commit | 62df313f8bf3c81b629c2102a887ce8196041fd5 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | John Messerly <jmesserly@google.com> | Fri Mar 20 09:11:10 2015 -0700 |
committer | John Messerly <jmesserly@google.com> | Fri Mar 20 09:11:10 2015 -0700 |
tree | 34d13325de7bc0b5132873e2a93caf121d4f0f67 | |
parent | de6c6216b90906f3abb3bad7d25e102b9f8e57bc [diff] | |
parent | f3c37eed4cad28802860acfe01cca96c2b80ab14 [diff] |
Merge pull request #13 from dart-lang/html5lib_html re-export package:html from all libraries
Future releases of this package will happen in the html
package.
To continue using html5lib
without deprecation warnings, change your pubspec to depend on html5lib: '<=0.12.0'
.
See the html package for details.
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.
Add this to your pubspec.yaml
(or create it):
dependencies: html5lib: any
Then run the Pub Package Manager (comes with the Dart SDK):
pub install
Parsing HTML is easy!
import 'package:html5lib/parser.dart' show parse; import 'package:html5lib/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.
# From Dart SVN checkout ./tools/build.py -m release ./tools/test.py -m release html5lib ./tools/test.py -m release -r drt html5lib