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Please can someone tell me a simple way to find href and src tags in an html file using regular expressions in Java?
And then, how do I get the URL associated with the tag?

Thanks for any suggestion.

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Java is not an acronym, so should not be spelled in all caps. – Martin OConnor Mar 24 at 11:56
Oh ok. Lucky you :P – arpf Mar 24 at 21:24

7 Answers

vote up 19 vote down check

Using regular expressions to pull values from HTML is always a mistake. HTML syntax is a lot more complex that it may first appear and it's very easy for a page to catch out even a very complex regular expression.

Use an HTML Parser instead.

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+1 for not parsing HTML with regular expressions. – Welbog Mar 24 at 11:43
+1 for answer and morph – Paul Whelan Mar 24 at 11:46
It depends on what you are doing. If you are processing a lot of HTML from random sources an HTML Parser may well fail on some of them and will likely require more memory and processing than a regex. For example the Heritrix web crawler uses regex for link extraction on HTML pages. – Kris Mar 24 at 12:19
I am amazed how often this very question has been answered with this very answer on this site (and the rest of the Internet) already. I wonder if this this topic will ever run dry. +1 nevertheless. – Tomalak Mar 24 at 12:55
The solution depends on the question... – ReneS Mar 24 at 13:06
vote up 5 vote down

Dont use regular expressions use NekoHTML or TagSoup which are a bridge providing a SAX or DOM as in XML approach to visiting a HTML document.

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+1 on Neko. Very easy to use. – Damo Mar 24 at 15:20
vote up 3 vote down

If you want to go down the html parsing route, which Dave and I recommend here's the code to parse a String Data for anchor tags and print their href.

since your just using anchor tags you should be ok with just regex but if you want to do more go with a parser. The Mozilla HTML Parser is the best out there.

File parserLibraryFile = new File("lib/MozillaHtmlParser/native/bin/MozillaParser" + EnviromentController.getSharedLibraryExtension());
                String parserLibrary = parserLibraryFile.getAbsolutePath();
                //  mozilla.dist.bin directory :
                final File mozillaDistBinDirectory = new File("lib/MozillaHtmlParser/mozilla.dist.bin."+ EnviromentController.getOperatingSystemName());

        MozillaParser.init(parserLibrary,mozillaDistBinDirectory.getAbsolutePath());
MozillaParser parser = new MozillaParser();
Document domDocument = parser.parse(data);
NodeList list = domDocument.getElementsByTagName("a");

for (int i = 0; i < list.getLength(); i++) {
    Node n = list.item(i);
    NamedNodeMap m = n.getAttributes();
    if (m != null) {
        Node attrNode = m.getNamedItem("href");
        if (attrNode != null)
           System.out.println(attrNode.getNodeValue());
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vote up 1 vote down

I searched the Regular Expression Library (http://regexlib.com/Search.aspx?k=href and http://regexlib.com/Search.aspx?k=src)

The best I found was

((?<html>(href|src)\s*=\s*")|(?<css>url\())(?<url>.*?)(?(html)"|\))

Check out these links for more expressions:

http://regexlib.com/REDetails.aspx?regexp_id=2261

http://regexlib.com/REDetails.aspx?regexp_id=758

http://regexlib.com/REDetails.aspx?regexp_id=774

http://regexlib.com/REDetails.aspx?regexp_id=1437

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I hate that site. I see they still don't bother to mention which flavor a given regex is targeted at. This regex (id=2261) uses named captures and conditionals, neither of which is supported by Java. – Alan Moore Mar 24 at 17:03
vote up 1 vote down

The other answers are true. Java Regex API is not a proper tool to achieve your goal. Use efficient, secure and well tested high-level tools mentioned in the other answers.

If your question concerns rather Regex API than a real-life problem (learning purposes for example) - you can do it with the following code:

String html = "foo <a href='link1'>bar</a> baz <a href='link2'>qux</a> foo";
Pattern p = Pattern.compile("<a href='(.*?)'>");
Matcher m = p.matcher(html);
while(m.find()) {
   System.out.println(m.group(0));
   System.out.println(m.group(1));
}

And the output is:

<a href='link1'>
link1
<a href='link2'>
link2

Please note that lazy/reluctant qualifier *? must be used in order to reduce the grouping to the single tag. Group 0 is the entire match, group 1 is the next group match (next pair of parenthesis).

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vote up 0 vote down

Regular expressions can only parse regular languages, that's why they are called regular expressions. HTML is not a regular language, ergo it cannot be parsed by regular expressions.

HTML parsers, on the other hand, can parse HTML, that's why they are called HTML parsers.

You should use you favorite HTML parser instead.

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vote up -1 vote down

Contrary to popular opinion, regular expressions are useful tools to extract data from unstructured text (which HTML is).

If you are doing complex HTML data extraction (say, find all paragraphs in a page) then HTML parsing is probably the way to go. But if you just need to get some URLs from HREFs, then a regular expression would work fine and it will be very hard to break it.

Try something like this:

/<a[^>]+href=["']?([^'"> ]+)["']?[^>]*>/i
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