Name

html_score - Show complexity metric and other stats for web page

Synopsis

html_score [--html] [uri|file]

Examples

html_score http://perl.org

html_score --html http://perl6.org

Description

Given a URI or a file name, treats its referent as HTML and prints a complexity metric, the maximum element depth, and per-element statistics. The per-element statistics appear in rows, one per tag name. For each tag name, its row contains:

  • The maximum nesting depth of elements with that tag name. This is per-tag-name nesting depth, and does not take into account nesting within other elements with other tag names.

  • A count of the elements with that tag name in the document.

  • The total number of characters in elements with that tag name. Characters in nested elements are counted multiple times. For example, if a page contains a table within a table, characters in the inner table will be counted twice.

  • The average size of elements with this tag name, in characters.

The argument to html_score can be either a URI or a file name. If it starts with alphanumerics followed by a colon, it is treated as a URI. Otherwise it is treated as file name. If the --html option is specified, the output is written as an HTML table.

The complexity metric is the average depth (or nesting level), in elements, of a character, divided by the logarithm of the length of the HTML. Whitespace and comments are ignored in calculating the complexity metric. The division by the logarithm of the HTML length is based on the idea that, all else being equal, it is reasonable for the nesting to increase logarithmically as a web page grows in length.

Sample output

Here is the first part of the output for http://perl.org.

http://perl.org
Complexity Score = 0.873
Maximum Depth = 12
              Maximum   Number of  Size in      Average
   Element    Nesting   Elements  Characters     Size  
a                    1         56       3533         63
body                 1          1       7615       7615
div                  5         30      24695        823
em                   1          1         13         13
h1                   1          1         37         37
h4                   1         11        559         50

Interpreting the complexity metric

With caution, the complexity metric can be used as a self-assessment of website quality. Well designed websites often have low numbers, particularly if fast loading is an important goal. But high values of the complexity metric do not necessarily mean low quality. Everything depends on what the mission is, and how well complexity is being used to serve the site's mission.

Purpose

This program is a demo of a demo. It purpose is to show how easy it is to write applications which look at the structure of web pages using Marpa::R2::HTML. And the purpose of Marpa::R2::HTML is to demonstrate the power of its parse engine, Marpa::R2. Marpa::R2::HTML was written in a few days, and its logic is a straightforward, natural expression of the structure of HTML.

Acknowledgements

The starting template for this code was HTML::TokeParser, by Gisle Aas.

Copyright and License

Copyright 2013 Jeffrey Kegler
This file is part of Marpa::R2.  Marpa::R2 is free software: you can
redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser
General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation,
either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

Marpa::R2 is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU
Lesser General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser
General Public License along with Marpa::R2.  If not, see
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.