vote up 20 vote down star
34

This question is a lazy way of collecting examples of parsing HTML with a variety of languages and parsing libraries. Individual comments will be linked to in answers to questions about how to parse HTML with regexes as a way of showing the right way to do things (similar to how I use Can you provide some examples of why it is hard to parse XML and HTML with a regex?).

For the sake of consistency, I ask that the example be parsing an HTML file for the href in anchor tags. To make it easy to search this question, I ask that you follow this format

language:
library:

<example code>

Please make the library a link to the documentation for the library. If you want to provide an example other than extracting links, please include a

purpose:

after the "library:".

Note, the tags have been changed to draw in other languages. Here is a history of the tags this post has had: c#, perl, python, ruby, vb.net, and parsing.

flag
repeat for each example the HTML builder code is pointless – dfa Apr 22 at 9:46
and why you are clutting perl code with pointless/useless use directives? (warnings and strict) – dfa Apr 22 at 9:48
1  
Self contained, working examples are better. All Perl code should include strict and warnings, they are not pointless; they are a part of Modern Perl. I shudder to think what your code looks like if you think they are "pointless" and "useless". – Chas. Owens Apr 22 at 11:21
in my code I always use warnings and strict; in THIS context they are pointless. Most of this samples are not "self contained" (e.g. jquery, ruby and other answers) so why bother with perl-based solutions? – dfa Apr 22 at 13:21
2  
Proper code is not a distraction. – Chas. Owens Apr 22 at 18:48
show 2 more comments

20 Answers

vote up 4 vote down

Language: Common Lisp
Library: Closure Html, Closure Xml, CL-WHO

(shown using DOM API, without using XPATH or STP API)

(defvar *html*
  (who:with-html-output-to-string (stream)
    (:html
     (:body (loop
               for site in (list "foo" "bar" "baz")
               do (who:htm (:a :href (format nil "http://~A.com/" site))))))))

(defvar *dom*
  (chtml:parse *html* (cxml-dom:make-dom-builder)))

(loop
   for tag across (dom:get-elements-by-tag-name *dom* "a")
   collect (dom:get-attribute tag "href"))
=> 
("http://foo.com/" "http://bar.com/" "http://baz.com/")
link|flag
does collect or dom:get-attribute correctly handle tags that do not have href set? – Chas. Owens Apr 28 at 14:56
1  
Depending on definition of correctness. In example as it is shown, empty strings will be collected for "a" tags with no "href" attribute. If loop is rewritten as (loop for tag across (dom:get-elements-by-tag-name dom "a") when (string/= (dom:get-attribute tag "href") "") collect (dom:get-attribute tag "href")) then only non-empty "href"s will be collected. – dmitry-vk Apr 28 at 15:19
Actually, that's not when (string/= (dom:get-attribute tag "href") "") but when (dom:has-attribute tag "href") – dmitry-vk Apr 28 at 15:35
vote up 0 vote down

Language: Objective-C
Library: libxml2 + Matt Gallagher's libxml2 wrappers + Ben Copsey's ASIHTTPRequest

ASIHTTPRequest *request = [ASIHTTPRequest alloc] initWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://stackoverflow.com/questions/773340"];
[request start];
NSError *error = [request error];
if (!error) {
    NSData *response = [request responseData];
    NSLog(@"Data: %@", [[self query:@"//a[@href]" withResponse:response] description]);
    [request release];
}
else 
    @throw [NSException exceptionWithName:@"kMyHTTPRequestFailed" reason:@"Request failed!" userInfo:nil];

...

- (id) query:(NSString *)xpathQuery WithResponse:(NSData *)resp {
    NSArray *nodes = PerformHTMLXPathQuery(resp, xpathQuery);
    if (nodes != nil)
        return nodes;
    return nil;
}
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Language: PHP
Library: SimpleXML (and DOM)

<?php
$page = new DOMDocument();
$page->strictErrorChecking = false;
$page->loadHTMLFile('http://stackoverflow.com/questions/773340');
$xml = simplexml_import_dom($page);

$links = $xml->xpath('//a[@href]');
foreach($links as $link)
    echo $link['href']."\n";
link|flag
I don't know XPath, does '//a[@href]' give you all a tags that have an href attribute set? – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 22:47
Yes it does, and I don't know where my first reply has gone... – Ward Werbrouck Apr 24 at 16:54
vote up 3 vote down

