3

I am fetching my resut from a RSS feed using following code:

try:
    desc = item.xpath('description')[0].text
    if date is not None:
        desc =date +"\n"+"\n"+desc
except:
    desc = None

But sometimes the description contains html tags inside RSS feed as below:

This is samle text

< img src="http://imageURL" alt="" />

While displaying the content I do not want any HTML tags to be displayed on page. Is there any regular expression to remove the HTML tags.

5
  • 4
    i think this will be appropriate! stackoverflow.com/questions/1732348/…. Aug 29, 2011 at 6:48
  • @Jeroen: No, it isn’t appropriate. It’s stupid. Didn’t you read the question at all? HE’s ALREADY USING xpath!!! Will you people just lay off and use your brain for a change?
    – tchrist
    Aug 29, 2011 at 8:46
  • @tchrist: I may misunderstood something, but currently it seems to me like you didn't really read his question. He is using a xpath, right, but what he gets after evaluating it, is HTML. And beside that fact: no need to be unfriendly, bro.
    – naeg
    Aug 29, 2011 at 13:37
  • @naeg: I very strongly feel that that 1732348 answer is simply a joke that gets repeated incredibly too often. It does not help people. I find it very unfriendly, so I downvote it every chance I get.
    – tchrist
    Aug 29, 2011 at 16:36
  • @tchrist: it imo helps, because it explains that using regex to parse html/xml is just wrong and you should be using some parser. I read that answer for the first time and found it funny and right (not only the accepted answer to the question, also others)
    – naeg
    Aug 29, 2011 at 21:23

3 Answers 3

1

Try:

pattern = re.compile(u'<\/?\w+\s*[^>]*?\/?>', re.DOTALL | re.MULTILINE | re.IGNORECASE | re.UNICODE)
text = pattern.sub(u" ", text)
2
  • 1
    @naeg: Regular expressions works fine for this case. A better solution could be text = lxml.html.fromstring(text).text_content() but requires extra packages.
    – pricco
    Aug 29, 2011 at 7:31
  • did you read the link? Just don't use regex to parse html in general, there can always be cases where your regex will fail hard and mess up everything.
    – naeg
    Aug 29, 2011 at 8:08
1

The quick and dirty way:

def remove_html_tags(text):
    pattern = re.compile(r'<.*?>')
    return pattern.sub('', text)

But for a more robust solution, I'd recommend looking into Beautiful Soup.

1

There's a simple way to this without using regex. It's a robust solution:

def remove_html_markup(s):
    tag = False
    quote = False
    out = ""

    for c in s:
            if c == '<' and not quote:
                tag = True
            elif c == '>' and not quote:
                tag = False
            elif (c == '"' or c == "'") and tag:
                quote = not quote
            elif not tag:
                out = out + c

    return out

The idea is explained here: http://youtu.be/2tu9LTDujbw

You can see it working here: http://youtu.be/HPkNPcYed9M?t=35s

PS - If you're interested in the class(about smart debugging with python) I give you a link: http://www.udacity.com/overview/Course/cs259/CourseRev/1. It's free!

You're welcome! :)

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