413

I want to parse a string which contains HTML text. I want to do it in JavaScript.

I tried the Pure JavaScript HTML Parser library but it seems that it parses the HTML of my current page, not from a string. Because when I try the code below, it changes the title of my page:

var parser = new HTMLtoDOM("<html><head><title>titleTest</title></head><body><a href='test0'>test01</a><a href='test1'>test02</a><a href='test2'>test03</a></body></html>", document);

My goal is to extract links from an HTML external page that I read just like a string.

Do you know an API to do it?

4

16 Answers 16

503

Create a dummy DOM element and add the string to it. Then, you can manipulate it like any DOM element.

var el = document.createElement( 'html' );
el.innerHTML = "<html><head><title>titleTest</title></head><body><a href='test0'>test01</a><a href='test1'>test02</a><a href='test2'>test03</a></body></html>";

el.getElementsByTagName( 'a' ); // Live NodeList of your anchor elements

Edit: adding a jQuery answer to please the fans!

var el = $( '<div></div>' );
el.html("<html><head><title>titleTest</title></head><body><a href='test0'>test01</a><a href='test1'>test02</a><a href='test2'>test03</a></body></html>");

$('a', el) // All the anchor elements
23
  • 12
    Just a note: With this solution, if I do a "alert(el.innerHTML)", I lose the <html>, <body> and <head> tag....
    – stage
    May 14, 2012 at 15:10
  • 5
    @stage I'm a little bit late to the party, but you should be able to use document.createElement('html'); to preserve the <head> and <body> tags. May 20, 2015 at 17:21
  • 5
    it looks like you are putting an html element within an html element
    – symbiont
    Aug 16, 2017 at 11:39
  • 17
    I'm concerned is upvoted as the top answer. The parse() solution below is more reusable and elegant.
    – Justin
    Mar 7, 2019 at 17:36
  • 8
    Security note: this will execute any script in the input, and thus is unsuitable for untrusted input. Mar 11, 2020 at 13:55
422

It's quite simple:

const parser = new DOMParser();
const htmlDoc = parser.parseFromString(txt, 'text/html');
// do whatever you want with htmlDoc.getElementsByTagName('a');

According to MDN, to do this in chrome you need to parse as XML like so:

const parser = new DOMParser();
const htmlDoc = parser.parseFromString(txt, 'text/xml');
// do whatever you want with htmlDoc.getElementsByTagName('a');

It is currently unsupported by webkit and you'd have to follow Florian's answer, and it is unknown to work in most cases on mobile browsers.

Edit: Now widely supported

9
  • 51
    Worth noting that in 2016 DOMParser is now widely supported. caniuse.com/#feat=xml-serializer
    – aendra
    Mar 9, 2016 at 11:21
  • 7
    Worth noting that all relative links in the created document are broken, because the document gets created by inheriting the documentURL of window, which most likely differs from the URL of the string.
    – ceving
    Nov 3, 2017 at 0:17
  • 4
    Worth noting that you should only call new DOMParser once and then reuse that same object throughout the rest of your script.
    – Jack G
    May 19, 2018 at 17:36
  • 1
    The parse() solution below is more reusable and specific to HTML. This is nice if you need an XML document, however.
    – Justin
    Mar 7, 2019 at 17:39
  • 1
    Security note: this will execute without any browser context, so no scripts will run. It should be suitable for untrusted input. Mar 11, 2020 at 13:56
42

EDIT: The solution below is only for HTML "fragments" since html,head and body are removed. I guess the solution for this question is DOMParser's parseFromString() method:

const parser = new DOMParser();
const document = parser.parseFromString(html, "text/html");

For HTML fragments, the solutions listed here works for most HTML, however for certain cases it won't work.

For example try parsing <td>Test</td>. This one won't work on the div.innerHTML solution nor DOMParser.prototype.parseFromString nor range.createContextualFragment solution. The td tag goes missing and only the text remains.

Only jQuery handles that case well.