Language: Perl
Library : HTML::TreeBuilder

use strict;
use HTML::TreeBuilder;
use LWP::Simple;

my $content = get 'http://www.stackoverflow.com';
my $document = HTML::TreeBuilder->new->parse($content)->eof;

for my $a ($document->find('a')) {
    print $a->attr('href'), "\n" if $a->attr('href');
}
link|flag
my original code was less cluttered :) – dfa Apr 22 at 9:44
It was also incorrect, you must call $document->eof; if you use $document->parse($html); and would print empty lines when href wasn't set. – Chas. Owens Apr 22 at 11:34
reverted to my original code; ->eof() is useless in this sample; also checking for href presence is pointless in this example – dfa Apr 22 at 13:17
Is there a reason you don't want to use new_from_content? – Chas. Owens Apr 22 at 17:51
vote up 3 vote down

Language: Ruby
Library: Nokogiri

#!/usr/bin/env ruby
require 'nokogiri'
require 'open-uri'

document = Nokogiri::HTML(open("http://google.com"))
document.css("html head title").first.content
=> "Google"
document.xpath("//title").first.content
=> "Google"
link|flag
vote up 12 vote down

Language: Perl
Library: pQuery

use strict;
use warnings;
use pQuery;

my $html = join '',
    "<html><body>",
    (map { qq(<a href="http://$_.com">$_</a>) } qw/foo bar baz/),
    "</body></html>";

pQuery( $html )->find( 'a' )->each(
    sub {  
        my $at = $_->getAttribute( 'href' ); 
        print "$at\n" if defined $at;
    }
);

/I3az/

link|flag
1  
That's brilliant. Never knew about pQuery, but it looks very cool. – depesz Apr 21 at 21:43
Can you search for 'a[@href]' or 'a[href]' as in jQuery? It would simplify the code, and quite sure be faster. – Ward Werbrouck Apr 21 at 22:51
1  
Here are some other stackoverflow questions with pQuery answers... stackoverflow.com/questions/713827/… stackoverflow.com/questions/574199/… stackoverflow.com/questions/254345/… stackoverflow.com/questions/221091/… – draegtun Apr 22 at 10:10
@code-is-art: Unfortunately not yet... to quote author from docs "The selector syntax is still very limited. (Single tags, IDs and classes only)". Checkout the tests because pQuery does have features that aren't in the documentation, for eg. say 'Number of <td> with "blah" content - ', pQuery('td:contains(blah)')->size; – draegtun Apr 22 at 10:19
@depesz, @chas - I agree! But someone else doesn't because its been voted down a bit ;-( – draegtun Apr 23 at 16:02
vote up 4 vote down

Language: Java
Libraries: XOM, TagSoup

I've included intentionally malformed and inconsistent XML in this sample.

import java.io.IOException;

import nu.xom.Builder;
import nu.xom.Document;
import nu.xom.Element;
import nu.xom.Node;
import nu.xom.Nodes;
import nu.xom.ParsingException;
import nu.xom.ValidityException;

import org.ccil.cowan.tagsoup.Parser;
import org.xml.sax.SAXException;

public class HtmlTest {
    public static void main(final String[] args) throws SAXException, ValidityException, ParsingException, IOException {
        final Parser parser = new Parser();
        parser.setFeature(Parser.namespacesFeature, false);
        final Builder builder = new Builder(parser);
        final Document document = builder.build("<html><body><ul><li><a href=\"http://google.com\">google</li><li><a HREF=\"http://reddit.org\" target=\"_blank\">reddit</a></li><li><a name=\"nothing\">nothing</a><li></ul></body></html>", null);
        final Element root = document.getRootElement();
        final Nodes links = root.query("//a[@href]");
        for (int linkNumber = 0; linkNumber < links.size(); ++linkNumber) {
            final Node node = links.get(linkNumber);
            System.out.println(((Element) node).getAttributeValue("href"));
        }
    }
}

