require 5; package HTML::Parse; # Time-stamp: "2000-05-18 23:40:06 MDT" =head1 NAME HTML::Parse - Deprecated, a wrapper around HTML::TreeBuilder =head1 SYNOPSIS See the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder =head1 DESCRIPTION Disclaimer: This module is provided only for backwards compatibility with earlier versions of this library. New code should I use this module, and should really use the HTML::Parser and HTML::TreeBuilder modules directly, instead. The C module provides functions to parse HTML documents. There are two functions exported by this module: =over 4 =item parse_html($html) or parse_html($html, $obj) This function is really just a synonym for $obj->parse($html) and $obj is assumed to be a subclass of C. Refer to L for more documentation. If $obj is not specified, the $obj will default to an internally created new C object configured with strict_comment() turned on. That class implements a parser that builds (and is) a HTML syntax tree with HTML::Element objects as nodes. The return value from parse_html() is $obj. =item parse_htmlfile($file, [$obj]) Same as parse_html(), but pulls the HTML to parse, from the named file. Returns C if the file could not be opened, or $obj otherwise. =back When a C object is created, the following variables control how parsing takes place: =over 4 =item $HTML::Parse::IMPLICIT_TAGS Setting this variable to true will instruct the parser to try to deduce implicit elements and implicit end tags. If this variable is false you get a parse tree that just reflects the text as it stands. Might be useful for quick & dirty parsing. Default is true. Implicit elements have the implicit() attribute set. =item $HTML::Parse::IGNORE_UNKNOWN This variable contols whether unknow tags should be represented as elements in the parse tree. Default is true. =item $HTML::Parse::IGNORE_TEXT Do not represent the text content of elements. This saves space if all you want is to examine the structure of the document. Default is false. =item $HTML::Parse::WARN Call warn() with an apropriate message for syntax errors. Default is false. =back =head1 REMEMBER! HTML::TreeBuilder objects should be explicitly destroyed when you're finished with them. See L. =head1 SEE ALSO L, L, L =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright 1995-1998 Gisle Aas. All rights reserved. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 AUTHOR Gisle Aas Egisle@aas.noE. Current maintainer Sean M. Burke Esburke@cpan.orgE =cut require Exporter; @ISA = qw(Exporter); @EXPORT = qw(parse_html parse_htmlfile); use strict; use vars qw($VERSION $IMPLICIT_TAGS $IGNORE_UNKNOWN $IGNORE_TEXT $WARN ); # Backwards compatability $IMPLICIT_TAGS = 1; $IGNORE_UNKNOWN = 1; $IGNORE_TEXT = 0; $WARN = 0; require HTML::TreeBuilder; $VERSION = '2.71'; sub parse_html ($;$) { my $p = $_[1]; $p = _new_tree_maker() unless $p; $p->parse($_[0]); } sub parse_htmlfile ($;$) { my($file, $p) = @_; local(*HTML); open(HTML, $file) or return undef; $p = _new_tree_maker() unless $p; $p->parse_file(\*HTML); } sub _new_tree_maker { my $p = HTML::TreeBuilder->new( implicit_tags => $IMPLICIT_TAGS, ignore_unknown => $IGNORE_UNKNOWN, ignore_text => $IGNORE_TEXT, 'warn' => $WARN, ); $p->strict_comment(1); $p; } 1;