| :mod:`html.parser` --- Simple HTML and XHTML parser |
| =================================================== |
| |
| .. module:: html.parser |
| :synopsis: A simple parser that can handle HTML and XHTML. |
| |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: HTML |
| single: XHTML |
| |
| **Source code:** :source:`Lib/html/parser.py` |
| |
| -------------- |
| |
| This module defines a class :class:`HTMLParser` which serves as the basis for |
| parsing text files formatted in HTML (HyperText Mark-up Language) and XHTML. |
| |
| .. class:: HTMLParser(strict=False) |
| |
| Create a parser instance. If *strict* is ``False`` (the default), the parser |
| will accept and parse invalid markup. If *strict* is ``True`` the parser |
| will raise an :exc:`~html.parser.HTMLParseError` exception instead [#]_ when |
| it's not able to parse the markup. |
| The use of ``strict=True`` is discouraged and the *strict* argument is |
| deprecated. |
| |
| An :class:`.HTMLParser` instance is fed HTML data and calls handler methods |
| when start tags, end tags, text, comments, and other markup elements are |
| encountered. The user should subclass :class:`.HTMLParser` and override its |
| methods to implement the desired behavior. |
| |
| This parser does not check that end tags match start tags or call the end-tag |
| handler for elements which are closed implicitly by closing an outer element. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.2 |
| *strict* keyword added. |
| |
| .. deprecated-removed:: 3.3 3.5 |
| The *strict* argument and the strict mode have been deprecated. |
| The parser is now able to accept and parse invalid markup too. |
| |
| An exception is defined as well: |
| |
| |
| .. exception:: HTMLParseError |
| |
| Exception raised by the :class:`HTMLParser` class when it encounters an error |
| while parsing and *strict* is ``True``. This exception provides three |
| attributes: :attr:`msg` is a brief message explaining the error, |
| :attr:`lineno` is the number of the line on which the broken construct was |
| detected, and :attr:`offset` is the number of characters into the line at |
| which the construct starts. |
| |
| .. deprecated-removed:: 3.3 3.5 |
| This exception has been deprecated because it's never raised by the parser |
| (when the default non-strict mode is used). |
| |
| |
| Example HTML Parser Application |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| As a basic example, below is a simple HTML parser that uses the |
| :class:`HTMLParser` class to print out start tags, end tags, and data |
| as they are encountered:: |
| |
| from html.parser import HTMLParser |
| |
| class MyHTMLParser(HTMLParser): |
| def handle_starttag(self, tag, attrs): |
| print("Encountered a start tag:", tag) |
| def handle_endtag(self, tag): |
| print("Encountered an end tag :", tag) |
| def handle_data(self, data): |
| print("Encountered some data :", data) |
| |
| parser = MyHTMLParser(strict=False) |
| parser.feed('<html><head><title>Test</title></head>' |
| '<body><h1>Parse me!</h1></body></html>') |
| |
| The output will then be:: |
| |
| Encountered a start tag: html |
| Encountered a start tag: head |
| Encountered a start tag: title |
| Encountered some data : Test |
| Encountered an end tag : title |
| Encountered an end tag : head |
| Encountered a start tag: body |
| Encountered a start tag: h1 |
| Encountered some data : Parse me! |
| Encountered an end tag : h1 |
| Encountered an end tag : body |
| Encountered an end tag : html |
| |
| |
| :class:`.HTMLParser` Methods |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| :class:`HTMLParser` instances have the following methods: |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.feed(data) |
| |
| Feed some text to the parser. It is processed insofar as it consists of |
| complete elements; incomplete data is buffered until more data is fed or |
| :meth:`close` is called. *data* must be :class:`str`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.close() |
| |
| Force processing of all buffered data as if it were followed by an end-of-file |
| mark. This method may be redefined by a derived class to define additional |
| processing at the end of the input, but the redefined version should always call |
