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The moving parts
================
html5lib consists of a number of components, which are responsible for
handling its features.
Parsing uses a *tree builder* to generate a *tree*, the in-memory representation of the document.
Several tree representations are supported, as are translations to other formats via *tree adapters*.
The tree may be translated to a token stream with a *tree walker*, from which :class:`~html5lib.serializer.HTMLSerializer` produces a stream of bytes.
The token stream may also be transformed by use of *filters* to accomplish tasks like sanitization.
Tree builders
-------------
The parser reads HTML by tokenizing the content and building a tree that
the user can later access. html5lib can build three types of trees:
* ``etree`` - this is the default; builds a tree based on :mod:`xml.etree`,
which can be found in the standard library. Whenever possible, the
accelerated ``ElementTree`` implementation (i.e.
``xml.etree.cElementTree`` on Python 2.x) is used.
* ``dom`` - builds a tree based on :mod:`xml.dom.minidom`.
* ``lxml`` - uses the :mod:`lxml.etree` implementation of the ``ElementTree``
API. The performance gains are relatively small compared to using the
accelerated ``ElementTree`` module.
You can specify the builder by name when using the shorthand API:
.. code-block:: python
import html5lib
with open("mydocument.html", "rb") as f:
lxml_etree_document = html5lib.parse(f, treebuilder="lxml")
To get a builder class by name, use the :func:`~html5lib.treebuilders.getTreeBuilder` function.
When instantiating a :class:`~html5lib.html5parser.HTMLParser` object, you must pass a tree builder class via the ``tree`` keyword attribute:
.. code-block:: python
import html5lib
TreeBuilder = html5lib.getTreeBuilder("dom")
parser = html5lib.HTMLParser(tree=TreeBuilder)
minidom_document = parser.parse("<p>Hello World!")
The implementation of builders can be found in `html5lib/treebuilders/
Tree walkers
------------
In addition to manipulating a tree directly, you can use a tree walker to generate a streaming view of it.
html5lib provides walkers for ``etree``, ``dom``, and ``lxml`` trees, as well as ``genshi`` `markup streams <https://genshi.edgewall.org/wiki/Documentation/streams.html>`_.
The implementation of walkers can be found in `html5lib/treewalkers/
html5lib provides :class:`~html5lib.serializer.HTMLSerializer` for generating a stream of bytes from a token stream, and several filters which manipulate the stream.
HTMLSerializer
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The serializer lets you write HTML back as a stream of bytes.
.. code-block:: pycon
>>> import html5lib
>>> element = html5lib.parse('<p xml:lang="pl">Witam wszystkich')
>>> walker = html5lib.getTreeWalker("etree")
>>> stream = walker(element)
>>> s = html5lib.serializer.HTMLSerializer()
>>> output = s.serialize(stream)
>>> for item in output:
... print("%r" % item)
'<p'
' '
'xml:lang'
'='
'pl'
'>'
'Witam wszystkich'
You can customize the serializer behaviour in a variety of ways. Consult
the :class:`~html5lib.serializer.HTMLSerializer` documentation.
Filters
~~~~~~~
html5lib provides several filters:
* :class:`alphabeticalattributes.Filter
<html5lib.filters.alphabeticalattributes.Filter>` sorts attributes on
tags to be in alphabetical order
* :class:`inject_meta_charset.Filter
<html5lib.filters.inject_meta_charset.Filter>` sets a user-specified
encoding in the correct ``<meta>`` tag in the ``<head>`` section of
the document
* :class:`lint.Filter <html5lib.filters.lint.Filter>` raises
:exc:`AssertionError` exceptions on invalid tag and attribute names, invalid
PCDATA, etc.
* :class:`optionaltags.Filter <html5lib.filters.optionaltags.Filter>`
removes tags from the token stream which are not necessary to produce valid
HTML
* :class:`sanitizer.Filter <html5lib.filters.sanitizer.Filter>` removes
unsafe markup and CSS. Elements that are known to be safe are passed
through and the rest is converted to visible text. The default
configuration of the sanitizer follows the `WHATWG Sanitization Rules
* :class:`whitespace.Filter <html5lib.filters.whitespace.Filter>`
collapses all whitespace characters to single spaces unless they're in
``<pre/>`` or ``<textarea/>`` tags.
To use a filter, simply wrap it around a token stream:
.. code-block:: python
>>> import html5lib
>>> from html5lib.filters import sanitizer
>>> dom = html5lib.parse("<p><script>alert('Boo!')", treebuilder="dom")
>>> walker = html5lib.getTreeWalker("dom")
>>> stream = walker(dom)
>>> clean_stream = sanitizer.Filter(stream)
Tree adapters
-------------
Tree adapters can be used to translate between tree formats.
Two adapters are provided by html5lib:
* :func:`html5lib.treeadapters.genshi.to_genshi()` generates a `Genshi markup stream <https://genshi.edgewall.org/wiki/Documentation/streams.html>`_.
* :func:`html5lib.treeadapters.sax.to_sax()` calls a SAX handler based on the tree.
Encoding discovery
------------------
Parsed trees are always Unicode. However a large variety of input
encodings are supported. The encoding of the document is determined in
the following way:
* The encoding may be explicitly specified by passing the name of the
encoding as the encoding parameter to the
:meth:`~html5lib.html5parser.HTMLParser.parse` method on
:class:`~html5lib.html5parser.HTMLParser` objects.
* If no encoding is specified, the parser will attempt to detect the
encoding from a ``<meta>`` element in the first 512 bytes of the
document (this is only a partial implementation of the current HTML
specification).
* If no encoding can be found and the :mod:`chardet` library is available, an
attempt will be made to sniff the encoding from the byte pattern.
* If all else fails, the default encoding will be used. This is usually
`Windows-1252 <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows-1252>`_, which is
a common fallback used by Web browsers.