I recommend just parsing to a DataFrame first, similar to how you are already (see below for my implementation) and then tweaking it to your requirements.
Then you're looking for a pivot
:
In [11]: df
Out[11]:
child Time grandchild
0 blah 1200 100
1 blah 1300 30
2 abc 1200 2
3 abc 1300 4
4 abc 1400 2
In [12]: df.pivot('Time', 'child', 'grandchild')
Out[12]:
child abc blah
Time
1200 2 100
1300 4 30
1400 2 NaN
I recommend first parse from a file and take out the things you want into a list of tuples:
from lxml import etree
root = etree.parse(file_name)
parents = root.getchildren()[0].getchildren()
In [21]: elems = [(p.attrib['name'], int(c.attrib['Time']), int(gc.text))
for p in parents
for c in p
for gc in c]
In [22]: elems
Out[22]:
[('blah', 1200, 100),
('blah', 1300, 30),
('blah', 1400, 70),
('abc', 1200, 2),
('abc', 1300, 4),
('abc', 1400, 2)]
For multiple files you could just whack it in an even longer list comprehension. Which shouldn't be too slow unless you have a huge number of xmls (here files
is the list of xmls)...
elems = [(p.attrib['name'], int(c.attrib['Time']), int(gc.text))
for f in files
for p in etree.parse(f).getchildren()[0].getchildren()
for c in p
for gc in c]
Put them in a DataFrame:
In [23]: pd.DataFrame(elems, columns=['child', 'Time', 'grandchild'])
Out[23]:
child Time grandchild
0 blah 1200 100
1 blah 1300 30
2 blah 1400 70
3 abc 1200 2
4 abc 1300 4
5 abc 1400 2
then do the pivot. :)
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