Provided by: libhtml-formatexternal-perl_26-6_all bug

NAME

       HTML::FormatExternal - HTML to text formatting using external programs

DESCRIPTION

       This is a collection of formatter modules which turn HTML into plain text by dumping it through the
       respective external programs.

           HTML::FormatText::Elinks
           HTML::FormatText::Html2text
           HTML::FormatText::Links
           HTML::FormatText::Lynx
           HTML::FormatText::Netrik
           HTML::FormatText::Vilistextum
           HTML::FormatText::W3m
           HTML::FormatText::Zen

       The module interfaces are compatible with "HTML::Formatter" modules such as "HTML::FormatText", but the
       external programs do all the work.

       Common formatting options are used where possible, such as "leftmargin" and "rightmargin".  So just by
       switching the class you can use a different program (or the plain "HTML::FormatText") according to
       personal preference, or strengths and weaknesses, or what you've got.

       There's nothing particularly difficult about piping through these programs, but a unified interface hides
       details like how to set margins and how to force input or output charsets.

FUNCTIONS

       Each of the classes above provide the following functions.  The "XXX" in the class names here is a
       placeholder for any of "Elinks", "Lynx", etc as above.

       See examples/demo.pl in the HTML-FormatExternal sources for a complete sample program.

   Formatter Compatible Functions
       "$text = HTML::FormatText::XXX->format_file ($filename, key=>value,...)"
       "$text = HTML::FormatText::XXX->format_string ($html_string, key=>value,...)"
           Run  the  formatter  program  over  a  file or string with the given options and return the formatted
           result as a string.  See "OPTIONS" below for possible key/value options.  For example,

               $text = HTML::FormatText::Lynx->format_file ('/my/file.html');

               $text = HTML::FormatText::W3m->format_string
                 ('<html><body> <p> Hello world! </p </body></html>');

           "format_file()" ensures any $filename is interpreted as a filename (by escaping as necessary  against
           however the programs interpret command line arguments).

       "$formatter = HTML::FormatText::XXX->new (key=>value, ...)"
           Create a formatter object with the given options.  In the current implementation an object doesn't do
           much more than remember the options for future use.

               $formatter = HTML::FormatText::Elinks->new(rightmargin => 60);

       "$text = $formatter->format ($tree_or_string)"
           Run  the  $formatter  program  on  a  "HTML::TreeBuilder"  tree  or  a  string,  using the options in
           $formatter, and return the result as a string.

           A TreeBuilder argument (ie. a "HTML::Element") is accepted for compatibility with  "HTML::Formatter".
           The  tree  is  simply turned into a string with "$tree->as_HTML" to pass to the program, so if you've
           got a string already then give that instead of a tree.

           "HTML::Element" itself has a "format()" method (see "format" in HTML::Element)  which  runs  a  given
           $formatter.  A "HTML::FormatExternal" object can be used for $formatter.

               $text = $tree->format($formatter);

               # which dispatches to
               $text = $formatter->format($tree);

   Extra Functions
       The following are extra methods not available in the plain "HTML::FormatText".

       "HTML::FormatText::XXX->program_version ()"
       "HTML::FormatText::XXX->program_full_version ()"
       "$formatter->program_version ()"
       "$formatter->program_full_version ()"
           Return  the version number of the formatter program as reported by its "--version" or similar option.
           If the formatter program is not available then return "undef".

           "program_version()"  is  the  bare  version  number,  perhaps  with  "beta"  or  similar  indication.
           "program_full_version()"  is  the  entire  version output, which may include build options, copyright
           notice, etc.

               $str = HTML::FormatText::Lynx->program_version();
               # eg. "2.8.7dev.10"

               $str = HTML::FormatText::W3m->program_full_version();
               # eg. "w3m version w3m/0.5.2, options lang=en,m17n,image,..."

           The version number of the respective Perl module itself is available in the usual way (see  "VERSION"
           in UNIVERSAL).

               $modulever = HTML::FormatText::Netrik->VERSION;
               $modulever = $formatter->VERSION

CHARSETS

       File  or  byte  string  input is by default interpreted by the programs in their usual ways.  This should
       mean HTML Latin-1 but user configurations might override that and  some  programs  recognise  a  "<meta>"
       charset declaration or a Unicode BOM.  The "input_charset" option below can force the input charset.

       Perl  wide-character  input  string  is  encoded  and  passed  to  the  program  in  whatever way it best
       understands.  Usually this is UTF-8 but in some cases  it  is  entitized  instead.   The  "input_charset"
       option can force the input charset to use if for some reason UTF-8 is not best.

       The  output  string  is either bytes or wide chars.  By default output is the same as input, so wide char
       string input gives wide output and byte input string or file input gives byte output.  The  "output_wide"
       option can force the output type (and is the way to get wide chars back from "format_file()").

       Byte  output  is  whatever  the  program produces.  Its default might be the locale charset or other user
       configuration which suits direct display to the user's terminal.  The "output_charset" option  can  force
       the output to be certain or to be ready for further processing.

