HTML::HeadParser - Parse <HEAD> section of a HTML document |
HTML::HeadParser - Parse <HEAD> section of a HTML document
require HTML::HeadParser; $p = HTML::HeadParser->new; $p->parse($text) and print "not finished";
$p->header('Title') # to access <title>....</title> $p->header('Content-Base') # to access <base href="http://..."> $p->header('Foo') # to access <meta http-equiv="Foo" content="..."> $p->header('X-Meta-Author') # to access <meta name="author" content="..."> $p->header('X-Meta-Charset') # to access <meta charset="...">
The HTML::HeadParser
is a specialized (and lightweight)
HTML::Parser
that will only parse the <HEAD>...</HEAD>
section of an HTML document. The parse()
method
will return a FALSE value as soon as some <BODY> element or body
text are found, and should not be called again after this.
Note that the HTML::HeadParser
might get confused if raw undecoded
UTF-8 is passed to the parse()
method. Make sure the strings are
properly decoded before passing them on.
The HTML::HeadParser
keeps a reference to a header object, and the
parser will update this header object as the various elements of the
<HEAD> section of the HTML document are recognized. The following
header fields are affected:
name
attribute will result in
headers using the prefix X-Meta-
appended with the value of the
name
attribute as the name of the header, and the value of the
content
attribute as the pushed header value.
<meta> elements containing a http-equiv
attribute will result
in headers as in above, but without the X-Meta-
prefix in the
header name.
<meta> elements containing a charset
attribute will result in
an X-Meta-Charset
header, using the value of the charset
attribute as the pushed header value.
The ':' character can't be represented in header field names, so if the meta element contains this char it's substituted with '-' before forming the field name.
The following methods (in addition to those provided by the superclass) are available:
header()
and push_header()
methods as defined by the HTTP::Headers
class. Normally it will be
of some class that is a or delegates to the HTTP::Headers
class.
If no $header is given HTML::HeadParser
will create an
HTTP::Headers
object by itself (initially empty).
$hp->header->header($key)
.
$h = HTTP::Headers->new; $p = HTML::HeadParser->new($h); $p->parse(<<EOT); <title>Stupid example</title> <base href="http://www.linpro.no/lwp/"> Normal text starts here. EOT undef $p; print $h->title; # should print "Stupid example"
the HTML::Parser manpage, the HTTP::Headers manpage
The HTTP::Headers
class is distributed as part of the
libwww-perl package. If you don't have that distribution installed
you need to provide the $header argument to the HTML::HeadParser
constructor with your own object that implements the documented
protocol.
Copyright 1996-2001 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.
HTML::HeadParser - Parse <HEAD> section of a HTML document |