NAME
HTML::Tidy - (X)HTML validation in a Perl object
VERSION
Version 1.50
SYNOPSIS
use HTML::Tidy;
my $tidy = HTML::Tidy->new( {config_file => 'path/to/config'} );
$tidy->ignore( type => TIDY_WARNING, typed => TIDY_INFO );
$tidy->parse( "foo.html", $contents_of_foo );
for my $message ( $tidy->messages ) {
print $message->as_string;
}
DESCRIPTION
HTML::Tidy
is an HTML checker in a handy dandy object. It's meant as a replacement for HTML::Lint. If you're currently an HTML::Lint user looking to migrate, see the section "Converting from HTML::Lint".
EXPORTS
Message types TIDY_ERROR
, TIDY_WARNING
and TIDY_INFO
.
Everything else is an object method.
METHODS
new()
Create an HTML::Tidy object.
my $tidy = HTML::Tidy->new();
Optionally you can give a hashref of configuration parms.
my $tidy = HTML::Tidy->new( {config_file => 'path/to/tidy.cfg'} );
This configuration file will be read and used when you clean or parse an HTML file.
You can also pass options directly to libtidy.
my $tidy = HTML::Tidy->new( {
output_xhtml => 1,
tidy_mark => 0,
} );
See http://tidy.sourceforge.net/docs/quickref.html or tidy -help-config
for the list of options supported by libtidy.
The following options are not supported by HTML::Tidy
: quiet
messages()
Returns the messages accumulated.
clear_messages()
Clears the list of messages, in case you want to print and clear, print and clear. If you don't clear the messages, then each time you call parse() you'll be accumulating more in the list.
ignore( parm => value [, parm => value ] )
Specify types of messages to ignore. Note that the ignore flags must be set before calling parse()
. You can call ignore()
as many times as necessary to set up all your restrictions; the options will stack up.
type => TIDY_INFO|TIDY_WARNING|TIDY_ERROR
Specifies the type of messages you want to ignore, either info or warnings or errors. If you wanted, you could call ignore on all three and get no messages at all.
$tidy->ignore( type => TIDY_WARNING );
text => qr/regex/
text => [ qr/regex1/, qr/regex2/, ... ]
Checks the text of the message against the specified regex or regexes, and ignores the message if there's a match. The value for the text parm may be either a regex, or a reference to a list of regexes.
$tidy->ignore( text => qr/DOCTYPE/ ); $tidy->ignore( text => [ qr/unsupported/, qr/proprietary/i ] );
parse( $filename, $str [, $str...] )
Parses a string, or list of strings, that make up a single HTML file.
The $filename parm is only used as an identifier for your use. The file is not actually read and opened.
Returns true if all went OK, or false if there was some problem calling tidy, or parsing tidy's output.
clean( $str [, $str...] )
Cleans a string, or list of strings, that make up a single HTML file.
Returns the cleaned string as a single string.
libtidy_version()
Returns the version of the underling tidy library.
INSTALLING LIBTIDY
HTML::Tidy requires that libtidy
be installed on your system. You can obtain libtidy through your distribution's package manager (make sure you install the development package with headers), or from the libtidy website at http://tidy.sourceforge.net/src/tidy_src.tgz.
CONVERTING FROM HTML::Lint
HTML::Tidy is different from HTML::Lint in a number of crucial ways.
It's not pure Perl
HTML::Tidy
is mostly a happy wrapper around libtidy.The real work is done by someone else
Changes to libtidy may come down the pipe that I don't have control over. That's the price we pay for having it do a darn good job.
It's no longer bundled with its
Test::
counterpartHTML::Lint came bundled with
Test::HTML::Lint
, but Test::HTML::Tidy is a separate distribution. This saves the people who don't want theTest::
framework from pulling it in, and all its prerequisite modules.
BUGS & FEEDBACK
Please report any bugs or feature requests at the issue tracker on github http://github.com/petdance/html-tidy/issues. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
Please do NOT use http://rt.cpan.org.
SUPPORT
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc HTML::Tidy
You can also look for information at:
AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
CPAN Ratings
HTML::Tidy's issue queue at github
Search CPAN
Subversion source code repository
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to Jonathan Rockway and Robert Bachmann for contributions.
AUTHOR
Andy Lester, <andy at petdance.com>
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2005-2010 by Andy Lester
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.1 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.