So the future solution (MS Edge 13+) is to use template tag:

function parseHTML(html) {
    var t = document.createElement('template');
    t.innerHTML = html;
    return t.content;
}

var documentFragment = parseHTML('<td>Test</td>');

For older browsers I have extracted jQuery's parseHTML() method into an independent gist - https://gist.github.com/Munawwar/6e6362dbdf77c7865a99

2
  • If you want to write forward-compatible code that also works on old browsers you can polyfill the <template> tag. It depends on custom elements which you may also need to polyfill. In fact you might just want to use webcomponents.js to polyfill custom elements, templates, shadow dom, promises, and a few other things all at one go. Sep 29, 2017 at 17:06
  • Wow. Extremely efficient!
    – Luis Lobo
    Nov 18, 2022 at 1:48
30
var doc = new DOMParser().parseFromString(html, "text/html");
var links = doc.querySelectorAll("a");
4
  • 4
    Why are you prefixing $? Also, as mentioned in the linked duplicate, text/html is not supported very well, and has to be implemented using a polyfill.
    – Rob W
    May 15, 2012 at 13:08
  • 2
    I copied this line from a project, I'm used to prefix variables with $ in javascript application (not in library). it's just to avoir having a conflict with a library. that's not very usefull as almost every variable is scoped but it used to be usefull. it also (maybe) help to identify variables easily.
    – Mathieu
    May 15, 2012 at 13:23
  • 1
    Sadly DOMParser neither work on text/html in chrome, this MDN page gives workaround.
    – Jokester
    Apr 24, 2013 at 16:51
  • 1
    Security note: this will execute without any browser context, so no scripts will run. It should be suitable for untrusted input. Mar 11, 2020 at 13:57
8
const parse = Range.prototype.createContextualFragment.bind(document.createRange());

document.body.appendChild( parse('<p><strong>Today is:</strong></p>') ),
document.body.appendChild( parse(`<p style="background: #eee">${new Date()}</p>`) );


Only valid child Nodes within the parent Node (start of the Range) will be parsed. Otherwise, unexpected results may occur:

// <body> is "parent" Node, start of Range
const parseRange = document.createRange();
const parse = Range.prototype.createContextualFragment.bind(parseRange);

// Returns Text "1 2" because td, tr, tbody are not valid children of <body>
parse('<td>1</td> <td>2</td>');
parse('<tr><td>1</td> <td>2</td></tr>');
parse('<tbody><tr><td>1</td> <td>2</td></tr></tbody>');

// Returns <table>, which is a valid child of <body>
parse('<table> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> </table>');
parse('<table> <tr> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> </tr> </table>');
parse('<table> <tbody> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> </tbody> </table>');

// <tr> is parent Node, start of Range
parseRange.setStart(document.createElement('tr'), 0);

// Returns [<td>, <td>] element array
parse('<td>1</td> <td>2</td>');
parse('<tr> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> </tr>');
parse('<tbody> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> </tbody>');
parse('<table> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> </table>');
1
  • 11
    Security note: this will execute any script in the input, and thus is unsuitable for untrusted input. Mar 11, 2020 at 13:55
7

The fastest way to parse HTML in Chrome and Firefox is Range#createContextualFragment:

var range = document.createRange();
range.selectNode(document.body); // required in Safari
var fragment = range.createContextualFragment('<h1>html...</h1>');
var firstNode = fragment.firstChild;

I would recommend to create a helper function which uses createContextualFragment if available and falls back to innerHTML otherwise.

Benchmark: http://jsperf.com/domparser-vs-createelement-innerhtml/3

5
  • Note that, like (the simple) innerHTML, this will execute an <img>’s onerror.
    – Ry-
    Aug 28, 2015 at 22:54
  • 1
    An issue with this is that, html like '<td>test</td>' would ignore the td in the document.body context (and only create 'test' text node).OTOH, if it used internally in a templating engine then the right context would be available.
    – Munawwar
    Oct 5, 2015 at 21:47
  • Also BTW, IE 11 supports createContextualFragment.
    – Munawwar
    Oct 5, 2015 at 21:49
  • The question was how to parse with JS - not Chrome or Firefox
    – sea26.2
    Apr 19, 2019 at 1:38
  • 5
    Security note: this will execute any script in the input, and thus is unsuitable for untrusted input. Mar 11, 2020 at 13:55
7

The following function parseHTML will return either :


The code :

function parseHTML(markup) {
    if (markup.toLowerCase().trim().indexOf('<!doctype') === 0) {
        var doc = document.implementation.createHTMLDocument("");
        doc.documentElement.innerHTML = markup;
        return doc;
    } else if ('content' in document.createElement('template')) {
       // Template tag exists!
       var el = document.createElement('template');
       el.innerHTML = markup;
       return el.content;
    } else {
       // Template tag doesn't exist!
       var docfrag = document.createDocumentFragment();
       var el = document.createElement('body');
       el.innerHTML = markup;
       for (i = 0; 0 < el.childNodes.length;) {
           docfrag.appendChild(el.childNodes[i]);
       }
       return docfrag;
    }
}

