Web::Query(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Web::Query(3pm) |
Web::Query - Yet another scraping library like jQuery
version 0.39
use Web::Query; wq('http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/') ->find('div.head dt') ->each(sub { my $i = shift; printf("%d %s\n", $i+1, $_->text); });
Web::Query is a yet another scraping framework, have a jQuery like interface.
Yes, I know Ingy's pQuery. But it's just a alpha quality. It doesn't works. Web::Query built at top of the CPAN modules, HTML::TreeBuilder::XPath, LWP::UserAgent, and HTML::Selector::XPath.
So, this module uses HTML::Selector::XPath and only supports the CSS 3 selector supported by that module. Web::Query doesn't support jQuery's extended queries(yet?). If a selector is passed as a scalar ref, it'll be taken as a straight XPath expression.
$wq( '<div><p>hello</p><p>there</p></div>' )->find( 'p' ); # css selector $wq( '<div><p>hello</p><p>there</p></div>' )->find( \'/div/p' ); # xpath selector
THIS LIBRARY IS UNDER DEVELOPMENT. ANY API MAY CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.
# all valid creators $q = Web::Query->new( 'http://techblog.babyl.ca' ); $q = Web::Query->new( '<p>foo</p>' ); $q = Web::Query->new( undef );
This method throw the exception on unknown $stuff.
This method returns undefined value on non-successful response with URL.
Currently, the only two valid options are indent, which will be used as the indentation string if the object is printed, and no_space_compacting, which will prevent the compaction of whitespace characters in text blocks.
If the response is not success(It means /^20[0-9]$/), this method returns undefined value.
You can get a last result of response, use the $Web::Query::RESPONSE.
Here is a best practical code:
my $url = 'http://example.com/'; my $q = Web::Query->new_from_url($url) or die "Cannot get a resource from $url: " . Web::Query->last_response()->status_line;
add
Returns a new object augmented with the new element(s).
@elements that already are part of the set are not added a second time.
my $group = $wq->find('#foo'); # collection has 1 element $group = $group->add( '#bar', $wq ); # 2 elements $group->add( '#foo', $wq ); # still 2 elements
$context is the point in the document at which the selector should begin matching
contents
Get the immediate children of each element in the set of matched elements, including text and comment nodes.
each
Visit each nodes. $i is a counter value, 0 origin. $elem is iteration item. $_ is localized by $elem.
$q->each(sub { my ($i, $elem) = @_; ... })
end
Back to the before context like jQuery.
filter
Reduce the elements to those that pass the function's test.
$q->filter(sub { my ($i, $elem) = @_; ... })
find
Get the descendants of each element in the current set of matched elements, filtered by a selector.
my $q2 = $q->find($selector); # $selector is a CSS3 selector.
NOTE If you want to match the element itself, use "filter".
INCOMPATIBLE CHANGE From v0.14 to v0.19 (inclusive) find() also matched the element itself, which is not jQuery compatible. You can achieve that result using "filter()", "add()" and "find()":
my $wq = wq('<div class="foo"><p class="foo">bar</p></div>'); # needed because we don't have a global document like jQuery does print $wq->filter('.foo')->add($wq->find('.foo'))->as_html; # <div class="foo"><p class="foo">bar</p></div><p class="foo">bar</p>
first
Return the first matching element.
This method constructs a new Web::Query object from the first matching element.
last
Return the last matching element.
This method constructs a new Web::Query object from the last matching element.
match($selector)
Returns a boolean indicating if the elements match the $selector.
In scalar context returns only the boolean for the first element.
For the reverse of "not()", see "filter()".
not($selector)
Returns all the elements not matching the $selector.
# $do_for_love will be every thing, except #that my $do_for_love = $wq->find('thing')->not('#that');
and_back
Add the previous set of elements to the current one.
# get the h1 plus everything until the next h1 $wq->find('h1')->next_until('h1')->and_back;
map
Creates a new array with the results of calling a provided function on every element.
$q->map(sub { my ($i, $elem) = @_; ... })
parent
Get the parent of each element in the current set of matched elements.
prev
Get the previous node of each element in the current set of matched elements.
my $prev = $q->prev;
next
Get the next node of each element in the current set of matched elements.
my $next = $q->next;
next_until( $selector )
Get all subsequent siblings, up to (but not including) the next node matched $selector.
add_class
Adds the specified class(es) to each of the set of matched elements.
# add class 'foo' to <p> elements wq('<div><p>foo</p><p>bar</p></div>')->find('p')->add_class('foo');
toggle_class( @classes )
Toggles the given class or classes on each of the element. I.e., if the element had the class, it'll be removed, and if it hadn't, it'll be added.
Classes are toggled once, no matter how many times they appear in the argument list.
$q->toggle_class( 'foo', 'foo', 'bar' ); # equivalent to $q->toggle_class('foo')->toggle_class('bar'); # and not $q->toggle_class('foo')->toggle_class('foo')->toggle_class('bar');
after
Insert content, specified by the parameter, after each element in the set of matched elements.
wq('<div><p>foo</p></div>')->find('p') ->after('<b>bar</b>') ->end ->as_html; # <div><p>foo</p><b>bar</b></div>
The content can be anything accepted by "new".
append
Insert content, specified by the parameter, to the end of each element in the set of matched elements.
wq('<div></div>')->append('<p>foo</p>')->as_html; # <div><p>foo</p></div>
The content can be anything accepted by "new".
as_html
Returns the string representations of either the first or all elements, depending if called in list or scalar context.
