| name | docx-shell-parse |
| description | Extract text from DOCX files using shell commands when python-docx is unavailable |
DOCX Shell Parsing Workaround
When you need to read content from Microsoft Word (.docx) files but python-docx or similar libraries are unavailable, use this shell-based approach to extract text reliably.
When to Use
- Python environment lacks
python-docx or similar libraries
- You need quick text extraction without installing dependencies
- Working in constrained environments (containers, minimal images, etc.)
Core Technique
DOCX files are ZIP archives containing XML files. Extract and parse the main document XML:
unzip -p filename.docx word/document.xml | sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g'
Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Verify the DOCX file exists
ls -la document.docx
2. Extract raw XML content
Use unzip -p to pipe the document.xml content directly to stdout:
unzip -p document.docx word/document.xml
3. Strip XML tags from content
Pipe through sed to remove all XML tags:
unzip -p document.docx word/document.xml | sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g'
4. Clean up whitespace (optional)
For cleaner output, remove excessive whitespace and newlines:
unzip -p document.docx word/document.xml | \
sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g' | \
sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//' -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//' | \
sed -e '/^$/d'
5. Save extracted text to file
unzip -p document.docx word/document.xml | \
sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g' > output.txt
Complete Shell Function
Add this reusable function to your scripts:
parse_docx() {
local file="$1"
if [ ! -f "$file" ]; then
echo "Error: File not found: $file" >&2
return 1
fi
unzip -p "$file" word/document.xml 2>/dev/null | \
sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g' | \
sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//' -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//' | \
sed -e '/^$/d'
}
Limitations
- Does not preserve formatting, images, or tables structure
- May include some residual XML entity references
- Works best for simple text extraction needs
- DOCX must be a valid Office Open XML format
Verification
Confirm extraction worked by checking output:
parse_docx document.docx | head -20
Alternative: Extract to Temporary Directory
For more complex parsing needs:
tmpdir=$(mktemp -d)
unzip document.docx -d "$tmpdir"
cat "$tmpdir/word/document.xml" | sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g'
rm -rf "$tmpdir"