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520 lines
19 KiB
520 lines
19 KiB
2 weeks ago
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# Use of this source code is governed by the MIT license.
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__license__ = "MIT"
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from collections import defaultdict
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import itertools
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import sys
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from bs4.element import (
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CharsetMetaAttributeValue,
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ContentMetaAttributeValue,
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Stylesheet,
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Script,
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TemplateString,
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nonwhitespace_re
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)
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__all__ = [
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'HTMLTreeBuilder',
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'SAXTreeBuilder',
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'TreeBuilder',
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'TreeBuilderRegistry',
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]
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# Some useful features for a TreeBuilder to have.
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FAST = 'fast'
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PERMISSIVE = 'permissive'
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STRICT = 'strict'
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XML = 'xml'
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HTML = 'html'
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HTML_5 = 'html5'
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class TreeBuilderRegistry(object):
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"""A way of looking up TreeBuilder subclasses by their name or by desired
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features.
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"""
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def __init__(self):
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self.builders_for_feature = defaultdict(list)
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self.builders = []
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def register(self, treebuilder_class):
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"""Register a treebuilder based on its advertised features.
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:param treebuilder_class: A subclass of Treebuilder. its .features
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attribute should list its features.
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"""
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for feature in treebuilder_class.features:
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self.builders_for_feature[feature].insert(0, treebuilder_class)
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self.builders.insert(0, treebuilder_class)
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def lookup(self, *features):
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"""Look up a TreeBuilder subclass with the desired features.
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:param features: A list of features to look for. If none are
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provided, the most recently registered TreeBuilder subclass
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will be used.
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:return: A TreeBuilder subclass, or None if there's no
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registered subclass with all the requested features.
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"""
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if len(self.builders) == 0:
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# There are no builders at all.
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return None
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if len(features) == 0:
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# They didn't ask for any features. Give them the most
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# recently registered builder.
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return self.builders[0]
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# Go down the list of features in order, and eliminate any builders
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# that don't match every feature.
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features = list(features)
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features.reverse()
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candidates = None
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candidate_set = None
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while len(features) > 0:
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feature = features.pop()
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we_have_the_feature = self.builders_for_feature.get(feature, [])
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if len(we_have_the_feature) > 0:
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if candidates is None:
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candidates = we_have_the_feature
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candidate_set = set(candidates)
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else:
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# Eliminate any candidates that don't have this feature.
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candidate_set = candidate_set.intersection(
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set(we_have_the_feature))
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# The only valid candidates are the ones in candidate_set.
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# Go through the original list of candidates and pick the first one
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# that's in candidate_set.
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if candidate_set is None:
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return None
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for candidate in candidates:
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if candidate in candidate_set:
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return candidate
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return None
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# The BeautifulSoup class will take feature lists from developers and use them
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# to look up builders in this registry.
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builder_registry = TreeBuilderRegistry()
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class TreeBuilder(object):
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"""Turn a textual document into a Beautiful Soup object tree."""
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NAME = "[Unknown tree builder]"
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ALTERNATE_NAMES = []
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features = []
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is_xml = False
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picklable = False
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empty_element_tags = None # A tag will be considered an empty-element
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# tag when and only when it has no contents.
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# A value for these tag/attribute combinations is a space- or
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# comma-separated list of CDATA, rather than a single CDATA.
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DEFAULT_CDATA_LIST_ATTRIBUTES = {}
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# Whitespace should be preserved inside these tags.
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DEFAULT_PRESERVE_WHITESPACE_TAGS = set()
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# The textual contents of tags with these names should be
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# instantiated with some class other than NavigableString.
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DEFAULT_STRING_CONTAINERS = {}
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USE_DEFAULT = object()
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# Most parsers don't keep track of line numbers.
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TRACKS_LINE_NUMBERS = False
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def __init__(self, multi_valued_attributes=USE_DEFAULT,
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preserve_whitespace_tags=USE_DEFAULT,
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store_line_numbers=USE_DEFAULT,
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string_containers=USE_DEFAULT,
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):
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"""Constructor.
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:param multi_valued_attributes: If this is set to None, the
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TreeBuilder will not turn any values for attributes like
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'class' into lists. Setting this to a dictionary will
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customize this behavior; look at DEFAULT_CDATA_LIST_ATTRIBUTES
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for an example.
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Internally, these are called "CDATA list attributes", but that
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probably doesn't make sense to an end-user, so the argument name
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is `multi_valued_attributes`.
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:param preserve_whitespace_tags: A list of tags to treat
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the way <pre> tags are treated in HTML. Tags in this list
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are immune from pretty-printing; their contents will always be
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output as-is.
