Hext is a domain-specific language for extracting structured data from HTML documents. Visit Hext's documentation to learn more about Hext.
Hext.js is a JavaScript/WebAssembly module that can be used in a browser.
<!-- latest hext.js release -->
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/html-extract/hext.js/dist/hext.js"></script>
<script>
(function() {
// loadHext() returns a promise
loadHext().then(hext => {
// hext.Html's constructor expects a single argument
// containing an UTF-8 encoded string of HTML.
const html = new hext.Html(
'<a href="one.html"> <img src="one.jpg" /> </a>' +
'<a href="two.html"> <img src="two.jpg" /> </a>' +
'<a href="three.html"><img src="three.jpg" /></a>');
// hext.Rule's constructor expects a single argument
// containing a Hext snippet.
// Throws an Error on invalid syntax, with
// Error.message containing the error description.
const rule = new hext.Rule('<a href:link>' +
' <img src:image />' +
'</a>');
// hext.Rule.extract expects an argument of type
// hext.Html. Returns an Array containing Objects
// which contain key-value pairs of type String.
const result = rule.extract(html);
// hext.Rule.extract has a second, optional parameter
// of type unsigned int, called max_searches.
// The search for matching elements is aborted by
// throwing an exception after this limit is reached.
// The default is 0, which never aborts. If running
// untrusted hext templates, it is recommend to set
// max_searches to some high value, like 10000, to
// protect against resource exhaustion.
// const result = rule.extract(html, 10000);
// print each key-value pair
for(var i in result)
{
for(var key in result[i])
console.log(key, "->", result[i][key]);
console.log()
}
});
})();
</script>
The current development version is found in dist/hext.js.
Hext.js also works in Node (example). If performance is important, you may prefer using Hext for Node instead. Hext for Node is a native node addon for Linux and Mac OS. For other language bindings visit hext.thomastrapp.com/download.
Hext is written in C++. This repo contains a full build process for compiling Hext and all its dependencies to JavaScript/WebAssembly.
In order to build this, you need Emscripten and the following packages:
wget git python3 build-essential libxml2 libtool autoconf rapidjson-dev cmake
.
Then compilation is done with a single command:
make
This will download and build all of Hext's dependencies. Then it will build libhext itself and a Hext wrapper which compiles to a JavaScript/WebAssembly module for use in browsers.
Running make test
will run libhext's blackbox tests through htmlext.wasm.js, which uses node.
To test the latest version of hext.js in your browser, visit hext.thomastrapp.com/hext.js-test/.