Provided by: libhtml-tokeparser-simple-perl_3.16-4_all bug

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 an excellent module that's often used for 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.

       You can also rebuild some tags on the fly.  Frequently, the attributes associated with start tags need to
       be altered, added to, or deleted.  This functionality is built in.

       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".

CONTRUCTORS

   "new($source)"
       The constructor for "HTML::TokeParser::Simple" can be used just like "HTML::TokeParser"'s constructor:

         my $parser = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new($filename);
         # or
         my $parser = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new($filehandle);
         # or
         my $parser = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(\$html_string);

   "new($source_type, $source)"
       If you wish to be more explicit, there is a new style of constructor available.

         my $parser = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(file   => $filename);
         # or
         my $parser = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(handle => $filehandle);
         # or
         my $parser = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(string => $html_string);

       Note that you do not have to provide a reference for the string if using the string constructor.

       As a convenience, you can also attempt to fetch the HTML directly from a URL.

         my $parser = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(url => 'http://some.url');

       This method relies on "LWP::Simple".  If this module is not found or the page cannot be fetched, the
       constructor will "croak()".

PARSER METHODS

   get_token
       This method will return the next token that "HTML::TokeParser::get_token()" method would return.
       However, it will be blessed into a class appropriate which represents the token type.

   get_tag
       This method will return the next token that "HTML::TokeParser::get_tag()" method would return.  However,
       it will be blessed into either the HTML::TokeParser::Simple::Token::Tag::Start or
       HTML::TokeParser::Simple::Token::Tag::End class.

   peek
       As of version 3.14, you can now "peek()" at the upcomings tokens without affecting the state of the
       parser.  By default, "peek()" will return the text of the next token, but specifying an integer $count
       will return the text of the next $count tokens.

       This is useful when you're trying to debug where you are in a document.

        warn $parser->peek(3); # show the next 3 tokens

ACCESSORS

       The following methods may be called on the token object which is returned, not on the parser object.

   Boolean Accessors
       These accessors return true or false.

       •   "is_tag([$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 ) { ... }

           Optionally, you may pass a regular expression as an argument.

       •   "is_start_tag([$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 ) { ... }
            if ( $token->is_start_tag( 'font' ) ) { ... }

           Optionally,  you  may pass a regular expression as an argument.  To match all header (h1, h2, ... h6)
           tags:

            if ( $token->is_start_tag( qr/^h[123456]$/ ) ) { ... }

       •   "is_end_tag([$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' ) ) { ... }
            }

           Optionally, you may pass a regular expression as an argument.

       •   "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.

           Currently,   there  appear  to  be  some  problems  with  process  instructions.   You  can  override
           "HTML::TokeParser::Simple::Token::ProcessInstruction" if you need to.

       •   "is_pi()"

           This is a shorthand for "is_process_instruction()".

   Data Accessors
       Some of these were originally "return_" methods, but that name was  not  only  unwieldy,  but  also  went
       against  reasonable  conventions.  The "get_" methods listed below still have "return_" methods available
       for backwards compatibility reasons, but they merely call their "get_" counterpart.  For example, calling
       "return_tag()" actually calls "get_tag()" internally.

       •   "get_tag()"

           Do you have a start tag or end tag?  This will return the type (lower case).  Note that this  is  not
           the same as the "get_tag()" method on the actual parser object.

       •   "get_attr([$attribute])"

           If  you have a start tag, this will return a hash ref with the attribute names as keys and the values
           as the values.

           If you pass in an attribute name, it will return the value for just that attribute.

           Returns false if the token is not a start tag.

       •   "get_attrseq()"

           For a start tag, this is an array reference with the sequence of the attributes, if any.

           Returns false if the token is not a start tag.

       •   "return_text()"

           This method has been heavily deprecated (for a couple of years) in  favor  of  "as_is".   Programmers
           were  getting  confused over the difference between "is_text", "return_text", and some parser methods
           such as "HTML::TokeParser::get_text" and friends.

           Using this method still succeeds, but will now carp and will be removed in the next major release  of
           this module.

       •   "as_is()"

           This is the exact text of whatever the token is representing.

       •   "get_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.

           Note that process instruction handling appears to be incomplete in "HTML::TokeParser".

           Returns false if the token is not a process instruction.

MUTATORS

       The "delete_attr()" and "set_attr()" methods allow the programmer to rewrite start tag attributes on  the
       fly.   It should be noted that bad HTML will be "corrected" by this.  Specifically, the new tag will have
       all attributes lower-cased with the values properly quoted.

       Self-closing tags (e.g. <hr />) are also handled correctly.  Some older browsers require a space prior to
       the final slash in a self-closed tag.  If such a space is detected in  the  original  HTML,  it  will  be
       preserved.

       Calling a mutator on an token type that does not support that property is a no-op.  For example:

        if ($token->is_comment) {
           $token->set_attr(foo => 'bar'); # does nothing
        }

       •   "delete_attr($name)"

           This  method attempts to delete the attribute specified.  It will silently fail if called on anything
           other than a start tag.  The argument is case-insensitive, but must otherwise be an  exact  match  of
           the  attribute  you  are attempting to delete.  If the attribute is not found, the method will return
           without changing the tag.

