NAME

HTML::RewriteAttributes - concise attribute rewriting

SYNOPSIS

$html = HTML::RewriteAttributes->rewrite($html, sub {
    my ($tag, $attr, $value) = @_;

    # delete any attribute that mentions..
    return if $value =~ /COBOL/i;

    $value =~ s/\brocks\b/rules/g;
    return $value;
});


# writing some HTML email I see..
$html = HTML::RewriteAttributes::Resources->rewrite($html, sub {
    my $uri = shift;
    my $content = render_template($uri);
    my $cid = generate_cid_from($content);
    $mime->attach($cid => content);
    return "cid:$cid";
});


# up for some HTML::ResolveLink?
$html = HTML::RewriteAttributes::Links->rewrite($html, "http://search.cpan.org");

# or perhaps HTML::LinkExtor?
HTML::RewriteAttributes::Links->rewrite($html, sub {
    my ($tag, $attr, $value) = @_;
    push @links, $value;
    $value;
});

DESCRIPTION

HTML::RewriteAttributes is designed for simple yet powerful HTML attribute rewriting.

You simply specify a callback to run for each attribute and we do the rest for you.

This module is designed to be subclassable to make handling special cases eaiser. See the source for methods you can override.

METHODS

new

You don't need to call new explicitly - it's done in "rewrite". It takes no arguments.

rewrite HTML, callback -> HTML

This is the main interface of the module. You pass in some HTML and a callback, the callback is invoked potentially many times, and you get back some similar HTML.

The callback receives as arguments the tag name, the attribute name, and the attribute value (though subclasses may override this -- HTML::RewriteAttributes::Resources does). Return undef to remove the attribute, or any other value to set the value of the attribute.

SEE ALSO

HTML::Parser, HTML::ResolveLink, Email::MIME::CreateHTML, HTML::LinkExtor

THANKS

Some code was inspired by, and tests borrowed from, Miyagawa's HTML::ResolveLink.

AUTHOR

Shawn M Moore, <sartak@bestpractical.com>

LICENSE

Copyright 2008-2010 Best Practical Solutions, LLC. HTML::RewriteAttributes is distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.