If given an argument "join", the string representations of the elements will be concatenated with the given string.
wq( '<div><p>foo</p><p>bar</p></div>' ) ->find('p') ->as_html( join => '!' ); # <p>foo</p>!<p>bar</p>
" attr "
Get/set attribute values.
In getter mode, it'll return either the values of the attribute for all elements of the set, or only the first one depending of the calling context.
my @values = $q->attr('style'); # style of all elements my $first_value = $q->attr('style'); # style of first element
In setter mode, it'll set attributes value for all elements, and return back the original object for easy chaining.
$q->attr( 'alt' => 'a picture' )->find( ... ); # can pass more than 1 element too $q->attr( alt => 'a picture', src => 'file:///...' );
The value passed for an attribute can be a code ref. In that case, the code will be called with $_ set to the current attribute value. If the code modifies $_, the attribute will be updated with the new value.
$q->attr( alt => sub { $_ ||= 'A picture' } );
" id "
Get/set the elements's id attribute.
In getter mode, it behaves just like "attr()".
In setter mode, it behaves like "attr()", but with the following exceptions.
If the attribute value is a scalar, it'll be only assigned to the first element of the set (as ids are supposed to be unique), and the returned object will only contain that first element.
my $first_element = $q->id('the_one');
It's possible to set the ids of all the elements by passing a sub to "id()". The sub is given the same arguments as for "each()", and its return value is taken to be the new id of the elements.
$q->id( sub { my $i = shift; 'foo_' . $i } );
" name "
Get/set the elements's 'name' attribute.
my $name = $q->name; # equivalent to $q->attr( 'name' ); $q->name( 'foo' ); # equivalent to $q->attr( name => 'foo' );
" data "
Get/set the elements's 'data-*name*' attributes.
my $data = $q->data('foo'); # equivalent to $q->attr( 'data-foo' ); $q->data( 'foo' => 'bar' ); # equivalent to $q->attr( 'data-foo' => 'bar' );
tagname
Get/Set the tag name of elements.
my $name = $q->tagname; $q->tagname($new_name);
before
Insert content, specified by the parameter, before each element in the set of matched elements.
wq('<div><p>foo</p></div>')->find('p') ->before('<b>bar</b>') ->end ->as_html; # <div><b>bar</b><p>foo</p></div>
The content can be anything accepted by "new".
clone
Create a deep copy of the set of matched elements.
detach
Remove the set of matched elements from the DOM.
has_class
Determine whether any of the matched elements are assigned the given class.
" html "
Get/Set the innerHTML.
my @html = $q->html(); my $html = $q->html(); # 1st matching element only $q->html('<p>foo</p>');
insert_before
Insert every element in the set of matched elements before the target.
insert_after
Insert every element in the set of matched elements after the target.
" prepend "
Insert content, specified by the parameter, to the beginning of each element in the set of matched elements.
remove
Delete the elements associated with the object from the DOM.
# remove all <blink> tags from the document $q->find('blink')->remove;
remove_class
Remove a single class, multiple classes, or all classes from each element in the set of matched elements.
replace_with
Replace the elements of the object with the provided replacement. The replacement can be a string, a "Web::Query" object or an anonymous function. The anonymous function is passed the index of the current node and the node itself (with is also localized as $_).
my $q = wq( '<p><b>Abra</b><i>cada</i><u>bra</u></p>' ); $q->find('b')->replace_with('<a>Ocus</a>); # <p><a>Ocus</a><i>cada</i><u>bra</u></p> $q->find('u')->replace_with($q->find('b')); # <p><i>cada</i><b>Abra</b></p> $q->find('i')->replace_with(sub{ my $name = $_->text; return "<$name></$name>"; }); # <p><b>Abra</b><cada></cada><u>bra</u></p>
size
Return the number of elements in the Web::Query object.
wq('<div><p>foo</p><p>bar</p></div>')->find('p')->size; # 2
text
Get/Set the text.
my @text = $q->text(); my $text = $q->text(); # 1st matching element only $q->text('text');
If called in a scalar context, only return the string representation of the first element
You can specify your own instance of LWP::UserAgent.
$Web::Query::UserAgent = LWP::UserAgent->new( agent => 'Mozilla/5.0' );
It's possible with Web::Query::LibXML and by using an xpath expression with "find()":
# find <?xml-stylesheet ... ?> $q->find(\"//processing-instruction('xml-stylesheet')");
However, note that the support for processing instructions in HTML::TreeBuilder::LibXML::Node is sketchy, so there are methods like "attr()" that won't work.
The <script> tag is treated differently by HTML::TreeBuilder, the parser used by Web::Query. To retrieve the content, you can use either the method "html()" (with the caveat that the content will be escaped), or use Web::Query::LibXML, which parse the 'script' element differently.
my $node = "<script>var x = '<p>foo</p>';</script>"; say Web::Query::wq( $node )->text; # nothing is printed! say Web::Query::wq( $node )->html; # var x = '<p>foo</p>'; say Web::Query::LibXML::wq( $node )->text; # var x = '<p>foo</p>'; say Web::Query::LibXML::wq( $node )->html; # var x = '<p>foo</p>';
Tokuhiro Matsuno <tokuhirom AAJKLFJEF@ GMAIL COM>
Copyright (C) Tokuhiro Matsuno
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website https://github.com/tokuhirom/Web-Query/issues
When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.
2018-08-23 | perl v5.26.2 |