DroidsOnRoids / jspoon

Annotation based HTML to Java parser + Retrofit converter
https://www.thedroidsonroids.com/blog/scraping-web-pages-with-retrofit-jspoon-library
MIT License
323 stars 23 forks source link
html java parser

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jspoon

jspoon is a Java library that provides parsing HTML into Java objects basing on CSS selectors. It uses jsoup underneath as a HTML parser.

Installation

Insert the following dependency into your project's build.gradle file:

dependencies {
    implementation 'pl.droidsonroids:jspoon:1.3.2'
}

Usage

jspoon works on any class with a default constructor. To make it work you need to annotate fields with @Selector annotation and set a CSS selector as the annotation's value:

class Page {
    @Selector("#title") String title;
    @Selector("li.a") List<Integer> intList;
    @Selector(value = "#image1", attr = "src") String imageSource;
}

Then you can create a HtmlAdapter and use it to build objects:

String htmlContent = "<div>" 
    + "<p id='title'>Title</p>" 
    + "<ul>"
    + "<li class='a'>1</li>"
    + "<li>2</li>"
    + "<li class='a'>3</li>"
    + "</ul>"
    + "<img id='image1' src='image.bmp' />"
    + "</div>";

Jspoon jspoon = Jspoon.create();
HtmlAdapter<Page> htmlAdapter = jspoon.adapter(Page.class);

Page page = htmlAdapter.fromHtml(htmlContent);
//title = "Title"; intList = [1, 3]; imageSource = "image.bmp"

It looks for the first occurrence in HTML and sets its value to a field.

Supported types

@Selector can be applied to any field of the following types (or their primitive equivalents):

It can also be used with a class, then you don't need to annotate every field inside it.

Attributes

By default, the HTML's textContent value is used on Strings, Dates and numbers. It is possible to use an attribute by setting an attr parameter in the @Selector annotation. You can also use "html" (or "innerHtml") and "outerHtml" as attr's value.

Formatting and regex

Regex can be set up by passing regex parameter to @Selector annotation. Example:

class Page {
    @Selector(value = "#numbers", regex = "([a-z]+),") String matchedNumber;
}

Date format can be set up by passing value parameter to @Format annotation. Example:

class Page {
    @Format(value = "HH:mm:ss dd.MM.yyyy")
    @Selector(value = "#date") Date date;
}
String htmlContent = "<span id='date'>13:30:12 14.07.2017</span>"
    + "<span id='numbers'>ONE, TwO, three,</span>";
Jspoon jspoon = Jspoon.create();
HtmlAdapter<Page> htmlAdapter = jspoon.adapter(Page.class);
Page page = htmlAdapter.fromHtml(htmlContent);//date = Jul 14, 2017 13:30:12; matchedNumber = "three";

Java's Locale is used for parsing Floats, Doubles and Dates. You can override it by setting languageTag @Format parameter:

@Format(languageTag = "pl")
@Selector(value = "div > p > span") Double pi; //3,14 will be parsed 

If jspoon doesn't find a HTML element it wont't set field's value unless you set the defValue parameter:

@Selector(value = "div > p > span", defValue = "NO_TEXT") String text;

Custom converterts

When format or regex is not enough, custom converter can be used to implement parsing from jsoup's Element. This can be done by extending ElementConverter class:

public class JoinChildrenClassConverter implements ElementConverter<String> {
    @Override
    public String convert(Element node, Selector selector) {
        return node.children().stream().map(Element::text).collect(Collectors.joining(", "));
    }
}

And it can be used the following way:

public class Model {
    @Selector(value = "#id", converter = JoinChildrenClassConverter::class)
    String childrenText;
}

Retrofit

Retrofit converter is available here.

Changelog

See GitHub releases

Other libraries/inspirations