How to use :

var links = parseHTML('<!doctype html><html><head></head><body><a>Link 1</a><a>Link 2</a></body></html>').getElementsByTagName('a');
6
  • I couldn't get this to work on IE8. I get the error "Object doesn't support this property or method" for the first line in the function. I don't think the createHTMLDocument function exists Jan 10, 2014 at 6:21
  • What exactly is your use case? If you just want to parse HTML and your HTML is intended for the body of your document, you could do the following : (1) var div=document.createElement("DIV"); (2) div.innerHTML = markup; (3) result = div.childNodes; --- This gives you a collection of childnodes and should work not just in IE8 but even in IE6-7. Jan 14, 2014 at 15:03
  • Thanks for the alternate option, I'll try it if I need to do this again. For now though I used the JQuery solution above. Jan 22, 2014 at 22:04
  • @SebastianCarroll Note that IE8 doesn't support the trim method on strings. See stackoverflow.com/q/2308134/3210837.
    – Toothbrush
    Dec 24, 2016 at 21:02
  • 3
    @Toothbrush : Is IE8 support still relevant at the dawn of 2017? Dec 29, 2016 at 14:53
6

I think the best way is use this API like this:

//Table string in HTML format
const htmlString = '<table><tbody><tr><td>Cell 1</td><td>Cell 2</td></tr></tbody></table>';

//Parse using DOMParser native way
const parser = new DOMParser();
const $newTable = parser.parseFromString(htmlString, 'text/html');

//Here you can select parts of your parsed html and work with it
const $row = $newTable.querySelector('table > tbody > tr');

//Here i'm printing the number of columns (2)
const $containerHtml = document.getElementById('containerHtml');
$containerHtml.innerHTML = ['Your parsed table have ', $row.cells.length, 'columns.'].join(' ');
<div id="containerHtml"></div>

5

1 Way

Use document.cloneNode()

Performance is:

Call to document.cloneNode() took ~0.22499999977299012 milliseconds.

and maybe will be more.

var t0, t1, html;

t0 = performance.now();
   html = document.cloneNode(true);
t1 = performance.now();

console.log("Call to doSomething took " + (t1 - t0) + " milliseconds.")

html.documentElement.innerHTML = '<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><title>Test</title></head><body><div id="test1">test1</div></body></html>';

console.log(html.getElementById("test1"));

2 Way

Use document.implementation.createHTMLDocument()

Performance is:

Call to document.implementation.createHTMLDocument() took ~0.14000000010128133 milliseconds.

var t0, t1, html;

t0 = performance.now();
html = document.implementation.createHTMLDocument("test");
t1 = performance.now();

console.log("Call to doSomething took " + (t1 - t0) + " milliseconds.")

html.documentElement.innerHTML = '<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><title>Test</title></head><body><div id="test1">test1</div></body></html>';

console.log(html.getElementById("test1"));

3 Way

Use document.implementation.createDocument()

Performance is:

Call to document.implementation.createHTMLDocument() took ~0.14000000010128133 milliseconds.

var t0 = performance.now();
  html = document.implementation.createDocument('', 'html', 
             document.implementation.createDocumentType('html', '', '')
         );
var t1 = performance.now();

console.log("Call to doSomething took " + (t1 - t0) + " milliseconds.")

html.documentElement.innerHTML = '<html><head><title>Test</title></head><body><div id="test1">test</div></body></html>';

console.log(html.getElementById("test1"));

4 Way

Use new Document()

Performance is:

Call to document.implementation.createHTMLDocument() took ~0.13499999840860255 milliseconds.