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:param string_containers: A dictionary mapping tag names to
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the classes that should be instantiated to contain the textual
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contents of those tags. The default is to use NavigableString
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for every tag, no matter what the name. You can override the
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default by changing DEFAULT_STRING_CONTAINERS.
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:param store_line_numbers: If the parser keeps track of the
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line numbers and positions of the original markup, that
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information will, by default, be stored in each corresponding
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`Tag` object. You can turn this off by passing
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store_line_numbers=False. If the parser you're using doesn't
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keep track of this information, then setting store_line_numbers=True
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will do nothing.
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"""
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self.soup = None
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if multi_valued_attributes is self.USE_DEFAULT:
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multi_valued_attributes = self.DEFAULT_CDATA_LIST_ATTRIBUTES
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self.cdata_list_attributes = multi_valued_attributes
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if preserve_whitespace_tags is self.USE_DEFAULT:
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preserve_whitespace_tags = self.DEFAULT_PRESERVE_WHITESPACE_TAGS
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self.preserve_whitespace_tags = preserve_whitespace_tags
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if store_line_numbers == self.USE_DEFAULT:
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store_line_numbers = self.TRACKS_LINE_NUMBERS
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self.store_line_numbers = store_line_numbers
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if string_containers == self.USE_DEFAULT:
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string_containers = self.DEFAULT_STRING_CONTAINERS
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self.string_containers = string_containers
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def initialize_soup(self, soup):
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"""The BeautifulSoup object has been initialized and is now
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being associated with the TreeBuilder.
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:param soup: A BeautifulSoup object.
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"""
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self.soup = soup
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def reset(self):
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"""Do any work necessary to reset the underlying parser
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for a new document.
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By default, this does nothing.
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"""
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pass
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def can_be_empty_element(self, tag_name):
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"""Might a tag with this name be an empty-element tag?
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The final markup may or may not actually present this tag as
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self-closing.
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For instance: an HTMLBuilder does not consider a <p> tag to be
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an empty-element tag (it's not in
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HTMLBuilder.empty_element_tags). This means an empty <p> tag
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will be presented as "<p></p>", not "<p/>" or "<p>".
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The default implementation has no opinion about which tags are
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empty-element tags, so a tag will be presented as an
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empty-element tag if and only if it has no children.
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"<foo></foo>" will become "<foo/>", and "<foo>bar</foo>" will
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be left alone.
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:param tag_name: The name of a markup tag.
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"""
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if self.empty_element_tags is None:
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return True
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return tag_name in self.empty_element_tags
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def feed(self, markup):
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"""Run some incoming markup through some parsing process,
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populating the `BeautifulSoup` object in self.soup.
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This method is not implemented in TreeBuilder; it must be
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implemented in subclasses.
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:return: None.
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"""
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raise NotImplementedError()
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def prepare_markup(self, markup, user_specified_encoding=None,
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document_declared_encoding=None, exclude_encodings=None):
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"""Run any preliminary steps necessary to make incoming markup
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acceptable to the parser.
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:param markup: Some markup -- probably a bytestring.
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:param user_specified_encoding: The user asked to try this encoding.
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:param document_declared_encoding: The markup itself claims to be
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in this encoding.
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:param exclude_encodings: The user asked _not_ to try any of
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these encodings.
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:yield: A series of 4-tuples:
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(markup, encoding, declared encoding,
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has undergone character replacement)
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Each 4-tuple represents a strategy for converting the
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document to Unicode and parsing it. Each strategy will be tried
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in turn.
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By default, the only strategy is to parse the markup
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as-is. See `LXMLTreeBuilderForXML` and
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`HTMLParserTreeBuilder` for implementations that take into
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account the quirks of particular parsers.
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"""
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yield markup, None, None, False
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def test_fragment_to_document(self, fragment):
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"""Wrap an HTML fragment to make it look like a document.
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Different parsers do this differently. For instance, lxml
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introduces an empty <head> tag, and html5lib
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doesn't. Abstracting this away lets us write simple tests
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which run HTML fragments through the parser and compare the
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results against other HTML fragments.
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This method should not be used outside of tests.
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:param fragment: A string -- fragment of HTML.
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:return: A string -- a full HTML document.
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"""
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return fragment
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def set_up_substitutions(self, tag):
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"""Set up any substitutions that will need to be performed on
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a `Tag` when it's output as a string.
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By default, this does nothing. See `HTMLTreeBuilder` for a
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case where this is used.
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:param tag: A `Tag`
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:return: Whether or not a substitution was performed.
