans. You can provide alternative property lists by
          supplying custom JXPathBeanInfo classes (see
          JXPathBeanInfo).
        
JXPath uses various implementations of the DynamicPropertyHandler interface to access properties of objects similar to Map.
          The org.apache.commons.jxpath.servlet
          package has several examples of custom
          DynamicPropertyHandlers.
        
          Architecturally, multiple model support is made possible by
          the notions of a
          NodePointer
          and
          NodeIterator,
          which are simple abstract classes that are extended in
          different ways to traverse graphs of objects of different
          kinds. The NodePointer/NodeIterator APIs are designed with
          models like JavaBeans in mind. They directly support
          indexed collections. As a result, XPaths like
          "foo[10]"  can be executed as
          "getFoo(9)"  or "getFoo()[9]",
          or "getFoo().get(9)", depending on the
          type of collection. This flexibility is disguised well
          enough by the APIs of the abstract classes, so we can still
          have a natural implementation of traversal of object
          models, such as DOM, that do not have the same notion of
          collection.
        
To add support for a new object model, build custom implementations of NodePointer and NodeIterator as well as NodePointerFactory. Then register the new factory with JXPathContextReferenceImpl.
See existing NodePointerFactories for examples of how that's done:
          The core JXPath class, JXPathContext, allows for alternative implementations. 
          This is why instead of allocating JXPathContext directly, you
          should call a static newContext  method.
          This method will utilize the JXPathContextFactory API to
          locate a suitable implementation of JXPath. JXPath comes
          bundled with a default implementation called Reference
          Implementation.