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I'm trying to write a parser to get the data out of a typical html table day/time schedule (like this).

I'd like to give this parser a page and a table class/id, and have it return a list of events, along with days & times they occur. It should take into account rowspans and colspans, so for the linked example, it would return {:event => "Music With Paul Ray", :times => [T 12:00am - 3:00am, F 12:00am - 3:00am]}, etc.

I've sort of figured out a half-executed messy approach using ruby, and am wondering how you might tackle such a problem?

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4 Answers

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This is what the program will need to do:

  1. Read the tags in (detect attributes and open/close tags)
  2. Build an internal representation of the table (how will you handle malformed tables?)
  3. Calculate the day, start time, and end time of each event
  4. Merge repeated events into an event series

That's a lot of components! You'll probably need to ask a more specific question.

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The best thing to do here is to use a HTML parser. With a HTML parser you can look at the table rows programmatically, without having to resort to fragile regular expressions and doing the parsing yourself.

Then you can run some logic along the lines of (this is not runnable code, just a sketch that you should be able to see the idea from):

for row in table:
    i = 0
    for cell in row: # skipping row 1
        event = name
        starttime = row[0]
        endtime = table[ i + cell.rowspan + 1 ][0]

        print event, starttime, endtime
    i += 1
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Use http://www.crummy.com/software/BeautifulSoup/ and that task should be a breeze.

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As said, using regexes on HTML is generally a bad idea, you should use a good parser.
For validating XHTML pages, you can use a simple XML parser which is available in most languages. Alas, in your case, the given page doesn't validate (W3C's markup validation service reports 230 Errors, 7 warning(s)!)
For generic, possibly malformed HTML, there are libraries to handle that (kigurai recommends BeautifulSoup for Python, I know also TagSoup for Java, there are others).

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