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"""
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return False
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def _replace_cdata_list_attribute_values(self, tag_name, attrs):
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"""When an attribute value is associated with a tag that can
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have multiple values for that attribute, convert the string
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value to a list of strings.
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Basically, replaces class="foo bar" with class=["foo", "bar"]
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NOTE: This method modifies its input in place.
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:param tag_name: The name of a tag.
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:param attrs: A dictionary containing the tag's attributes.
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Any appropriate attribute values will be modified in place.
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"""
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if not attrs:
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return attrs
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if self.cdata_list_attributes:
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universal = self.cdata_list_attributes.get('*', [])
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tag_specific = self.cdata_list_attributes.get(
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tag_name.lower(), None)
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for attr in list(attrs.keys()):
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if attr in universal or (tag_specific and attr in tag_specific):
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# We have a "class"-type attribute whose string
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# value is a whitespace-separated list of
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# values. Split it into a list.
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value = attrs[attr]
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if isinstance(value, str):
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values = nonwhitespace_re.findall(value)
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else:
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# html5lib sometimes calls setAttributes twice
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# for the same tag when rearranging the parse
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# tree. On the second call the attribute value
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# here is already a list. If this happens,
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# leave the value alone rather than trying to
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# split it again.
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values = value
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attrs[attr] = values
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return attrs
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class SAXTreeBuilder(TreeBuilder):
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"""A Beautiful Soup treebuilder that listens for SAX events.
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This is not currently used for anything, but it demonstrates
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how a simple TreeBuilder would work.
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"""
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def feed(self, markup):
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raise NotImplementedError()
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def close(self):
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pass
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def startElement(self, name, attrs):
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attrs = dict((key[1], value) for key, value in list(attrs.items()))
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#print("Start %s, %r" % (name, attrs))
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self.soup.handle_starttag(name, attrs)
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def endElement(self, name):
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#print("End %s" % name)
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self.soup.handle_endtag(name)
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def startElementNS(self, nsTuple, nodeName, attrs):
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# Throw away (ns, nodeName) for now.
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self.startElement(nodeName, attrs)
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def endElementNS(self, nsTuple, nodeName):
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# Throw away (ns, nodeName) for now.
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self.endElement(nodeName)
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#handler.endElementNS((ns, node.nodeName), node.nodeName)
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def startPrefixMapping(self, prefix, nodeValue):
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# Ignore the prefix for now.
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pass
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def endPrefixMapping(self, prefix):
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# Ignore the prefix for now.
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# handler.endPrefixMapping(prefix)
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pass
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def characters(self, content):
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self.soup.handle_data(content)
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def startDocument(self):
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pass
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def endDocument(self):
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pass
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class HTMLTreeBuilder(TreeBuilder):
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"""This TreeBuilder knows facts about HTML.
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Such as which tags are empty-element tags.
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"""
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empty_element_tags = set([
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# These are from HTML5.
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'area', 'base', 'br', 'col', 'embed', 'hr', 'img', 'input', 'keygen', 'link', 'menuitem', 'meta', 'param', 'source', 'track', 'wbr',
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# These are from earlier versions of HTML and are removed in HTML5.
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'basefont', 'bgsound', 'command', 'frame', 'image', 'isindex', 'nextid', 'spacer'
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])
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# The HTML standard defines these as block-level elements. Beautiful
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# Soup does not treat these elements differently from other elements,
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# but it may do so eventually, and this information is available if
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# you need to use it.
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block_elements = set(["address", "article", "aside", "blockquote", "canvas", "dd", "div", "dl", "dt", "fieldset", "figcaption", "figure", "footer", "form", "h1", "h2", "h3", "h4", "h5", "h6", "header", "hr", "li", "main", "nav", "noscript", "ol", "output", "p", "pre", "section", "table", "tfoot", "ul", "video"])
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# The HTML standard defines an unusual content model for these tags.
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# We represent this by using a string class other than NavigableString
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# inside these tags.
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#
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# I made this list by going through the HTML spec
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# (https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#metadata-content) and looking for
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# "metadata content" elements that can contain strings.
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#
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# TODO: Arguably <noscript> could go here but it seems
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# qualitatively different from the other tags.
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DEFAULT_STRING_CONTAINERS = {
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'style': Stylesheet,
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'script': Script,
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'template': TemplateString,
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}
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# The HTML standard defines these attributes as containing a
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# space-separated list of values, not a single value. That is,
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# class="foo bar" means that the 'class' attribute has two values,
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# 'foo' and 'bar', not the single value 'foo bar'. When we
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# encounter one of these attributes, we will parse its value into
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# a list of values if possible. Upon output, the list will be
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# converted back into a string.