TagSoup adds an XML namespace referencing XHTML to the document by default. I've chosen to suppress that in this sample. Using the default behavior would require the call to root.query to include a namespace like so:

root.query("//xhtml:a[@href]", new nu.xom.XPathContext("xhtml", root.getNamespaceURI())
link|flag
Does this work for HTML 4 and HTML 5? – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 22:34
I'm sure either will work fine. TagSoup was made to parse whatever you can throw at it. – laz Apr 22 at 0:23
vote up 2 vote down

language: Python
library: lxml.html

import lxml.html

html = "<html><body>"
for link in ("foo", "bar", "baz"):
    html += '<a href="http://%s.com">%s</a>' % (link, link)
html += "</body></html>"

tree = lxml.html.document_fromstring(html)
for element, attribute, link, pos in tree.iterlinks():
    if attribute == "href":
        print link

lxml also has a CSS selector class for traversing the DOM, which can make using it very similar to using JQuery:

for a in tree.cssselect('a[href]'):
    print a.get('href')
link|flag
Hmm, I am getting "ImportError: No module named html" when I try to run this, is there something I need besides python-lxml? – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 19:01
Ah, I have version 1.3.6 and that comes with 2.0 and later – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 19:02
Indeed. I can provide an example of using lxml.etree to do the job as well if you like? lxml.html is a bit more tolerant of broken HTML. – Adam Apr 21 at 19:26
vote up 0 vote down

Language: C#
Library: System.XML (standard .NET)

using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Xml;

public static void Main(string[] args)
{
    List<string> matches = new List<string>();

    XmlDocument xd = new XmlDocument();
    xd.LoadXml("<html>...</html>");

    FindHrefs(xd.FirstChild, matches);
}

static void FindHrefs(XmlNode xn, List<string> matches)
{
    if (xn.Attributes != null && xn.Attributes["href"] != null)
        matches.Add(xn.Attributes["href"].InnerXml);

    foreach (XmlNode child in xn.ChildNodes)
        FindHrefs(child, matches);
}
link|flag
will this work if the HTML is not valid xml (e.g. unclosed img tags)? – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 18:42
Who writes HTML that isn't valid XML? Well, other than stackoverflow, I mean. :-P – Tanktalus Apr 21 at 18:50
This is parsing XML, not "HTML". However, it does work with valid xHTML... – Ward Werbrouck Apr 21 at 18:57
@Tanktalus: Try the whole web. :) – Paolo Bergantino Apr 21 at 21:57
vote up 9 vote down

Language: JavaScript
Library: jQuery

$.each($('a[href]'), function(){
    console.debug(this.href);
});

(using firebug console.debug for output...)

And loading any html page:

$.get('http://stackoverflow.com/', function(page){
     $(page).find('a[href]').each(function(){
        console.debug(this.href);
    });
});

Used another each function for this one, I think it's cleaner when chaining methods.

link|flag
1  
I just love jQuery. – macke Apr 21 at 21:04
the most elegant solution by now – dfa Apr 21 at 21:56
A little bit of cheating, but yes. ;) – Paolo Bergantino Apr 21 at 22:11
added loading other html pages, so no more cheating ;) – Ward Werbrouck Apr 21 at 22:22
The cheating was that I'm pretty sure the implication of the question was for server-side solutions. Even though you could run Javascript on the server but its not really the first thing you'd think of, which is why I said "a little bit" of cheating. :) – Paolo Bergantino Apr 21 at 22:24
show 2 more comments
vote up 3 vote down

Language: JavaScript
Library: DOM

var links = document.links;
for(var i in links){
    var href = links[i].href;
    if(href != null) console.debug(href);
}

(using firebug console.debug for output...)

link|flag
1  
Good use of the browser as a parser. – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 18:35
vote up 9 vote down

Language: C#
Library: HtmlAgilityPack

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
    	var web = new HtmlWeb();
    	var doc = web.Load("http://www.stackoverflow.com");

    	var nodes = doc.DocumentNode.SelectNodes("//a[@href]");

    	foreach (var node in nodes)
    	{
    		Console.WriteLine(node.InnerHtml);
    	}
    }
}
link|flag
I was waiting for a C# answer, thanks. – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 18:08
vote up 8 vote down

Language Perl
Library: HTML::LinkExtor

Beauty of Perl is that you have modules for very specific tasks. Like link extraction.