| the :class:`HTMLParser` base class method :meth:`close`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.reset() |
| |
| Reset the instance. Loses all unprocessed data. This is called implicitly at |
| instantiation time. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.getpos() |
| |
| Return current line number and offset. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.get_starttag_text() |
| |
| Return the text of the most recently opened start tag. This should not normally |
| be needed for structured processing, but may be useful in dealing with HTML "as |
| deployed" or for re-generating input with minimal changes (whitespace between |
| attributes can be preserved, etc.). |
| |
| |
| The following methods are called when data or markup elements are encountered |
| and they are meant to be overridden in a subclass. The base class |
| implementations do nothing (except for :meth:`~HTMLParser.handle_startendtag`): |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.handle_starttag(tag, attrs) |
| |
| This method is called to handle the start of a tag (e.g. ``<div id="main">``). |
| |
| The *tag* argument is the name of the tag converted to lower case. The *attrs* |
| argument is a list of ``(name, value)`` pairs containing the attributes found |
| inside the tag's ``<>`` brackets. The *name* will be translated to lower case, |
| and quotes in the *value* have been removed, and character and entity references |
| have been replaced. |
| |
| For instance, for the tag ``<A HREF="http://www.cwi.nl/">``, this method |
| would be called as ``handle_starttag('a', [('href', 'http://www.cwi.nl/')])``. |
| |
| All entity references from :mod:`html.entities` are replaced in the attribute |
| values. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.handle_endtag(tag) |
| |
| This method is called to handle the end tag of an element (e.g. ``</div>``). |
| |
| The *tag* argument is the name of the tag converted to lower case. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.handle_startendtag(tag, attrs) |
| |
| Similar to :meth:`handle_starttag`, but called when the parser encounters an |
| XHTML-style empty tag (``<img ... />``). This method may be overridden by |
| subclasses which require this particular lexical information; the default |
| implementation simply calls :meth:`handle_starttag` and :meth:`handle_endtag`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.handle_data(data) |
| |
| This method is called to process arbitrary data (e.g. text nodes and the |
| content of ``<script>...</script>`` and ``<style>...</style>``). |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.handle_entityref(name) |
| |
| This method is called to process a named character reference of the form |
| ``&name;`` (e.g. ``>``), where *name* is a general entity reference |
| (e.g. ``'gt'``). |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.handle_charref(name) |
| |
| This method is called to process decimal and hexadecimal numeric character |
| references of the form ``&#NNN;`` and ``&#xNNN;``. For example, the decimal |
| equivalent for ``>`` is ``>``, whereas the hexadecimal is ``>``; |
| in this case the method will receive ``'62'`` or ``'x3E'``. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.handle_comment(data) |
| |
| This method is called when a comment is encountered (e.g. ``<!--comment-->``). |
| |
| For example, the comment ``<!-- comment -->`` will cause this method to be |
| called with the argument ``' comment '``. |
| |
| The content of Internet Explorer conditional comments (condcoms) will also be |
| sent to this method, so, for ``<!--[if IE 9]>IE9-specific content<![endif]-->``, |
| this method will receive ``'[if IE 9]>IE-specific content<![endif]'``. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.handle_decl(decl) |
| |
| This method is called to handle an HTML doctype declaration (e.g. |
| ``<!DOCTYPE html>``). |
| |
| The *decl* parameter will be the entire contents of the declaration inside |
| the ``<!...>`` markup (e.g. ``'DOCTYPE html'``). |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.handle_pi(data) |
| |
| Method called when a processing instruction is encountered. The *data* |
| parameter will contain the entire processing instruction. For example, for the |