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DEFAULT_CDATA_LIST_ATTRIBUTES = {
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"*" : ['class', 'accesskey', 'dropzone'],
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"a" : ['rel', 'rev'],
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"link" : ['rel', 'rev'],
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"td" : ["headers"],
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"th" : ["headers"],
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"td" : ["headers"],
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"form" : ["accept-charset"],
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"object" : ["archive"],
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# These are HTML5 specific, as are *.accesskey and *.dropzone above.
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"area" : ["rel"],
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"icon" : ["sizes"],
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"iframe" : ["sandbox"],
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"output" : ["for"],
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}
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DEFAULT_PRESERVE_WHITESPACE_TAGS = set(['pre', 'textarea'])
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def set_up_substitutions(self, tag):
|
||
|
"""Replace the declared encoding in a <meta> tag with a placeholder,
|
||
|
to be substituted when the tag is output to a string.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An HTML document may come in to Beautiful Soup as one
|
||
|
encoding, but exit in a different encoding, and the <meta> tag
|
||
|
needs to be changed to reflect this.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param tag: A `Tag`
|
||
|
:return: Whether or not a substitution was performed.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
# We are only interested in <meta> tags
|
||
|
if tag.name != 'meta':
|
||
|
return False
|
||
|
|
||
|
http_equiv = tag.get('http-equiv')
|
||
|
content = tag.get('content')
|
||
|
charset = tag.get('charset')
|
||
|
|
||
|
# We are interested in <meta> tags that say what encoding the
|
||
|
# document was originally in. This means HTML 5-style <meta>
|
||
|
# tags that provide the "charset" attribute. It also means
|
||
|
# HTML 4-style <meta> tags that provide the "content"
|
||
|
# attribute and have "http-equiv" set to "content-type".
|
||
|
#
|
||
|
# In both cases we will replace the value of the appropriate
|
||
|
# attribute with a standin object that can take on any
|
||
|
# encoding.
|
||
|
meta_encoding = None
|
||
|
if charset is not None:
|
||
|
# HTML 5 style:
|
||
|
# <meta charset="utf8">
|
||
|
meta_encoding = charset
|
||
|
tag['charset'] = CharsetMetaAttributeValue(charset)
|
||
|
|
||
|
elif (content is not None and http_equiv is not None
|
||
|
and http_equiv.lower() == 'content-type'):
|
||
|
# HTML 4 style:
|
||
|
# <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf8">
|
||
|
tag['content'] = ContentMetaAttributeValue(content)
|
||
|
|
||
|
return (meta_encoding is not None)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def register_treebuilders_from(module):
|
||
|
"""Copy TreeBuilders from the given module into this module."""
|
||
|
this_module = sys.modules[__name__]
|
||
|
for name in module.__all__:
|
||
|
obj = getattr(module, name)
|
||
|
|
||
|
if issubclass(obj, TreeBuilder):
|
||
|
setattr(this_module, name, obj)
|
||
|
this_module.__all__.append(name)
|
||
|
# Register the builder while we're at it.
|
||
|
this_module.builder_registry.register(obj)
|
||
|
|
||
|
class ParserRejectedMarkup(Exception):
|
||
|
"""An Exception to be raised when the underlying parser simply
|
||
|
refuses to parse the given markup.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
def __init__(self, message_or_exception):
|
||
|
"""Explain why the parser rejected the given markup, either
|
||
|
with a textual explanation or another exception.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
if isinstance(message_or_exception, Exception):
|
||
|
e = message_or_exception
|
||
|
message_or_exception = "%s: %s" % (e.__class__.__name__, str(e))
|
||
|
super(ParserRejectedMarkup, self).__init__(message_or_exception)
|
||
|
|
||
|
# Builders are registered in reverse order of priority, so that custom
|
||
|
# builder registrations will take precedence. In general, we want lxml
|
||
|
# to take precedence over html5lib, because it's faster. And we only
|
||
|
# want to use HTMLParser as a last resort.
|
||
|
from . import _htmlparser
|
||
|
register_treebuilders_from(_htmlparser)
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
from . import _html5lib
|
||
|
register_treebuilders_from(_html5lib)
|
||
|
except ImportError:
|
||
|
# They don't have html5lib installed.
|
||
|
pass
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
from . import _lxml
|
||
|
register_treebuilders_from(_lxml)
|
||
|
except ImportError:
|
||
|
# They don't have lxml installed.
|
||
|
pass
|