Whole program:

#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;

use HTML::LinkExtor;
use LWP::Simple;

my $url     = 'http://www.google.com/';
my $content = get( $url );

my $p       = HTML::LinkExtor->new( \&process_link, $url, );
$p->parse( $content );

exit;

sub process_link {
    my ( $tag, %attr ) = @_;

    return unless $tag eq 'a';
    return unless defined $attr{ 'href' };

    print "- $attr{'href'}\n";
    return;
}

Explanation:

  • use strict - turns on "strict" mode - eases potential debugging, not fully relevant to the example
  • use HTML::LinkExtor - load of interesting module
  • use LWP::Simple - just a simple way to get some html for tests
  • my $url = 'http://www.google.com/' - which page we will be extracting urls from
  • my $content = get( $url ) - fetches page html
  • my $p = HTML::LinkExtor->new( \&process_link, $url ) - creates LinkExtor object, givin it reference to function that will be used as callback on every url, and $url to use as BASEURL for relative urls
  • $p->parse( $content ) - pretty obvious I guess
  • exit - end of program
  • sub process_link - begin of function process_link
  • my ($tag, %attr) - get arguments, which are tag name, and its atributes
  • return unless $tag eq 'a' - skip processing if the tag is not <a>
  • return unless defeined $attr{'href'} - skip processing if the <a> tag doesn't have href attribute
  • print "- $attr{'href'}\n"; - pretty obvious I guess :)
  • return; - finish the function

That's all.

link|flag
Nice, but I think you are missing the point of the question, the example is there so that the code will be similar, not because I want the links. Think in more general terms. The goal is to provide people with the tools to use parsers instead of regexes. – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 17:12
4  
It is possible that I miss something, but I read in the problem description: "For the sake of consistency, I ask that the example be parsing an HTML file for the href in anchor tags." If you'd ask for example of parsing <td> tags - I would probably use HTML::TableExtract - basically - specialized tool beats (in my opinion) general tool. – depesz Apr 21 at 17:38
Fine, find all span tags that have the class "to_understand_intent" that are inside of div tags whose class is "learn". Specialized tools are great, but they are just that: specialized. You will wind up needing to know the general tool one day. This is a question about the general tools, not specialized libraries that use those tools. – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 18:32
2  
For this new request - of course HTML::Parser would be much better. But just saying "use HTML::Parser" is plain wrong. One should use proper tool for a given task. For extracting hrefs I would say that using HTML::Parser is overkill. For extracting <td>s - as well. Asking "give me general way to parse ..." is wrong because it assumes that there exists 1 tool (in language) that's perfect for all cases. I personally parse HTML in at least 6 different ways, depending on what I need to do. – depesz Apr 21 at 21:38
Look at the task again. The task was not get the links in an HTMl page, it was demonstrate how your favorite parser works using getting the links in an HTML page as an example. It was chosen because it is a simple task that involves finding the right tag and looking at a piece of data in it. It was also chosen because it is a common task. Because it is a common task Perl has automated it for you, but that doesn't mean this question was asking for you to give the automated answer. – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 22:41
show 3 more comments
vote up 3 vote down

Language: Perl
Library: HTML::Parser
Purpose: How can I remove unused, nested HTML span tags with a Perl regex?

link|flag
Good, this is the sort of stuff I would like to see collected here. – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 17:14
vote up 13 vote down

language: Python
library: BeautifulSoup

from BeautifulSoup import BeautifulSoup

html = "<html><body>"
for link in ("foo", "bar", "baz"):
    html += '<a href="http://%s.com">%s</a>' % (link, link)
html += "</body></html>"

soup = BeautifulSoup(html)
links = soup.findAll('a', href=True) # find <a> with a defined href attribute
print links

output:

[<a href="http://foo.com">foo</a>,
 <a href="http://bar.com">bar</a>,
 <a href="http://baz.com">baz</a>]

also possible:

for link in links:
    print link['href']

output:

http://foo.com
http://bar.com
http://baz.com
link|flag
This is nice, but does BeautifulSoup provide a way of looking into the tags to get the attributes? goes off to look at docs – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 17:16
1  
Yes. Edited to show. – Paolo Bergantino Apr 21 at 17:17
1  
The output in the first example is just the text representation of the matched links, they are actually objects to which you can do all kinds of fun stuff. – Paolo Bergantino Apr 21 at 17:18
1  
Yeah, I just read the docs, you just beat me to fixing the code. I did add the try/catch to prevent it from blowing up when href isn't there though. Apparently "'href' in link" doesn't work. – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 17:24
be sure to use beautifulsoup < 3.1. see here for more info: crummy.com/software/BeautifulSoup/… – Peteris Krumins Apr 23 at 14:08
vote up 7 vote down