| processing instruction ``<?proc color='red'>``, this method would be called as |
| ``handle_pi("proc color='red'")``. It is intended to be overridden by a derived |
| class; the base class implementation does nothing. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| The :class:`HTMLParser` class uses the SGML syntactic rules for processing |
| instructions. An XHTML processing instruction using the trailing ``'?'`` will |
| cause the ``'?'`` to be included in *data*. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: HTMLParser.unknown_decl(data) |
| |
| This method is called when an unrecognized declaration is read by the parser. |
| |
| The *data* parameter will be the entire contents of the declaration inside |
| the ``<![...]>`` markup. It is sometimes useful to be overridden by a |
| derived class. The base class implementation raises an :exc:`HTMLParseError` |
| when *strict* is ``True``. |
| |
| |
| .. _htmlparser-examples: |
| |
| Examples |
| -------- |
| |
| The following class implements a parser that will be used to illustrate more |
| examples:: |
| |
| from html.parser import HTMLParser |
| from html.entities import name2codepoint |
| |
| class MyHTMLParser(HTMLParser): |
| def handle_starttag(self, tag, attrs): |
| print("Start tag:", tag) |
| for attr in attrs: |
| print(" attr:", attr) |
| def handle_endtag(self, tag): |
| print("End tag :", tag) |
| def handle_data(self, data): |
| print("Data :", data) |
| def handle_comment(self, data): |
| print("Comment :", data) |
| def handle_entityref(self, name): |
| c = chr(name2codepoint[name]) |
| print("Named ent:", c) |
| def handle_charref(self, name): |
| if name.startswith('x'): |
| c = chr(int(name[1:], 16)) |
| else: |
| c = chr(int(name)) |
| print("Num ent :", c) |
| def handle_decl(self, data): |
| print("Decl :", data) |
| |
| parser = MyHTMLParser(strict=False) |
| |
| Parsing a doctype:: |
| |
| >>> parser.feed('<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" ' |
| ... '"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">') |
| Decl : DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd" |
| |
| Parsing an element with a few attributes and a title:: |
| |
| >>> parser.feed('<img src="python-logo.png" alt="The Python logo">') |
| Start tag: img |
| attr: ('src', 'python-logo.png') |
| attr: ('alt', 'The Python logo') |
| >>> |
| >>> parser.feed('<h1>Python</h1>') |
| Start tag: h1 |
| Data : Python |
| End tag : h1 |
| |
| The content of ``script`` and ``style`` elements is returned as is, without |
| further parsing:: |
| |
| >>> parser.feed('<style type="text/css">#python { color: green }</style>') |
| Start tag: style |
| attr: ('type', 'text/css') |
| Data : #python { color: green } |
| End tag : style |
| >>> |
| >>> parser.feed('<script type="text/javascript">' |
| ... 'alert("<strong>hello!</strong>");</script>') |
| Start tag: script |
| attr: ('type', 'text/javascript') |
| Data : alert("<strong>hello!</strong>"); |
| End tag : script |
| |
| Parsing comments:: |
| |
| >>> parser.feed('<!-- a comment -->' |
| ... '<!--[if IE 9]>IE-specific content<![endif]-->') |
| Comment : a comment |
| Comment : [if IE 9]>IE-specific content<![endif] |
| |
| Parsing named and numeric character references and converting them to the |
| correct char (note: these 3 references are all equivalent to ``'>'``):: |
| |
| >>> parser.feed('>>>') |
| Named ent: > |
| Num ent : > |
| Num ent : > |
| |
| Feeding incomplete chunks to :meth:`~HTMLParser.feed` works, but |
| :meth:`~HTMLParser.handle_data` might be called more than once:: |
| |
| >>> for chunk in ['<sp', 'an>buff', 'ered ', 'text</s', 'pan>']: |
| ... parser.feed(chunk) |
| ... |
| Start tag: span |
| Data : buff |
| Data : ered |
| Data : text |
| End tag : span |
| |
| Parsing invalid HTML (e.g. unquoted attributes) also works:: |
| |
| >>> parser.feed('<p><a class=link href=#main>tag soup</p ></a>') |
| Start tag: p |
| Start tag: a |
| attr: ('class', 'link') |
| attr: ('href', '#main') |
| Data : tag soup |
| End tag : p |
| End tag : a |
| |
| .. rubric:: Footnotes |
| |
| .. [#] For backward compatibility reasons *strict* mode does not raise |
| exceptions for all non-compliant HTML. That is, some invalid HTML |
| is tolerated even in *strict* mode. |