\name{setXMLNamespace} \alias{setXMLNamespace} \title{Set the name space on a node} \description{ This function sets the name space for an XML node, typically an internal node. We can use it to either define a new namespace and use that, or refer to a name space definition in an ancestor of the current node. } \usage{ setXMLNamespace(node, namespace, append = FALSE) } \arguments{ \item{node}{the node on which the name space is to be set} \item{namespace}{the name space to use for the node. This can be a name space prefix (string) defined in an ancestor node, or a named character vector of the form \code{c(prefix = URI)} that defines a new namespace on this node, or we can use a name space object created with \code{\link{newXMLNamespace}}.} \item{append}{currently ignored.} } \value{ An object of class \code{XMLNamespaceRef} which is a reference to the native/internal/C-level name space object. } %\references{} \author{ Duncan Temple Lang } \seealso{ \code{\link{newXMLNamespace}} \code{\link{removeXMLNamespaces}} } \examples{ # define a new namespace e = newXMLNode("foo") setXMLNamespace(e, c("r" = "http://www.r-project.org")) # use an existing namespace on an ancestor node e = newXMLNode("top", namespaceDefinitions = c("r" = "http://www.r-project.org")) setXMLNamespace(e, "r") e } \keyword{programming}