            # <body bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
            $token->delete_attr('bgcolor');
            print $token->as_is;
            # <body>

           After this method is called, if successful, the "as_is()", "get_attr()" and  "get_attrseq()"  methods
           will all return updated results.

       •   "set_attr($name,$value)"

           This  method will set the value of an attribute.  If the attribute is not found, then "get_attrseq()"
           will have the new attribute listed at the end.

            # <p>
            $token->set_attr(class => 'some_class');
            print $token->as_is;
            # <p class="some_class">

            # <body bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
            $token->set_attr('bgcolor','red');
            print $token->as_is;
            # <body bgcolor="red">

           After this method is called, if successful, the "as_is()", "get_attr()" and  "get_attrseq()"  methods
           will all return updated results.

       •   "set_attr($hashref)"

           Under the premise that "set_" methods should accept what their corresponding "get_" methods emit, the
           following works:

             $tag->set_attr($tag->get_attr);

           Theoretically  that's  a no-op and for purposes of rendering HTML, it should be.  However, internally
           this calls "$tag->rewrite_tag", so see that method to understand how this may affect you.

           Of course, this is useless if you want to actually change the attributes, so you can do this:

             my $attrs = {
               class  => 'headline',
               valign => 'top'
             };
             $token->set_attr($attrs)
               if $token->is_start_tag('td') &&  $token->get_attr('class') eq 'stories';

       •   "rewrite_tag()"

           This method rewrites the tag.  The tag name and the name  of  all  attributes  will  be  lower-cased.
           Values that are not quoted with double quotes will be.  This may be called on both start or end tags.
           Note that both "set_attr()" and "delete_attr()" call this method prior to returning.

           If  called  on  a  token  that  is  not a tag, it simply returns.  Regardless of how it is called, it
           returns the token.

            # <body alink=#0000ff BGCOLOR=#ffffff class='none'>
            $token->rewrite_tag;
            print $token->as_is;
            # <body alink="#0000ff" bgcolor="#ffffff" class="none">

           A quick cleanup of sloppy HTML is now the following:

            my $parser = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new( string => $ugly_html );
            while (my $token = $parser->get_token) {
                $token->rewrite_tag;
                print $token->as_is;
            }

PARSER VERSUS TOKENS

       The parser returns tokens that are blessed into appropriate classes.  Some people get confused and try to
       call  parser   methods   on   tokens   and   token   methods   on   the   parser.    To   prevent   this,
       "HTML::TokeParser::Simple"  versions  1.4  and above now bless all tokens into appropriate token classes.
       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( file => $doc );
            while ( my $token = $p->get_token ) {
                next unless $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( $file => 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( file => $doc );
            while ( my $token = $p->get_token ) {
                if ( $token->is_start_tag('form') ) {
                    my $action = $token->get_attr(action);
                    $action =~ s/www\.foo\.com/www.bar.com/;
                    $token->set_attr('action', $action);
                }
                print FILE $token->as_is;
            }
            close FILE;
        }

CAVEATS

       For  compatibility  reasons  with  "HTML::TokeParser",  methods  that  return  references  are  violating
       encapsulation  and altering the references directly will alter the state of the object.  Subsequent calls
       to "rewrite_tag()" can thus have unexpected results.  Do not alter these references directly  unless  you
       are  following  behavior  described  in  these  docs.  In the future, certain methods such as "get_attr",
       "get_attrseq" and others may return a copy of the reference rather than  the  original  reference.   This
       behavior  has  not  yet  been  changed  in order to maintain compatibility with previous versions of this
       module.  At the present time, your author is not aware of anyone taking advantage of this "feature,"  but
       it's better to be safe than sorry.

       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.

       Note  that  "HTML::Parser" processes text in 512 byte chunks.  This sometimes will cause strange behavior
       and cause text to be broken into more than one token.  You can suppress this behavior with the  following
       command:

        $p->unbroken_text( [$bool] );

       See  the  "HTML::Parser"  documentation  and  http://www.perlmonks.org/index.pl?node_id=230667  for  more
       information.

BUGS

       There are no known bugs, but that's no guarantee.

       Address bug reports and comments to:  <eop_divo_sitruc@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.

       Reverse the name to email the author.

SUBCLASSING

       You  may  wish  to  change  the  behavior  of  this  module.   You  probably  do  not  want  to  subclass
       "HTML::TokeParser::Simple".    Instead,   you'll   want   to   subclass   one   of   the  token  classes.
       "HTML::TokeParser::Simple::Token" is the base class for all tokens.  Global behavioral changes should  go
       there.  Otherwise, see the appropriate token class for the behavior you wish to alter.

SEE ALSO

       HTML::TokeParser::Simple::Token

       HTML::TokeParser::Simple::Token::Tag

       HTML::TokeParser::Simple::Token::Text

       HTML::TokeParser::Simple::Token::Comment

       HTML::TokeParser::Simple::Token::Declaration

       HTML::TokeParser::Simple::Token::ProcessInstruction

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright  (c)  2004  by 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

AUTHOR

       Curtis "Ovid" Poe <eop_divo_sitruc@yahoo.com>

       Reverse the name to email the author.

perl v5.32.1                                       2021-12-05                      HTML::TokeParser::Simple(3pm)