LINQ to XML is a great place to start. Consider the following code to parse your XML.
string xml = @"<?xml version=""1.0"" encoding=""utf-8""?>
<block1>
<file name=""c:w0.xml"">
<word>Text</word>
<number>67</number>
</file>
<file name=""c:w1.xml"">
<word>Text</word>
<number>67</number>
</file>
<file name=""c:w2.xml"">
<word>Text</word>
<number>67</number>
</file>
</block1>";
XDocument document = XDocument.Parse(xml);
var block = from file in document.Descendants("file")
select new
{
Name = file.Attribute ("name").Value,
Word = file.Element("word").Value,
Number = (int)file.Element("number")
};
foreach (var file in block)
{
Console.WriteLine("{0}{1}{2}", file.Name, file.Word, file.Number );
}
You can, of course, load the XML directly from a file using XDocument.Load instead of using Parse to read an XML string. XDocument is in the System.Xml.Linq namespace. Frankly, I would start there, but there are other options to work with XML in the System.Xml namespace (XmlReader.Create, etc.).
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