copperhead
copperhead

Reputation: 677

What is the best way to parse html in google apps script

var page = UrlFetchApp.fetch(contestURL);
var doc = XmlService.parse(page);

The above code gives a parse error when used, however if I replace the XmlService class with the deprecated Xml class, with the lenient flag set, it parses the html properly.

var page = UrlFetchApp.fetch(contestURL);
var doc = Xml.parse(page, true);

The problem is mostly caused because of no CDATA in the javascript part of the html and the parser complains with the following error.

The entity name must immediately follow the '&' in the entity reference.

Even if I remove all the <script>(.*?)</script> using regex, it still complains because the <br> tags aren't closed. Is there a clean way of parsing html into a DOM tree.

Upvotes: 36

Views: 36897

Answers (11)

thdoan
thdoan

Reputation: 19127

In 2021, the best way to parse HTML on the .gs side that I know of is...

  1. Click + next to Library
  2. Enter 1ReeQ6WO8kKNxoaA_O0XEQ589cIrRvEBA9qcWpNqdOP17i47u6N9M5Xh0
  3. Click "Look up"
  4. Click Add
  5. Sample usage:
const contentText = UrlFetchApp.fetch('https://www.somesite.com/').getContentText();
const $ = Cheerio.load(contentText);

$('.some-class').first().text();

That's it -- this is probably the closest we'll get to doing jQuery-like DOM selection in GAS. The .first() is important or else you may extract more content than you expected (think of it as using querySelector() instead of querySelectorAll()).

Credit where credit is due: https://github.com/tani/cheeriogs

Upvotes: 30

Max Makhrov
Max Makhrov

Reputation: 18727

If you are using Cheerio library for Google Apps Script:

Source code

Library page

Installation by library ID:

1ReeQ6WO8kKNxoaA_O0XEQ589cIrRvEBA9qcWpNqdOP17i47u6N9M5Xh0

A function to get current emojis from unicode.org:

function getEmojis() {
  var t = new Date();
  var url = 'https://unicode.org/emoji/charts/full-emoji-list.html';
  var fetch = UrlFetchApp.fetch(url);
  var contentText = fetch.getContentText();
  //console.log(new Date() - t);
  
  // Cherio
  var $ = Cheerio.load(contentText);
  var data = [];
  $("table > tbody > tr").each((index, element) => {
    var row = [];
    $(element).find("td").each((index, child) => {
      row.push($(child).text());
    });
    if (row.length > 0) {
      data.push(row);
    }    
  });

  //console.log(data);
  //console.log(new Date() - t);

  // Result
  return data;

}

↑ Sample code shows how to parse table and put it into [[array]]

May be used as a custom function:

enter image description here

Bonus

Parsing the site may be a time-consuming operation + you may reach the limit. Here's a test file with a full version of the script:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1iO7YjYWyfseQu_YCfRbGDPg7NskOgMu_iO1iGjr7KxY/edit#gid=93365395

↑ it uses CasheService to reduce the number of calls.

Upvotes: 4

Let Me Tink About It
Let Me Tink About It

Reputation: 16132

As of May 2020, you can now use the Cheerio library for Google Apps Script to do this.

Returns the content of Wikipedia's Main Page

const content = getContent_('https://en.wikipedia.org');
const $ = Cheerio.load(content);
Logger.log($('#mp-right').text());

Returns the content of the first paragraph <p> of Wikipedia's Main Page

const content = getContent_('https://en.wikipedia.org');
const $ = Cheerio.load(content);
Logger.log($('p').first().text());

To add to your project:

Select Resources - Libraries... in the Google Apps Script editor. Enter the project key 1ReeQ6WO8kKNxoaA_O0XEQ589cIrRvEBA9qcWpNqdOP17i47u6N9M5Xh0 in the Add a library field, and click "Add". Select the highest version number, and click "Save".

Upvotes: 14

Jindřich Širůček
Jindřich Širůček

Reputation: 344

I know it is not exactly what OP asked, but I found this question when I was looking for some html parsing options - so it might be useful for others as well.

There is an easy to use the library for TEXT parsing. It's useful if you want to get only one piece of information from the html(xml) code.

EDIT 2021: The script library id is:
1Mc8BthYthXx6CoIz90-JiSzSafVnT6U3t0z_W3hLTAX5ek4w0G_EIrNw

Visualization of parsing text principle It works like in the picture above

function getData() {
    var url = "https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/signaturesatori-central-s/fejomcfhljndadjlojamaklegghjnjfn?hl=en";
    var fromText = '<span class="e-f-ih" title="';
    var toText = '">';
  
    var content = UrlFetchApp.fetch(url).getContentText();
    var scraped = Parser
                    .data(content)
                    .from(fromText)
                    .to(toText)
                    .build();
    Logger.log(scraped);
    return scraped;
}

Upvotes: 4

Srik
Srik

Reputation: 7965

There are two options

a) One is to use JavaScript's string functions. First locate your tag using string.indexOf() and then extract the data you want using string.substring().

b) The other option is to make use of the Xml Service.

