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Is there a PHP class/library that would allow me to query an XHTML document with CSS selectors? I need to scrape some pages for data that is very easily accessible if I could somehow use CSS selectors (jQuery has spoiled me!). Any ideas?

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After googling further (initial results weren't very helpful) it seems there is actually a Zend Framework libary for this, along with some others:

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+1 phpQuery is absolutely wonderful. – Jonathan Sampson Jul 17 '09 at 18:36
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I tried out 3 of the items you listed. In the end, my choice is Simple HTML DOM, purely because they explain it's usage very simply and well put. phpQuery got the job done, but I felt as if there was a lack of documentation and support. Zend successfully grabbed my query and counted it, but when it came to getting the values, it failed. Again, my suggestion is Simple HTML DOM. – NessDan Dec 10 '10 at 2:50
Although simple html dom is quite popular, a) it doesn't have good coverage of the full selector syntax b) it doesn't appear to be in active development. – Bobby Jack Dec 7 '11 at 11:42
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XPath is a fairly standard way to access XML (and XHTML) nodes, and provides much more precision than CSS.

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+1 to bring to 0, but mainly because alternatives are always good. – eyelidlessness Nov 4 '08 at 7:05
wow, I was downvoted for this? I'm kinda interested as to why... – nickf Nov 4 '08 at 10:36
Wasn't me the OP! :-) I actually think this would be the best alternative since XHTML is just a subset of XML. – Wilco Nov 4 '08 at 16:54
Sometimes people here are rather random. I agreed on XPath being a better tool to use, if it's available. It's standard, more powerful and quite similar to CSS-selectors anyway. – troelskn Nov 5 '08 at 15:01
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In CSS you couldn't do anything like "select the parent of a 'strong' tag" – nickf Apr 5 '09 at 5:43
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For jQuery users most interesting may be port of jQuery to PHP, which is phpQuery. Almost all sections of the library are ported. Additionally it contains WebBrowser plugin, which can be used for Web Scraping whole site's path/processes (eg accessing data available after logging in). It simply simulates web browser on the server (events and cookies too). Latest versions has experimental support for XML namespaces and CSS3 "|" selector.

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I wrote mine, based on Mootools CSS selector engine http://selectors.svn.exyks.org/. it rely on simplexml extension ability (so, it's read-only)

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Another one:
http://querypath.org/

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Looks better than all the other options, to me - thanks! – Bobby Jack Dec 7 '11 at 12:06
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I ended up using PHP Query Lite, it's very simple and has all I need.

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A great one is a component of symfony 2, CssSelector\Parser­Introduction. It converts CSS selectors into XPath expressions. Take a look =)

Source code

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For document parsing I use DOM. This can quite easily solve your problem if you know the tag name (in this example "div"):

 $doc = new DOMDocument();
 $doc->loadHTML($html);

 $elements = $doc->getElementsByTagName("div");
 foreach ($elements as $e){
  if ($e->getAttribute("class")!="someclass") continue;

  //its a div.classname
 }

Not sure if DOM lets you get all elements of a document at once... you might have to do a tree traversal.

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