$ gnpm install htmlparser2
The fast & forgiving HTML/XML parser.
htmlparser2 is the fastest HTML parser, and takes some shortcuts to get there. If you need strict HTML spec compliance, have a look at parse5.
npm install htmlparser2
A live demo of htmlparser2
is available on AST Explorer.
Name | Description |
---|---|
htmlparser2 | Fast & forgiving HTML/XML parser |
domhandler | Handler for htmlparser2 that turns documents into a DOM |
domutils | Utilities for working with domhandler's DOM |
css-select | CSS selector engine, compatible with domhandler's DOM |
cheerio | The jQuery API for domhandler's DOM |
dom-serializer | Serializer for domhandler's DOM |
htmlparser2
itself provides a callback interface that allows consumption of documents with minimal allocations.
For a more ergonomic experience, read Getting a DOM below.
import * as htmlparser2 from "htmlparser2";
const parser = new htmlparser2.Parser({
onopentag(name, attributes) {
/*
* This fires when a new tag is opened.
*
* If you don't need an aggregated `attributes` object,
* have a look at the `onopentagname` and `onattribute` events.
*/
if (name === "script" && attributes.type === "text/javascript") {
console.log("JS! Hooray!");
}
},
ontext(text) {
/*
* Fires whenever a section of text was processed.
*
* Note that this can fire at any point within text and you might
* have to stitch together multiple pieces.
*/
console.log("-->", text);
},
onclosetag(tagname) {
/*
* Fires when a tag is closed.
*
* You can rely on this event only firing when you have received an
* equivalent opening tag before. Closing tags without corresponding
* opening tags will be ignored.
*/
if (tagname === "script") {
console.log("That's it?!");
}
},
});
parser.write(
"Xyz <script type='text/javascript'>const foo = '<<bar>>';</script>",
);
parser.end();
Output (with multiple text events combined):
--> Xyz
JS! Hooray!
--> const foo = '<<bar>>';
That's it?!
This example only shows three of the possible events. Read more about the parser, its events and options in the wiki.
While the Parser
interface closely resembles Node.js streams, it's not a 100% match.
Use the WritableStream
interface to process a streaming input:
import { WritableStream } from "htmlparser2/lib/WritableStream";
const parserStream = new WritableStream({
ontext(text) {
console.log("Streaming:", text);
},
});
const htmlStream = fs.createReadStream("./my-file.html");
htmlStream.pipe(parserStream).on("finish", () => console.log("done"));
The DomHandler
produces a DOM (document object model) that can be manipulated using the DomUtils
helper.
import * as htmlparser2 from "htmlparser2";
const dom = htmlparser2.parseDocument(htmlString);
The DomHandler
, while still bundled with this module, was moved to its own module.
Have a look at that for further information.
htmlparser2
makes it easy to parse RSS, RDF and Atom feeds, by providing a parseFeed
method:
const feed = htmlparser2.parseFeed(content, options);
After having some artificial benchmarks for some time, @AndreasMadsen published his htmlparser-benchmark
, which benchmarks HTML parses based on real-world websites.
At the time of writing, the latest versions of all supported parsers show the following performance characteristics on GitHub Actions (sourced from here):
htmlparser2 : 2.17215 ms/file ± 3.81587
node-html-parser : 2.35983 ms/file ± 1.54487
html5parser : 2.43468 ms/file ± 2.81501
neutron-html5parser: 2.61356 ms/file ± 1.70324
htmlparser2-dom : 3.09034 ms/file ± 4.77033
html-dom-parser : 3.56804 ms/file ± 5.15621
libxmljs : 4.07490 ms/file ± 2.99869
htmljs-parser : 6.15812 ms/file ± 7.52497
parse5 : 9.70406 ms/file ± 6.74872
htmlparser : 15.0596 ms/file ± 89.0826
html-parser : 28.6282 ms/file ± 22.6652
saxes : 45.7921 ms/file ± 128.691
html5 : 120.844 ms/file ± 153.944
In 2011, this module started as a fork of the htmlparser
module.
htmlparser2
was rewritten multiple times and, while it maintains an API that's mostly compatible with htmlparser
, the projects don't share any code anymore.
The parser now provides a callback interface inspired by sax.js (originally targeted at readabilitySAX). As a result, old handlers won't work anymore.
The DefaultHandler
was renamed to clarify its purpose (to DomHandler
). The old name is still available when requiring htmlparser2
and your code should work as expected.
The RssHandler
was replaced with a getFeed
function that takes a DomHandler
DOM and returns a feed object. There is a parseFeed
helper function that can be used to parse a feed from a string.
To report a security vulnerability, please use the Tidelift security contact. Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure.
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