I'm working on a program that downloads HTML pages and then selects some of the information and write it to another file.

I want to extract the information which is intbetween the paragraph tags, but i can only get one line of the paragraph. My code is as follows;

FileReader fileReader = new FileReader(file);
	BufferedReader buffRd = new BufferedReader(fileReader);
	BufferedWriter out = new BufferedWriter(new FileWriter(newFile.txt));
	String s;
	while ((s = br.readLine()) !=null) {
		if(s.contains("<p>")){

			try {
		        out.write(s);
		    } catch (IOException e) {
		    }
		}

i was trying to add another while loop, which would tell the program to keep writing to file until the line contains the </p> tag, by saying;

while ((s = br.readLine()) !=null) {
		if(s.contains("<p>")){
                    while(!s.contains("</p>"){
			try {
		        out.write(s);
		    } catch (IOException e) {
		}

But this doesn't work. Could someone please help.

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We definitely are seeing a bug in SO's escaping of HTML tags. – Yishai Sep 6 '09 at 16:55
Are you quoting them as code with backticks? – pjp Sep 6 '09 at 17:19
HTML parsers do exist and there are plenty of them. – lazy Sep 6 '09 at 18:09
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8 Answers

jericho is one of several posible html parsers that could make this task both easy and safe.

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JTidy can represent an HTML document (even a malformed one) as a document model, making the process of extracting the contents of a <p> tag a rather more elegant process than manually thunking through the raw text.

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Yes it's best to avoid trying to parse HTML manually – pjp Sep 6 '09 at 17:12
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Why don't you use an HTML parser for this?

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4  
Suggestions for a parser? – pjp Sep 6 '09 at 17:14
feedback

Try (if you don't want to use a HTML parser library):


        FileReader fileReader = new FileReader(file);
        BufferedReader buffRd = new BufferedReader(fileReader);
        BufferedWriter out = new BufferedWriter(new FileWriter(newFile.txt));
        String s;
        int writeTo = 0;
        while ((s = br.readLine()) !=null) 
        {
                if(s.contains("<p>"))
            	{
            	    	writeTo = 1;

            	    	try 
            	    	{
        	            	out.write(s);
        	        } 
            	    	catch (IOException e) 
            	    	{

        	        }
            	}
            	if(s.contains("</p>"))
            	{
            	    	writeTo = 0;

            	    	try 
            	    	{
        	            	out.write(s);
        	        } 
            	    	catch (IOException e) 
            	    	{

        	        }
            	}
            	else if(writeTo==1)
            	{
            	    	try 
            	    	{
        	            	out.write(s);
        	        } 
            	    	catch (IOException e) 
            	    	{

        	       	}
            	}
}
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What happens if the <p> and </p> are on the same line? In this case the string will be written out twice. I guess it really depends on the input. – pjp Sep 6 '09 at 17:13
You could add some state to see if you have already written out the line before writing it out again. – pjp Sep 6 '09 at 17:21
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I've had success using TagSoup & XPath to parse HTML.

http://home.ccil.org/~cowan/XML/tagsoup/

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Use a ParserCallback. Its a simple class thats included with the JDK. It notifies you every time a new tag is found and then you can extract the text of the tag. Simple example:

import java.io.*;
import java.net.*;
import javax.swing.text.*;
import javax.swing.text.html.*;
import javax.swing.text.html.parser.*;

public class ParserCallbackTest extends HTMLEditorKit.ParserCallback
{
    private int tabLevel = 1;
    private int line = 1;

    public void handleComment(char[] data, int pos)
    {
    	displayData(new String(data));
    }

    public void handleEndOfLineString(String eol)
    {
    	System.out.println( line++ );
    }

    public void handleEndTag(HTML.Tag tag, int pos)
    {
    	tabLevel--;
    	displayData("/" + tag);
    }

    public void handleError(String errorMsg, int pos)
    {
    	displayData(pos + ":" + errorMsg);
    }

    public void handleMutableTag(HTML.Tag tag, MutableAttributeSet a, int pos)
    {
    	displayData("mutable:" + tag + ": " + pos + ": " + a);
    }

    public void handleSimpleTag(HTML.Tag tag, MutableAttributeSet a, int pos)
    {
    	displayData( tag + "::" + a );
//  	tabLevel++;
    }

    public void handleStartTag(HTML.Tag tag, MutableAttributeSet a, int pos)
    {
    	displayData( tag + ":" + a );
    	tabLevel++;
    }

    public void handleText(char[] data, int pos)
    {
    	displayData( new String(data) );
    }

    private void displayData(String text)
    {
    	for (int i = 0; i < tabLevel; i++)
    		System.out.print("\t");

    	System.out.println(text);
    }

    public static void main(String[] args)
    throws IOException
    {
    	ParserCallbackTest parser = new ParserCallbackTest();

    	// args[0] is the file to parse

    	Reader reader = new FileReader(args[0]);
//  	URLConnection conn = new URL(args[0]).openConnection();
//  	Reader reader = new InputStreamReader(conn.getInputStream());

    	try
    	{
    		new ParserDelegator().parse(reader, parser, true);
    	}
    	catch (IOException e)
    	{
    		System.out.println(e);
    	}
    }
}

So all you need to do is set a boolean flag when the paragraph tag is found. Then in the handleText() method you extract the text.

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Another html parser I really liked using was jsoup. You could get all the <p> elements in 2 lines of code.

Document doc = Jsoup.connect("http://en.wikipedia.org/").get();
Elements ps = doc.select("p");

Then write it out to a file in one more line

out.write(ps.text());  //it will append all of the p elements together in one long string

or if you want them on separate lines you can iterate through the elements and write them out separately.

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You may just be using the wrong tool for the job:

perl -ne "print if m|<p>| .. m|</p>|" infile.txt >outfile.txt
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-1: wrong answer for the question – Charles Stewart Dec 26 '09 at 1:52
That's a fair cop. Kind of a late hit, though. – brianary Dec 26 '09 at 2:09
1  
Late hits go both ways :) – Charles Stewart Dec 27 '09 at 9:55
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