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Is there a parser/library which is able to read an HTML document into a DOM tree using Java? I'd like to use the standard DOM/Xpath API that Java provides.

Most libraries seem have custom API's to solve this task. Furthermore the conversion HTML to XML-DOM seems unsupported by the most of the available parsers.

Any ideas or experience with a good HTML DOM parser?

6 Answers 6

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JTidy, either by processing the stream to XHTML then using your favourite DOM implementation to re-parse, or using parseDOM if the limited DOM imp that gives you is enough.

Alternatively Neko.

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  • Neko + Xerces do the job quite well. Thanks to all answering Jan 19, 2009 at 14:41
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    Beware of JTidy. It has a memory leak bug. If you run it in a production system it will eventually blow up - StackOverflowError and eventually OutOfMemoryError. That said, it is wonderfully good at fixing broken html so that you can feed it into a dom parser.
    – Joel
    Nov 13, 2009 at 10:14
  • Is there a clean way to use JTidy as a front end to JDOM or XOM in a streaming fashion? That is, without reading the whole document into memory first? (And without using PipedInput/OutputStream and multiple threads?) Or would I be better off just using Neko in that case? Nov 16, 2011 at 1:41
  • Everybody suggests JTidy or its variants, but another reason to BEWARE is that JTidy isn't that predictable. You will always get warnings from it, and it's hard to tell from that torrent whether the page was really processable or not (my experience was some years back) As I recall it was also fussy about ampersands, which I would have thought easier to recover from than other HTML glitches. Aug 12, 2012 at 23:23
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Since HTML files are generally problematic, you'll need to first clean them up using a parser/scanner. I've used JTidy but never happily. NekoHTML works okay, but any of these tools are always just making a best guess of what is intended. You're effectively asking to let a program alter a document's markup until it conforms to a schema. That will likely cause structural (markup), style or content loss. It's unavoidable, and you won't really know what's missing unless you manually scan via a browser (and then you have to trust the browser too).

It really depends on your purpose — if you have thousands of ugly documents with tons of extraneous (non-HTML) markup, then a manual process is probably unreasonable. If your goal is accuracy on a few important documents, then manually fixing them is a reasonable proposition.

One approach is the manual process of repeatedly passing the source through a well-formed and/or validating parser, in an edit cycle using the error messages to eventually fix the broken markup. This does require some understanding of XML, but that's not a bad education to undertake.

With Java 5 the necessary XML features — called the JAXP API — are now built into Java itself; you don't need any external libraries.

You first obtain an instance of a DocumentBuilderFactory, set its features, create a DocumentBuilder (parser), then call its parse() method with an InputSource. InputSource has a number of possible constructors, with a StringReader used in the following example:

import javax.xml.parsers.*;
// ...

DocumentBuilderFactory dbf = DocumentBuilderFactory.newInstance();
dbf.setValidating(false);
dbf.setNamespaceAware(true);
dbf.setIgnoringComments(false);
dbf.setIgnoringElementContentWhitespace(false);
dbf.setExpandEntityReferences(false);
DocumentBuilder db = dbf.newDocumentBuilder();
return db.parse(new InputSource(new StringReader(source)));

This returns a DOM Document. If you don't mind using external libraries there's also the JDOM and XOM APIs, and while these have some advantages over the SAX and DOM APIs in JAXP, they do require non-Java libraries to be added. The DOM can be somewhat cumbersome, but after so many years of using it I don't really mind any longer.

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  • I've used JAXP extensively with XML but I didn't find using JAXP very useful for HTML, even after disabling validation or taking the rest of the steps you've suggested. But perhaps the HTML that I was trying to parse was just too far from being valid XHTML.
    – spaaarky21
    Nov 24, 2013 at 9:07
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Here is a link that might be useful. It's a list of Open Source HTML Parser in Java Open Source HTML Parsers in Java

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Use https://jsoup.org , this is very simple and power.can read and change a html.

Sample:

Document doc = Jsoup.parse(page);  //page can be a file or string.
Element main = doc.getElementById("MainView");
Elements links = doc.select(".link");

for create elements can use j2html, https://j2html.com

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TagSoup can do what you want.

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Apache's Xerces2 parser should do what you want.

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  • 4
    Xerces is very strict at validation making it unsuitable for reading real world HTML pages. May 30, 2012 at 8:19

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