A Lisp Based HTML Parser

Introduction/Simple Example
LHTML  parse output format
Case mode notes
Parsing HTML comments
Parsing <SCRIPT> and <STYLE> tags
Parsing SGML <! tags
Parsing Illegal and Deprecated Tags
Default Attribute Values
Parsing Interleaved Character Formatting Tags
parse-html reference
   methods
   phtml-internal

The parse-html generic function processes HTML input, returning a list of HTML tags, attributes, and text. Here is a simple example:

(parse-html "<HTML>
                    <HEAD>
                    <TITLE>Example HTML input</TITLE>
                    <BODY>
                    <P>Here is some text with a <B>bold</B> word<br>and a <A HREF=\"help.html\">link</P>
                    </HTML>")

generates:

((:html (:head (:title "Example HTML input"))
  (:body (:p "Here is some text with a " (:b "bold") " word" :br "and a "
                  ((:a :href "help.html") "link")))))

The output format is known as LHTML format; it is the same format that the
aserve htmlgen macro accepts.

LHTML format

LHTML is a list representation of HTML tags and content.

Each list member may be:

  1. a string containing text content, such as "Here is some text with a "
  2. a keyword package symbol representing a HTML tag with no associated attributes
    or content, such as :br.
  3. a list representing an HTML tag with associated attributes and/or content,
    such as (:b "bold") or ((:a :href "help.html") "link"). If the HTML tag
    does not have associated attributes, then the first list member will be a
    keyword package symbol representing the HTML tag, and the other elements will
    represent the content, which can be a string (text content), a keyword package symbol (HTML
    tag with no attributes or content), or list (nested HTML tag with
    associated attributes and/or content). If there are associated attributes,
    then the first list member will be a list containing a keyword package symbol
    followed by two list members for each associated attribute; the first member is a keyword
    package symbol representing the attribute, and the next member is a string corresponding
    to the attribute value.

Case Mode and LHTML

If excl:*current-case-mode* is :CASE-INSENSITIVE-UPPER, keyword package symbols will be
in upper case; otherwise, they will be in lower case.

HTML Comments

HTML comments are represented use a :comment symbol. For example,

(parse-html "<!-- this is a comment-->")

--> ((:comment " this is a comment"))

HTML <SCRIPT> and <STYLE> tags

All <SCRIPT> and <STYLE> content is not parsed; it is returned as text content.

For example,

(parse-html "<SCRIPT>this <B>will not</B> be parsed</SCRIPT>")

--> ((:script "this <B>will not</B> be parsed"))

XML and SGML <! tags

Since, some HTML pages contain special XML/SGML tags, non-comment tags
starting with '<!' are treated specially:

(parse-html "<!doctype this is some text>")

--> ((:!doctype " this is some text"))

Illegal and Deprecated HTML

There is plenty of illegal and deprecated HTML on the web that popular browsers
nonetheless successfully display. The parse-html parser is generous - it will not
raise an error condition upon encountering most input. In particular, it does not
maintain a list of legal HTML tags and will successfully parse nonsense input.

For example,

(parse-html "<this> <is> <some> <nonsense> <input>")

--> ((:this (:is (:some (:nonsense :input)))))

In some situations, you may prefer a two-pass parse that results in a parse where
deep nesting related to unrecognized tags is minimized:

(let ((string "<this> <is> <some> <nonsense> </some> <input>"))
        (multiple-value-bind (res rogues)
          (parse-html string :collect-rogue-tags t)
            (declare (ignorable res))
            (parse-html string :no-body-tags rogues)))

--> (:this :is (:some (:nonsense)) :input)

See the :collect-rogue-tags and :no-body-tags argument descriptions in the reference
section below for more information.

Default Attribute values

As per the HTML 4.0 specification, attributes without specified values are given a lower case
string value that matches the attribute name.

For example,

(parse-html "<P here ARE some attributes>")

--> (((:p :here "here" :are "are" :some "some" :attributes "attributes")))

Interleaved Character Formatting Tags

Existing HTML pages often have character format tags that are interleaved among
other tags. Such interleaving is removed in a manner consistent with the HTML 4.0
specification.

For example,

(parse-html "<P>Here is <B>bold text<P>that spans</B>two paragraphs")

--> ((:p "Here is " (:b "bold text")) (:p (:b "that spans") "two paragraphs"))


parse-html Reference

parse-html [Generic function]

Arguments: input-source &key callbacks callback-only
            collect-rogue-tags no-body-tags parse-entities

Returns LHTML output, as described above.

The callbacks argument, if non-nil, should be an association list. Each list member's
car (first) element specifies a keyword package symbol, and each list member's cdr (rest)
element specifies a function object or a symbol naming a function. The function should
expect one argument. The function will be invoked once for each time the HTML tag
corresponding to the specified keyword package symbol is encountered in the HTML input; the
argument will be an LHTML list containing the tag, along with associated attributes and
content. The default callbacks argument value is nil.

The callback-only argument, if non-nil, directs parse-html to not generate a complete LHTML
output. Instead, LHTML lists will only be generated when necessary as arguments for functions
specified in the callbacks association list. This results in faster parser execution. The default
callback-only argument value is nil.

The collect-rogue-tags argument, if non-nil, directs parse-html to return an additional value,
a list containing any unrecognized tags closed by the end of input.

The no-body-tags argument, if non-nil, should be a list containing unknown tags that, if
encountered, will be treated as a tag with no body or content, and thus, no associated end
tag. Typically, the argument is a list or modified list resulting from an earlier parse-html
execution with the :collect-rogue-tags argument specified as non-nil.

If the parse-entities argument is true then entities are converted to the character they name.  Thus for example the &lt; entity is converted to the less than sign.

parse-html Methods

parse-html (p stream) &key callbacks callback-only
            collect-rogue-tags no-body-tags parse-entities

parse-html (str string) &key callbacks callback-only
            collect-rogue-tags no-body-tags parse-entities

parse-html (file t) &key callbacks callback-only
            collect-rogue-tags no-body-tags parse-entities

The t method assumes the argument is a pathname suitable
for use with the with-open-file macro.


phtml-internal [Function]

Arguments: stream read-sequence-func callback-only callbacks
collect-rogue-tags no-body-tags parse-entities

This function may be used when more control is needed for supplying
the HTML input. The read-sequence-func argument, if non-nil, should be a function
object or a symbol naming a function. When phtml-internal requires another buffer
of HTML input, it will invoke the read-sequence-func function with two arguments -
the first argument is an internal buffer character array and the second argument is
the phtml-internal stream argument. If read-sequence-fun is nil, phtml-internal
will invoke read-sequence to fill the buffer. The read-sequence-func function must
return the number of character array elements successfully stored in the buffer.