I am using the htmlcxx library to read an HTML file and generate the same HTML file with additional content.
I can read the file with no problem, but simply emitting the original HTML file doesn’t correctly include the end tags. That is, when I simply iterate and output the entire DOM, no closing tags are emitted.
I know that there is a closingText() interface for a node (see Node.h), but I can’t seem to find a way to use it that lets me do what I need.
Here is how I’m dumping the DOM:
it = dom.begin();
end = dom.end();
for (; it != end; ++it)
{
cout << it->text();
}
The above gives me:
<div>
<li>
<div>
(blank)
(blank)
(blank)
<div>
(blank)
for the following html:
<div>
<li>
<div>
</div>
</li>
</div>
<div>
</div>
Anything i can do other than changing the code?
There is virtually no documentation provided with this library, and only a very small set of example code. The tree manipulation was lifted from http://tree.phi-sci.com and that site has a little more documentation, but not much in the way of additional example code.
Every example that I have seen uses the basic “depth-first” iterator, which allows you to traverse the tree using a simple for loop. This doesn’t seem to be very useful, since to serialize an HTML tree, you really need to use recursion.
I hacked about until I got a recursive algorithm working. This may not be the best way to use the library, but it seems to work.
As you can see from my code, the
text()andclosingText()functions bracket whatever content is contained in the sub-tree which is processed recursively.