  • Note

ParentNode.append is experimental technology in 2020 year.

var t0, t1, html;

t0 = performance.now();
//---------------
html = new Document();

html.append(
  html.implementation.createDocumentType('html', '', '')
);
    
html.append(
  html.createElement('html')
);
//---------------
t1 = performance.now();

console.log("Call to doSomething took " + (t1 - t0) + " milliseconds.")

html.documentElement.innerHTML = '<html><head><title>Test</title></head><body><div id="test1">test1</div></body></html>';

console.log(html.getElementById("test1"));
5

To do this in node.js, you can use an HTML parser like node-html-parser. The syntax looks like this:

import { parse } from 'node-html-parser';

const root = parse('<ul id="list"><li>Hello World</li></ul>');

console.log(root.firstChild.structure);
// ul#list
//   li
//     #text

console.log(root.querySelector('#list'));
// { tagName: 'ul',
//   rawAttrs: 'id="list"',
//   childNodes:
//    [ { tagName: 'li',
//        rawAttrs: '',
//        childNodes: [Object],
//        classNames: [] } ],
//   id: 'list',
//   classNames: [] }
console.log(root.toString());
// <ul id="list"><li>Hello World</li></ul>
root.set_content('<li>Hello World</li>');
root.toString();    // <li>Hello World</li>
5
  • 1
    This is the best solution even on the browser, if you do not want to rely on the browser implementation.. This implementation will behave always the same no matter which browser you are on (not that it matters much nowdays), but also the parsing is done in javascript itself instead of c/c++!
    – Rainb
    Jul 26, 2022 at 9:50
  • Thanks @Rainb. How do you use the solution in the browser though? Jul 26, 2022 at 19:59
  • 1
    like this (await import("https://cdn.skypack.dev/node-html-parser")).default('<ul id="list"><li>Hello World</li></ul>').firstChild.structure
    – Rainb
    Jul 27, 2022 at 16:10
  • I never knew that was an option. Can you do that with any node library, or is it because this one doesn't use any node-only code? Jul 29, 2022 at 0:49
  • 1
    if it requires anything from node like tls, http, net, fs then it probably won't work in the browser. But it won't work in deno either. So just look for deno compatible packages.
    – Rainb
    Jul 29, 2022 at 7:47
4

If you're open to using jQuery, it has some nice facilities for creating detached DOM elements from strings of HTML. These can then be queried through the usual means, E.g.:

var html = "<html><head><title>titleTest</title></head><body><a href='test0'>test01</a><a href='test1'>test02</a><a href='test2'>test03</a></body></html>";
var anchors = $('<div/>').append(html).find('a').get();

Edit - just saw @Florian's answer which is correct. This is basically exactly what he said, but with jQuery.

0
1
const html =
`<script>
    alert('👋 there ! Wanna grab a 🍺'); 
</script>`;

const scriptEl = document.createRange().createContextualFragment(html);
parent.append(scriptEl);

I found this solution, and i think it's the best solution, it parse the HTML and execute the script inside.

0

I had to use innerHTML of an element parsed in popover of Angular NGX Bootstrap popover. This is the solution which worked for me.

public htmlContainer = document.createElement( 'html' );

in constructor

this.htmlContainer.innerHTML = ''; setTimeout(() => { this.convertToArray(); });

 convertToArray() {
    const shapesHC = document.getElementsByClassName('weekPopUpDummy');
    const shapesArrHCSpread = [...(shapesHC as any)];
    this.htmlContainer = shapesArrHCSpread[0];
    this.htmlContainer.innerHTML = shapesArrHCSpread[0].textContent;
  }

in html

<div class="weekPopUpDummy" [popover]="htmlContainer.innerHTML" [adaptivePosition]="false" placement="top" [outsideClick]="true" #popOverHide="bs-popover" [delay]="150" (onHidden)="onHidden(weekEvent)" (onShown)="onShown()">
0
function parseElement(raw){
    let el = document.createElement('div');
    el.innerHTML = raw;
    let res = el.querySelector('*');
    res.remove();
    return res;
}

note: raw string should not be more than 1 element

0

I used DOMParser class which I referred from this blog.

This will return a HTMLCollection object where we can access the element as DOM element itself. Also easy to insert the code in the HTML document by document.body.append(...parseHTML(html_string));

const parseHTML = (htmlString) => {
    const parser = new DOMParser();
    const page = parser.parseFromString(htmlString, 'text/html');
    return page.body.children;
};

Thank me later.

-1
let content = "<center><h1>404 Not Found</h1></center>"
let result = $("<div/>").html(content).text()

content: <center><h1>404 Not Found</h1></center>,
result: "404 Not Found"

1
  • This does not answer the Quest. OP wants to extract links.
    – Rene Koch
    Oct 7, 2020 at 11:47

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