       Wide  char output is done by choosing the best output charset the program can do and decoding its output.
       Usually this means UTF-8 but some of the programs may only have less.  The  "output_charset"  option  can
       force  the  charset  used  and  decoded.   If it's something less than UTF-8 then some programs might for
       example give ASCII art approximations of otherwise unrepresentable characters.

       Byte input is usual for HTML downloaded from a HTTP server or from a MIME email and the headers have  the
       "input_charset" which applies.  Byte output is good to go straight out to a tty or back to more MIME etc.
       The input and output charsets could differ if a server gives something other than what you want for final
       output.

       Wide chars are most convenient for crunching text within Perl.  The default wide input giving wide output
       is designed to be transparent for this.

       For  reference,  if  a "HTML::Element" tree contains wide char strings then its usual "as_HTML()" method,
       which is used by "format()" above, produces wide char HTML so the formatters here give  wide  char  text.
       Actually  "as_HTML()"  produces all ASCII because its default behaviour is to entitize anything "unsafe",
       but it's still a wide char string so the formatted output text is wide.

OPTIONS

       The following options can be given to the constructor or to the formatting  methods.   The  defaults  are
       whatever  the respective programs do.  The programs generally read their config files when dumping so the
       defaults and formatting details may follow the user's personal  preferences.   Usually  this  is  a  good
       thing.

       "leftmargin => INTEGER"
       "rightmargin => INTEGER"
           The  column numbers for the left and right hand ends of the text.  "leftmargin" 0 means no padding on
           the left.  "rightmargin" is the text width, so for instance 60 would mean  the  longest  line  is  60
           characters (inclusive of any "leftmargin").  These options are compatible with "HTML::FormatText".

           "rightmargin" is not necessarily a hard limit.  Some of the programs will exceed it in a HTML literal
           "<pre>", or a run of "&nbsp;" or similar.

       "input_charset => STRING"
           Force  the  HTML  input to be interpreted as bytes of the given charset, irrespective of locale, user
           configuration, "<meta>" in the HTML, etc.

       "output_charset => STRING"
           Force the text output to be encoded as the given charset.  The default varies among the programs, but
           usually defaults to the locale.

       "output_wide => 0,1,"as_input""
           Select output string as wide characters rather than bytes.  The default is "as_input" which  means  a
           wide  char  input  string results in a wide char output string and a byte input or file input is byte
           output.  See "CHARSETS" above for how wide characters work.

           Bytes or wide chars output can be forced by 0 or 1 respectively.  For example to get wide char output
           when formatting a file,

               $wide_char_text = HTML::FormatText::W3m->format_file
                                  ('/my/file.html', output_wide => 1);

       "base => STRING"
           Set the base URL for any relative links within the HTML (similar  to  "HTML::FormatText::WithLinks").
           Usually this should be the location the HTML was downloaded from.

           If the document contains its own "<base>" setting then currently the document takes precedence.  Only
           Lynx and Elinks display absolutized link targets and the option has no effect on the other programs.

TAINT MODE

       The  formatter  modules  can  be  used  under  "perl  -T" taint mode.  They run external programs so it's
       necessary to untaint $ENV{PATH} in the usual way per "Cleaning Up Your Path" in perlsec.

       The formatted text strings returned are always tainted, on the basis that they use or include  data  from
       outside the Perl program.  The "program_version()" and "program_full_version()" strings are tainted too.

BUGS

       "leftmargin"  is  implemented  by  adding spaces to the program output.  For byte output it this is ASCII
       spaces and that will be badly wrong for unusual output like UTF-16 which is not a byte superset of ASCII.
       For wide char output the margin is applied after decoding to wide chars so is correct.  It'd be better to
       ask the programs to do the margin but their options for that are poor.

       There's nothing done with errors or warning messages from the  programs.   Generally  they  make  a  best
       effort  on  doubtful  HTML,  but  fatal  errors like bad options or missing libraries ought to be somehow
       trapped.

OTHER POSSIBILITIES

       "elinks" (from Aug 2008 onwards) and "netrik" can produce ANSI escapes for colours, underline,  etc,  and
       "html2text"  and  "lynx"  can  produce  tty  style  backspace  overstriking.  This might be good for text
       destined for a tty or further crunching.  Perhaps an "ansi" or "tty"  option  could  enable  this,  where
       possible, but for now it's deliberately turned off in those programs to keep the default as plain text.

SEE ALSO

       HTML::FormatText::Elinks, HTML::FormatText::Html2text, HTML::FormatText::Links, HTML::FormatText::Netrik,
       HTML::FormatText::Lynx, HTML::FormatText::Vilistextum, HTML::FormatText::W3m, HTML::FormatText::Zen

       HTML::FormatText, HTML::FormatText::WithLinks, HTML::FormatText::WithLinks::AndTables

HOME PAGE

       <http://user42.tuxfamily.org/html-formatexternal/index.html>

LICENSE

       Copyright 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015 Kevin Ryde

       HTML-FormatExternal is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
       General  Public  License  as  published  by  the  Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your
       option) any later version.

       HTML-FormatExternal 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 General
       Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License  along  with  HTML-FormatExternal.   If
       not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

perl v5.36.0                                       2022-11-19                          HTML::FormatExternal(3pm)