The docx is a zip file containing an XML of the document. You can open the zip, read the document and parse data using ElementTree.
The advantage of this technique is that you don't need any extra python libraries installed.
import zipfile
import xml.etree.ElementTree
WORD_NAMESPACE = '{http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/wordprocessingml/2006/main}'
PARA = WORD_NAMESPACE + 'p'
TEXT = WORD_NAMESPACE + 't'
TABLE = WORD_NAMESPACE + 'tbl'
ROW = WORD_NAMESPACE + 'tr'
CELL = WORD_NAMESPACE + 'tc'
with zipfile.ZipFile('<path to docx file>') as docx:
tree = xml.etree.ElementTree.XML(docx.read('word/document.xml'))
for table in tree.iter(TABLE):
for row in table.iter(ROW):
for cell in row.iter(CELL):
print ''.join(node.text for node in cell.iter(TEXT))
See my stackoverflow answer to How to read contents of an Table in MS-Word file Using Python? for more details and references.
In answer to a comment below,
Images are not as clear cut to extract. I have created an empty docx and inserted one image into it. I then open the docx file as a zip archive (using 7zip) and looked at the document.xml. All the image information is stored as attributes in the XML not the CDATA like the text is. So you need to find the tag you are interested in and pull out the information that you are looking for.
For example adding to the script above:
IMAGE = '{http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/drawingml/2006/wordprocessingDrawing}' + 'docPr'
for image in tree.iter(IMAGE):
print image.attrib
outputs:
{'id': '1', 'name': 'Picture 1'}
I'm no expert at the openxml format but I hope this helps.
I do note that the zip file contains a directory called media which contains a file called image1.jpeg that contains a renamed copy of my embedded image. You can look around in the docx zipfile to investigate what is available.
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