Upvotes: 1

Ivan de Leon
Ivan de Leon

Reputation: 39

For simple tasks such as grabbing one value from a webpage, you could use a regular expression. Regex is notoriously bad for parsing HTML as there's all sorts of weird cases it can get tripped up, but if you're confident about the HTML you're accessing this can sometimes be the simplest way.

Here's an example that fetches the contents of the page's <title> tag:

var page = UrlFetchApp.fetch(contestURL);
var regExp = new RegExp("<title>(.*)</title>", "gi");
var result = regExp.exec(page.getContentText());
// [1] is the match group when using parenthesis in the pattern
var value = result ? result[1] : 'No title found';

Upvotes: 4

Justin Bicknell
Justin Bicknell

Reputation: 4808

I ran into this exact same problem. I was able to circumvent it by first using the deprecated Xml.parse, since it still works, then selecting the body XmlElement, then passing in its Xml String into the new XmlService.parse method:

var page = UrlFetchApp.fetch(contestURL);
var doc = Xml.parse(page, true);
var bodyHtml = doc.html.body.toXmlString();
doc = XmlService.parse(bodyHtml);
var root = doc.getRootElement();

Note: This solution may not work if the old Xml.parse is completely removed from Google Scripts.

Upvotes: 31

Yves R
Yves R

Reputation: 134

I found that the best way to parse html in google apps is to avoid using XmlService.parse or Xml.parse. XmlService.parse doesn't work well with bad html code from certain websites.

Here a basic example on how you can parse any website easily without using XmlService.parse or Xml.parse. In this example, i am retrieving a list of president from "wikipedia.org/wiki/President_of_the_United_States" whit a regular javascript document.getElementsByTagName(), and pasting the values into my google spreadsheet.

1- Create a new Google Sheet;

2- Click the menu Tools > Script editor... to open a new tab with the code editor window and copy the following code into your Code.gs:

function onOpen() {
 var ui = SpreadsheetApp.getUi();
    ui.createMenu("Parse Menu")
      .addItem("Parse", "parserMenuItem")
      .addToUi();

}


function parserMenuItem() {
  var sideBar = HtmlService.createHtmlOutputFromFile("test");
  SpreadsheetApp.getUi().showSidebar(sideBar);
}


function getUrlData(url) {
 var doc = UrlFetchApp.fetch(url).getContentText()
 return doc                               
}

function writeToSpreadSheet(data) {
 var ss = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
 var sheet = ss.getSheets()[0];
 var row=1

   for (var i = 0; i < data.length; i++) {
   var x = data[i];
   var range = sheet.getRange(row, 1)
   range.setValue(x);
   var row = row+1
    }
}

3- Add an HTML file to your Apps Script project. Open the Script Editor and choose File > New > Html File, and name it 'test'.Then copy the following code into your test.html

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>    
</head>
<body>
<input id= "mButon" type="button" value="Click here to get list"
onclick="parse()">
<div hidden id="mOutput"></div>
</body>
<script>

window.onload = onOpen;

function onOpen() {
 var url = "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/President_of_the_United_States"
 google.script.run.withSuccessHandler(writeHtmlOutput).getUrlData(url)
 document.getElementById("mButon").style.visibility = "visible";
}

function writeHtmlOutput(x) {
 document.getElementById('mOutput').innerHTML = x;
}

function parse() {

var list = document.getElementsByTagName("area");
var data = [];

   for (var i = 0; i < list.length; i++) {
   var x = list[i];
   data.push(x.getAttribute("title"))
    }

google.script.run.writeToSpreadSheet(data);
} 
</script> 
</html>

4- Save your gs and html files and Go back to your spreadsheet. Reload your Spreadsheet. Click on "Parse Menu" - "Parse". Then click on "Click here to get list" in the sidebar.

Upvotes: 5

Eric Koleda
Eric Koleda

Reputation: 12671

Xml.parse() has an option to turn on lenient parsing, which helps when parsing HTML. Note that the Xml service is deprecated however, and the newer XmlService doesn't have this functionality.

Upvotes: 4

Zig Mandel
Zig Mandel

Reputation: 19864

Natively there's no way unless you do what you already tried which wont work if the html doesnt conform with the xml format.

Upvotes: 1

Eric Koleda
Eric Koleda

Reputation: 12671

It's not possible to create an HTML DOM server-side in Apps Script. Using regular expressions is likely your best option, at least for simple parsing.

Upvotes: -2

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