19

I have a html string like this:

<html><body><p>foo <a href='http://www.example.com'>bar</a> baz</p></body></html>

I wish to strip all html tags so that the resulting string becomes:

foo bar baz

From another post here at SO I've come up with this function (which uses the Html Agility Pack):

  Public Shared Function stripTags(ByVal html As String) As String
    Dim plain As String = String.Empty
    Dim htmldoc As New HtmlAgilityPack.HtmlDocument

    htmldoc.LoadHtml(html)
    Dim invalidNodes As HtmlAgilityPack.HtmlNodeCollection = htmldoc.DocumentNode.SelectNodes("//html|//body|//p|//a")

    If Not htmldoc Is Nothing Then
      For Each node In invalidNodes
        node.ParentNode.RemoveChild(node, True)
      Next
    End If

    Return htmldoc.DocumentNode.WriteContentTo
  End Function

Unfortunately this does not return what I expect, instead it gives:

bazbarfoo

Please, where do I go wrong - and is this the best approach?

Regards and happy coding!

UPDATE: by the answer below I came up with this function, might be usefull to others:

  Public Shared Function stripTags(ByVal html As String) As String
    Dim htmldoc As New HtmlAgilityPack.HtmlDocument
    htmldoc.LoadHtml(html.Replace("</p>", "</p>" & New String(Environment.NewLine, 2)).Replace("<br/>", Environment.NewLine))
    Return htmldoc.DocumentNode.InnerText
  End Function
0

5 Answers 5

35

Why not just return htmldoc.DocumentNode.InnerText instead of removing all the non-text nodes? It should give you what you want.

2

It removes the tags and properties not found in the whitelist.

Public NotInheritable Class HtmlSanitizer
    Private Sub New()
    End Sub
    Private Shared ReadOnly Whitelist As IDictionary(Of String, String())
    Private Shared DeletableNodesXpath As New List(Of String)()

    Shared Sub New()
        Whitelist = New Dictionary(Of String, String())() From { _
            {"a", New () {"href"}}, _
            {"strong", Nothing}, _
            {"em", Nothing}, _
            {"blockquote", Nothing}, _
            {"b", Nothing}, _
            {"p", Nothing}, _
            {"ul", Nothing}, _
            {"ol", Nothing}, _
            {"li", Nothing}, _
            {"div", New () {"align"}}, _
            {"strike", Nothing}, _
            {"u", Nothing}, _
            {"sub", Nothing}, _
            {"sup", Nothing}, _
            {"table", Nothing}, _
            {"tr", Nothing}, _
            {"td", Nothing}, _
            {"th", Nothing} _
        }
    End Sub

    Public Shared Function Sanitize(input As String) As String
        If input.Trim().Length < 1 Then
            Return String.Empty
        End If
        Dim htmlDocument = New HtmlDocument()

        htmlDocument.LoadHtml(input)
        SanitizeNode(htmlDocument.DocumentNode)
        Dim xPath As String = HtmlSanitizer.CreateXPath()

        Return StripHtml(htmlDocument.DocumentNode.WriteTo().Trim(), xPath)
    End Function

    Private Shared Sub SanitizeChildren(parentNode As HtmlNode)
        For i As Integer = parentNode.ChildNodes.Count - 1 To 0 Step -1
            SanitizeNode(parentNode.ChildNodes(i))
        Next
    End Sub

    Private Shared Sub SanitizeNode(node As HtmlNode)
        If node.NodeType = HtmlNodeType.Element Then
            If Not Whitelist.ContainsKey(node.Name) Then
                If Not DeletableNodesXpath.Contains(node.Name) Then
                    'DeletableNodesXpath.Add(node.Name.Replace("?",""));
                    node.Name = "removeableNode"
                    DeletableNodesXpath.Add(node.Name)
                End If
                If node.HasChildNodes Then
                    SanitizeChildren(node)
                End If

                Return
            End If

            If node.HasAttributes Then
                For i As Integer = node.Attributes.Count - 1 To 0 Step -1
                    Dim currentAttribute As HtmlAttribute = node.Attributes(i)
                    Dim allowedAttributes As String() = Whitelist(node.Name)
                    If allowedAttributes IsNot Nothing Then
                        If Not allowedAttributes.Contains(currentAttribute.Name) Then
                            node.Attributes.Remove(currentAttribute)
                        End If
                    Else
                        node.Attributes.Remove(currentAttribute)
                    End If
                Next
            End If
        End If

        If node.HasChildNodes Then
            SanitizeChildren(node)
        End If
    End Sub

    Private Shared Function StripHtml(html As String, xPath As String) As String
        Dim htmlDoc As New HtmlDocument()
        htmlDoc.LoadHtml(html)
        If xPath.Length > 0 Then
            Dim invalidNodes As HtmlNodeCollection = htmlDoc.DocumentNode.SelectNodes(xPath)
            For Each node As HtmlNode In invalidNodes
                node.ParentNode.RemoveChild(node, True)
            Next
        End If
        Return htmlDoc.DocumentNode.WriteContentTo()


    End Function

    Private Shared Function CreateXPath() As String
        Dim _xPath As String = String.Empty
        For i As Integer = 0 To DeletableNodesXpath.Count - 1
            If i IsNot DeletableNodesXpath.Count - 1 Then
                _xPath += String.Format("//{0}|", DeletableNodesXpath(i).ToString())
            Else
                _xPath += String.Format("//{0}", DeletableNodesXpath(i).ToString())
            End If
        Next
        Return _xPath
    End Function
End Class
3
  • In your dictionary for all entries except the 1st one, you have 'Nothing' as the value. You might potentially be able to skip using a map and use a list instead.
    – Zasz
    May 4, 2011 at 9:49
  • A List will probably be slower, though it's unlikely to be a bottleneck. That being said, on .Net 3.5+, I would recommend a HashSet over a List for this purpose.
    – Brian
    Aug 16, 2012 at 14:30
  • As Brian points out the choice of data structure here is "unlikely to be a bottleneck". Compared to the operations performed on each node the ContainsKey is probably a negligible portion, no? May 3, 2013 at 20:00
1

You seem to assume that ForEach traverses the document from start to finish.. if you want to make sure you do that, use a regular for loop. You can't even be sure the nodes are being picked up in the order you expect with the xpath selector, but you might be right on this occasion..

regards, Brunis

0

edit below few lines, then you get that you want..

Private Shared Function StripHtml(html As String, xPath As String) As String
    Dim htmlDoc As New HtmlAgilityPack.HtmlDocument()
    htmlDoc.LoadHtml(html)
    If xPath.Length > 0 Then
        Dim invalidNodes As HtmlNodeCollection = htmlDoc.DocumentNode.SelectNodes(xPath)

        '------- edit this line -------------------
        'For Each node As HtmlNode In invalidNodes
        'node.ParentNode.RemoveChild(node, True)
        'Next
        '
        ' result-> bazbarfoo
        '

        '------- modify line ----------------------
        For i = invalidNodes.Count - 1 To 0 Step -1
            Dim Node As HtmlNode = invalidNodes.Item(i)
            Node.ParentNode.RemoveChild(Node, True)
        Next
        '
        ' result-> foo bar baz
        '
    End If
    Return htmlDoc.DocumentNode.WriteContentTo()


End Function
-6

You can use the following code.

public string RemoveHTMLTags(string source)
{
     string expn = "<.*?>";
     return Regex.Replace(source, expn, string.Empty);
}
2

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