1

I have a very large HTML file (several megabytes). I know the data I want is under something like <div class=someName>here</div>

What is a good library to parse through the HTML page so I can loop through elements and grab each someName? I want to do this in either C#, Python or C++.

5 Answers 5

12

I would use Python and BeautifulSoup for the job. It is very solid at handling this kind of stuff.

For your case, you can use SoupStrainer to make BeautifulSoup only parse DIVs in the document that have the class you want, so it doesn't have to have the whole thing in memory.

For example, say your document looks like this:

<div class="test">Hello World</div>
<div class="hello">Aloha World</div>
<div>Hey There</div>

You can write this:

>>> from BeautifulSoup import BeautifulSoup, SoupStrainer
>>> doc = '''
...     <div class="test">Hello World</div>
...     <div class="hello">Aloha World</div>
...     <div>Hey There</div>
... '''
>>> findDivs = SoupStrainer('div', {'class':'hello'})
>>> [tag for tag in BeautifulSoup(doc, parseOnlyThese=findDivs)]
[<div class="hello">Aloha World</div>]
3

The Html Agility Pack is a stellar option if you want to use C#

1

Xerces is well documented, supported and tested. (C++)

http://xerces.apache.org/xerces-c/

(yes, it's an XML parser but it should do the trick)

1

Sounds like a case for good old regular expressions.

Input:

<div class="test">Hello World</div>
<div class="somename">Aloha World</div>
<div>Hey There</div>

RegEx:

\<div\sclass\=\"somename\"\>(?<Text>.*?)\<\/div\>

Yields:

Aloha World (note: In a single group named Text)

Probably need to account for enclosing quotes missing etc...

Although with regular expressions now you have two problems.

1
  • Irony is nice. But, it's not easy to upvote answers when they're of the form "don't do this"
    – S.Lott
    Apr 11, 2009 at 11:05
0

Give TinyXML a try. (C++ XML parser)

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