parse_html - Parse HTML text
parse_htmlfile - Parse HTML text from file
use HTML::Parse; $h = parse_htmlfile("test.html"); print $h->dump; $h = parse_html("<p>Some more <i>italic</i> text", $h); $h->delete; print parse_htmlfile("index.html")->as_HTML; # tidy up markup in a file
Disclaimer: This module is provided for backwards compatibility with earlier versions of this library. New code will probably prefer to use the HTML::Parser and HTML::TreeBuilder modules directly.
The HTML::Parse module provides functions to parse HTML documents. There are two functions exported by this module:
HTML::Parse
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.
HTML::Parser
The $obj will default to a internally created HTML::TreeBuilder object. This class implements a parser that builds (and is) a HTML syntax tree with HTML::Element objects as nodes.
HTML::TreeBuilder
The return value from parse_html() is $obj.
Same as parse_html(), but obtains HTML text from the named file.
Returns undef if the file could not be opened, or $obj otherwise.
undef
When a HTML::TreeBuilder object is created, the following variables control how parsing takes place:
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.
This variable contols whether unknow tags should be represented as elements in the parse tree. Default is true.
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.
Call warn() with an apropriate message for syntax errors. Default is false.
HTML::Parser, HTML::TreeBuilder, HTML::Element
Copyright 1995-1996 Gisle Aas. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Gisle Aas <aas@sn.no>
To install LWP, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm LWP
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install LWP
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.