language: shell
library: lynx (well, it's not library, but in shell, every program is kind-of library)

lynx -dump -listonly http://news.google.com/
link|flag
+1 for trying, +1 for a working solution, -1 for the solution not being generalizable to other tasks: net +1 – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 16:56
6  
well, the task was quite well defined - it had to extract links from "a" tags. :) – depesz Apr 21 at 17:10
Yes, but it is defined as an example to show how to parse, I could have just as easily asked you to print all of the contents of <td> tags that had the class "phonenum". – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 17:27
2  
I agree that this doesn't help with the generic question, but the specific question is likely to be a popular one, so it seems reasonable to me as a way to do it for a specific domain of the general problem. – Tanktalus Apr 21 at 18:49
Yeah, he/she got an up-vote from me on this one because I really didn't expect a shell solution. I think the specific question has already been asked a bunch of times for different languages, so if you are looking for this specific example to be solved you are better of searching SO for those questions. – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 22:44
vote up 4 vote down

language: Perl
library: XML::Twig

#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use Encode ':all';

use LWP::Simple;
use XML::Twig;

#my $url = 'http://stackoverflow.com/questions/773340/can-you-provide-an-example-of-parsing-html-with-your-favorite-parser';
my $url = 'http://www.google.com';
my $content = get($url);
die "Couldn't fetch!" unless defined $content;

my $twig = XML::Twig->new();
$twig->parse_html($content);

my @hrefs = map {
    $_->att('href');
} $twig->get_xpath('//*[@href]');

print "$_\n" for @hrefs;

caveat: Can get wide-character errors with pages like this one (changing the url to the one commented out will get this error), but the HTML::Parser solution above doesn't share this problem.

link|flag
Nice, I use XML::Twig all the time and never realized there was a parse_html method. – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 16:39
vote up 8 vote down

language: Ruby
library: Hpricot

#!/usr/bin/ruby

require 'hpricot'

html = '<html><body>'
['foo', 'bar', 'baz'].each {|link| html += "<a href=\"http://#{link}.com\">#{link}</a>" }
html += '</body></html>'

doc = Hpricot(html)
doc.search('//a').each {|elm| puts elm.attributes['href'] }
link|flag
Humorous story: apt-get install libhpricot-ruby doesn't install Ruby if it isn't installed. – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 16:43
Sounds like it's time for a wishlist bug... – Telemachus Apr 21 at 17:51
vote up 10 vote down

language: Perl
library: HTML::Parser

#!/usr/bin/perl

use strict;
use warnings;

use HTML::Parser;

my $find_links = HTML::Parser->new(
    start_h => [
    	sub {
    		my ($tag, $attr) = @_;
    		if ($tag eq 'a' and exists $attr->{href}) {
    			print "$attr->{href}\n";
    		}
    	}, 
    	"tag, attr"
    ]
);

my $html = join '',
    "<html><body>",
    (map { qq(<a href="http://$_.com">$_</a>) } qw/foo bar baz/),
    "</body></html>";

$find_links->parse($html);
link|flag
Using LWP::Simple to download this page (as I do below in my perl example) showed that you found a's that didn't have href's (but had names), so we just want to check that there is an href before printing it. – Tanktalus Apr 21 at 16:40
@tanktalus good catch – Chas. Owens Apr 21 at 16:47
vote up 2 vote down

language: Python
library: HTMLParser

#!/usr/bin/python

from HTMLParser import HTMLParser

class FindLinks(HTMLParser):
    def __init__(self):
    	HTMLParser.__init__(self)

    def handle_starttag(self, tag, attrs):
    	at = dict(attrs)
    	if tag == 'a' and 'href' in at:
    		print at['href']


find = FindLinks()

html = "<html><body>"
for link in ("foo", "bar", "baz"):
    html += '<a href="http://%s.com">%s</a>' % (link, link)
html += "</body></html>"

find.feed(html)
link|flag

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