Steev's HTML Parser is an HTML parsing librarythat builds a complete hierarchy for each elementand attribute in the supplied HTML file. Eachelement is its own C++ class, replete with childnodes, allowing for full control and processing.An 'HTML beautifier' example is included.
Hello forum, I am having problems to write a bash script.
I am trying to get some information from a web page, I want to format it to XMLTV. This is web page: Programación de las cadenas etb1, etb2, etb3, canal vasco y etb sat | EITB Televisión
I want to get something like this:
<programme... (1 Reply)
HTML::Parse(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation HTML::Parse(3)NAME
HTML::Parse - Deprecated, a wrapper around HTML::TreeBuilder
SYNOPSIS
See the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder
DESCRIPTION
Disclaimer: This module is provided only for backwards compatibility with earlier versions of this library. New code should not use this
module, and should really use the HTML::Parser and HTML::TreeBuilder modules directly, instead.
The "HTML::Parse" module provides functions to parse HTML documents. There are two functions exported by this module:
parse_html($html) or parse_html($html, $obj)
This function is really just a synonym for $obj->parse($html) and $obj is assumed to be a subclass of "HTML::Parser". Refer to
HTML::Parser for more documentation.
If $obj is not specified, the $obj will default to an internally created new "HTML::TreeBuilder" object configured with
strict_comment() turned on. That class implements a parser that builds (and is) a HTML syntax tree with HTML::Element objects as
nodes.
The return value from parse_html() is $obj.
parse_htmlfile($file, [$obj])
Same as parse_html(), but pulls the HTML to parse, from the named file.
Returns "undef" if the file could not be opened, or $obj otherwise.
When a "HTML::TreeBuilder" object is created, the following variables control how parsing takes place:
$HTML::Parse::IMPLICIT_TAGS
Setting this variable to true will instruct the parser to try to deduce implicit elements and implicit end tags. If this variable is
false you get a parse tree that just reflects the text as it stands. Might be useful for quick & dirty parsing. Default is true.
Implicit elements have the implicit() attribute set.
$HTML::Parse::IGNORE_UNKNOWN
This variable contols whether unknow tags should be represented as elements in the parse tree. Default is true.
$HTML::Parse::IGNORE_TEXT
Do not represent the text content of elements. This saves space if all you want is to examine the structure of the document. Default
is false.
$HTML::Parse::WARN
Call warn() with an apropriate message for syntax errors. Default is false.
REMEMBER!
HTML::TreeBuilder objects should be explicitly destroyed when you're finished with them. See HTML::TreeBuilder.
SEE ALSO
HTML::Parser, HTML::TreeBuilder, HTML::Element
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1995-1998 Gisle Aas, 1999-2004 Sean M. Burke, 2005 Andy Lester, 2006 Pete Krawczyk.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
This program 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.
AUTHOR
Currently maintained by Pete Krawczyk "<petek@cpan.org>"
Original authors: Gisle Aas, Sean Burke and Andy Lester.
perl v5.12.1 2006-08-06 HTML::Parse(3)