NAME
HTML::TokeParser::Simple - easy to use HTML::TokeParser interface
SYNOPSIS
use HTML::TokeParser::Simple;
my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new( $somefile );
while ( my $token = $p->get_token ) {
# This prints all text in an HTML doc (i.e., it strips the HTML)
next unless $token->is_text;
print $token->as_is;
}
DESCRIPTION
HTML::TokeParser
is a fairly common method of parsing HTML. However, the tokens returned are not exactly intuitive to parse:
["S", $tag, $attr, $attrseq, $text]
["E", $tag, $text]
["T", $text, $is_data]
["C", $text]
["D", $text]
["PI", $token0, $text]
To simplify this, HTML::TokeParser::Simple
allows the user ask more intuitive (read: more self-documenting) questions about the tokens returned. Specifically, there are 7 is_foo
type methods and 5 return_bar
type methods. The is_
methods allow you to determine the token type and the return_
methods get the data that you need.
Since this is a subclass of HTML::TokeParser
, all HTML::TokeParser
methods are available. To truly appreciate the power of this module, please read the documentation for HTML::TokeParser
and HTML::Parser
.
The following will be brief descriptions of the available methods followed by examples.
is_
Methods
is_start_tag
Use this to determine if you have a start tag. An optional "tag type" may be passed. This will allow you to match if it's a particular start tag. The supplied tag is case-insensitive.
if ( $token->is_start_tag( 'font' ) ) { ... }
is_end_tag.
Use this to determine if you have an end tag. An optional "tag type" may be passed. This will allow you to match if it's a particular end tag. The supplied tag is case-insensitive.
When testing for an end tag, the forward slash on the tag is optional.
while ( $token = $p->get_token ) { if ( $token->is_end_tag( 'form' ) ) { ... } }
Or:
while ( $token = $p->get_token ) { if ( $token->is_end_tag( '/form' ) ) { ... } }
is_tag
Use this to determine if you have any tag. An optional "tag type" may be passed. This will allow you to match if it's a particular tag. The supplied tag is case-insensitive.
if ( $token->is_tag ) { ... }
is_text
Use this to determine if you have text. Note that this is not to be confused with the
return_text
(deprecated) method described below!is_text
will identify text that the user typically sees display in the Web browser.is_comment
Are you still reading this? Nobody reads POD. Don't you know you're supposed to go to CLPM, ask a question that's answered in the POD and get flamed? It's a rite of passage.
Really.
is_comment
is used to identify comments. See the HTML::Parser documentation for more information about comments. There's more than you might think.is_declaration
This will match the DTD at the top of your HTML. (You do use DTD's, don't you?)
is_process_instruction
Process Instructions are from XML. This is very handy if you need to parse out PHP and similar things with a parser.
The return_
methods
Note:
In case it's not blindingly obvious (I've been bitten by this myself when writing the tests), you should generally test what type of token you have before you call some return_
methods. For example, if you have an end tag, there is no point in calling the return_attrseq
method. Calling an innapropriate method will return an empty string.
As noted for the is_
methods, these methods are case-insensitive after the return_
part.
return_tag
Do you have a start tag or end tag? This will return the type (lower case).
return_attr
If you have a start tag, this will return a hash ref with the attribute names as keys and the values as the values.
return_attrseq
For a start tag, this is an array reference with the sequence of the attributes, if any.
return_text
This method has been deprecated in favor of
as_is
. Programmers were getting confused over the difference betweenis_text
,return_text
, and some parser methods such asHTML::TokeParser::get_text
and friends. This confusion stems from the fact that your author is a blithering idiot when it comes to choosing methods names :)This method will hang around for a while, but no guarantees (but hey, that's what deprecation is, yes?).
as_is
This is the exact text of whatever the token is representing.
return_token0
For processing instructions, this will return the token found immediately after the opening tag. Example: For <?php, "php" will be the start of the returned string.
Important note:
Some people get confused and try to call parser methods on tokens and token methods (those described above) on methods. To prevent this, HTML::TokeParser::Simple
versions 1.4 and above now bless all tokens into a new class which inherits nothing. Please keep this in mind while using this module (and many thanks to PodMaster http://www.perlmonks.org/index.pl?node_id=107642 for pointing out this issue to me.
Examples
Finding comments
For some strange reason, your Pointy-Haired Boss (PHB) is convinced that the graphics department is making fun of him by embedding rude things about him in HTML comments. You need to get all HTML comments from the HTML.
use strict;
use HTML::TokeParser::Simple;
my @html_docs = glob( "*.html" );
open PHB, "> phbreport.txt" or die "Cannot open phbreport for writing: $!";
foreach my $doc ( @html_docs ) {
print "Processing $doc\n";
my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new( $doc );
while ( my $token = $p->get_token ) {
next if ! $token->is_comment;
print PHB $token->as_is, "\n";
}
}
close PHB;
Stripping Comments
Uh oh. Turns out that your PHB was right for a change. Many of the comments in the HTML weren't very polite. Since your entire graphics department was just fired, it falls on you need to strip those comments from the HTML.
use strict;
use HTML::TokeParser::Simple;
my $new_folder = 'no_comment/';
my @html_docs = glob( "*.html" );
foreach my $doc ( @html_docs ) {
print "Processing $doc\n";
my $new_file = "$new_folder$doc";
open PHB, "> $new_file" or die "Cannot open $new_file for writing: $!";
my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new( $doc );
while ( my $token = $p->get_token ) {
next if $token->is_comment;
print PHB $token->as_is;
}
close PHB;
}
Changing form tags
Your company was foo.com and now is bar.com. Unfortunately, whoever wrote your HTML decided to hardcode "http://www.foo.com/" into the action
attribute of the form tags. You need to change it to "http://www.bar.com/".
use strict;
use HTML::TokeParser::Simple;
my $new_folder = 'new_html/';
my @html_docs = glob( "*.html" );
foreach my $doc ( @html_docs ) {
print "Processing $doc\n";
my $new_file = "$new_folder$doc";
open FILE, "> $new_file" or die "Cannot open $new_file for writing: $!";
my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new( $doc );
while ( my $token = $p->get_token ) {
if ( $token->is_start_tag( 'form' ) ) {
my $form_tag = new_form_tag(
$token->return_attr,
$token->return_attrseq
);
print FILE $form_tag;
}
else {
print FILE $token->as_is;
}
}
close FILE;
}
sub new_form_tag {
my ( $attr, $attrseq ) = @_;
if ( exists $attr->{ action } ) {
$attr->{ action } =~ s/www\.foo\.com/www.bar.com/;
}
my $tag = '';
foreach ( @$attrseq ) {
$tag .= "$_=\"$attr->{ $_ }\" ";
}
$tag = "<form $tag>";
return $tag;
}
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2001 Curtis "Ovid" Poe. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself
TODO
Considering overloading some methods to allow multiple parameters to be tested. May add support for regexen. For example:
if ( $token->is_start_tag( qw/ h1 h2 h3 h4 h5 h6 / ) {...}
if ( $token->is_start_tag( qr/h[1..6]/ ) {...}
AUTHOR
Curtis "Ovid" Poe poec@yahoo.com
BUGS
Use of $HTML::Parser::VERSION
which is less than 3.25 may result in incorrect behavior as older versions do not always handle XHTML correctly. It is the programmer's responsibility to verify that the behavior of this code matches the programmer's needs.
Address bug reports and comments to: poec@yahoo.com. When sending bug reports, please provide the version of HTML::Parser
, HTML::TokeParser
, HTML::TokeParser::Simple
, the version of Perl, and the version of the operating system you are using.