| name | docx-dual-parse |
| description | Extract text from DOCX files using shell or Python zipfile, with environment-aware fallback |
DOCX Dual-Method Text Extraction
Extract text from Microsoft Word (.docx) files using either shell commands or Python's zipfile module, automatically selecting the most reliable method for your environment.
When to Use
- Need reliable DOCX text extraction in varying environments (containers, sandboxes, minimal images)
- Python environment may lack
python-docx but has standard library access
- Shell utilities (
unzip, sed) may be unavailable or restricted
- Want environment-aware fallback without manual intervention
Core Technique
DOCX files are ZIP archives containing XML files. This skill provides two extraction methods:
Method A (Shell): unzip -p + sed for tag stripping
Method B (Python): zipfile module for archive access + string parsing
Environment Detection
Before extraction, detect which method will work:
if unzip -v >/dev/null 2>&1; then
echo "Shell method available"
else
echo "Shell method unavailable, try Python"
fi
python3 -c "import zipfile; print('Python method available')" 2>/dev/null
Method A: Shell-Based Extraction
Use when unzip and sed are available and the environment allows shell operations.
Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Verify the DOCX file exists
ls -la document.docx
2. Extract raw XML content
unzip -p document.docx word/document.xml
3. Strip XML tags from content
unzip -p document.docx word/document.xml | sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g'
4. Clean up whitespace (optional)
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
Reusable Shell Function
parse_docx_shell() {
local file="$1"
if [ ! -f "$file" ]; then
echo "Error: File not found: $file" >&2
return 1
fi
if ! command -v unzip >/dev/null 2>&1; then
echo "Error: unzip not available" >&2
return 1
fi
unzip -p "$file" word/document.xml 2>/dev/null | \
sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g' | \
sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//' -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//' | \
sed -e '/^$/d'
}
Method B: Python Zipfile Extraction
Use when shell method fails or Python environment is more reliable than shell.
Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Verify the DOCX file exists
ls -la document.docx
2. Run Python extraction via run_shell
run_shell 'python3 -c "
import zipfile
import re
with zipfile.ZipFile(\"document.docx\", \"r\") as z:
content = z.read(\"word/document.xml\").decode(\"utf-8\")
text = re.sub(r\"<[^>]*>\", \"\", content)
lines = [l.strip() for l in text.splitlines() if l.strip()]
for line in lines:
print(line)
"'
3. Save to file by redirecting output
run_shell 'python3 -c "
import zipfile
import re
with zipfile.ZipFile(\"document.docx\", \"r\") as z:
content = z.read(\"word/document.xml\").decode(\"utf-8\")
text = re.sub(r\"<[^>]*>\", \"\", content)
lines = [l.strip() for l in text.splitlines() if l.strip()]
with open(\"output.txt\", \"w\") as f:
for line in lines:
f.write(line + \"\\n\")
"'
Reusable Python Function (via run_shell)
parse_docx_python() {
local file="$1"
local output="$2"
if [ ! -f "$file" ]; then
echo "Error: File not found: $file" >&2
return 1
fi
run_shell "python3 -c \"
import zipfile
import re
import sys
try:
with zipfile.ZipFile(\\'$file\\', \\'r\\') as z:
content = z.read(\\'word/document.xml\\').decode(\\'utf-8\\')
text = re.sub(r\\'<[^>]*>\\', \\'\\', content)
lines = [l.strip() for l in text.splitlines() if l.strip()]
for line in lines:
print(line)
except Exception as e:
print(f\\'Error: {e}\\', file=sys.stderr)
sys.exit(1)
\""
}
Unified Dual-Method Function
Automatically tries shell first, falls back to Python if shell fails:
parse_docx() {
local file="$1"
if [ ! -f "$file" ]; then
echo "Error: File not found: $file" >&2
return 1
fi
if command -v unzip >/dev/null 2>&1; then
result=$(unzip -p "$file" word/document.xml 2>/dev/null | \
sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g' | \
sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//' -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//' | \
sed -e '/^$/d')
if [ -n "$result" ]; then
echo "$result"
return 0
fi
fi
python3 -c "
import zipfile
import re
import sys
try:
with zipfile.ZipFile('$file', 'r') as z:
content = z.read('word/document.xml').decode('utf-8')
text = re.sub(r'<[^>]*>', '', content)
lines = [l.strip() for l in text.splitlines() if l.strip()]
for line in lines:
print(line)
except Exception as e:
print(f'Error: {e}', file=sys.stderr)
sys.exit(1)
"
}
Alternative: Extract to Temporary Directory
For complex parsing needs or debugging:
Shell approach:
tmpdir=$(mktemp -d)
unzip document.docx -d "$tmpdir"
cat "$tmpdir/word/document.xml" | sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g'
rm -rf "$tmpdir"
Python approach:
python3 -c "
import zipfile
import tempfile
import os
with zipfile.ZipFile('document.docx', 'r') as z:
tmpdir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
z.extractall(tmpdir)
with open(os.path.join(tmpdir, 'word/document.xml')) as f:
print(f.read())
"
Verification
Confirm extraction worked:
parse_docx document.docx | head -20
ls -la output.txt
wc -l output.txt
Method Selection Guide
| Environment | Recommended Method |
|---|
| Standard Linux with unzip | Shell (faster, simpler) |
| Container without unzip | Python zipfile |
| Sandboxed execution | Python via execute_code_sandbox or run_shell |
| Minimal/busybox images | Shell if unzip available |
| Unknown/restricted | Use unified parse_docx function |
Limitations
- Does not preserve formatting, images, or table structure
- May include some residual XML entity references ( , etc.)
- Works best for simple text extraction needs
- DOCX must be a valid Office Open XML format
- Protected/encrypted DOCX files require additional handling
Error Handling Tips
- Always check file existence before parsing
- Test method availability in the target environment
- Capture stderr for debugging failed extractions
- Validate output is non-empty before proceeding
- Handle XML entity decoding if needed (sed can expand basic entities)