commit | 78f0fb3b1ba3fb4422f899c22873de7280ff1b5d | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Nate Bosch <nbosch1@gmail.com> | Wed Jan 16 20:09:44 2019 -0800 |
committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | Wed Jan 16 20:09:44 2019 -0800 |
tree | c4d4f2a30dfa11fa1b7efb16bf42d455e26fd2ca | |
parent | e1826e451f09b04f8f19e9032bb60f4e42c98e5a [diff] |
Update test expectations for source_span output (#87) Version `1.5.0` of `source_span` changed the output format. Update the tests which hardcoded the expected output to the new format.
This is a pure Dart html5 parser. It‘s a port of html5lib from Python. Since it’s 100% Dart you can use it safely from a script or server side app.
Eventually the parse tree API will be compatible with dart:html, so the same code will work on the client and the server.
(Formerly known as html5lib.)
Add this to your pubspec.yaml
(or create it):
dependencies: html: any
Then run the Pub Package Manager (comes with the Dart SDK):
pub install
Parsing HTML is easy!
import 'package:html/parser.dart' show parse; import 'package:html/dom.dart'; main() { var document = parse( '<body>Hello world! <a href="www.html5rocks.com">HTML5 rocks!'); print(document.outerHtml); }
You can pass a String or list of bytes to parse
. There's also parseFragment
for parsing a document fragment, and HtmlParser
if you want more low level control.
./test/run.sh