Parse HTML into JSON
npm install himalaya
var himalaya = require('himalaya')
var html = require('fs').readFileSync('/webpage.html', {encoding: 'utf8'})
var json = himalaya.parse(html)
console.log('👉', json)
Download himalaya.js and put it in a <script>
tag. Himalaya will be accessible from window.himalaya
.
var html = '<div>Hello world</div>'
var json = window.himalaya.parse(html)
console.log('👉', json)
Himalaya bundles well with Browersify and Webpack.
Himalaya includes a command-line tool.
npm install --global himalaya
himalaya webpage.html webpage.json
# or as a pipe
echo "<h1>Hello</h1>" | himalaya > hello.json
Run himalaya --help
for more information.
Himalaya has specifications for its output.
- Version 0 – The original specification from 2015. The focus of this specification is developer convenience, processing and formatting special cases of attributes.
- Version 1 – The specification that will become default when Himalaya hits v1. The focus of this specification is fixing the problems in Version 0, in particular removing lossy attribute processing.
The Version 0 specification is the default. If interested, please try the Version 1 spec and report any bugs. To use Version 1, override the format
option of the himalaya.parse
function:
const himalaya = require('himalaya')
const format = require('himalaya/lib/format/v1').default
const parseOptions = Object.assign({}, himalaya.parseDefaults, {format})
const json = himalaya.parse('<p>Hello World</p>', parseOptions)
console.log('👉', json)
Himalaya v1 will not support the Version 0 specification.
<div class='post post-featured'>
<p>Himalaya parsed me...</p>
<!-- ...and I liked it. -->
</div>
// Version 0
[
{
"type": "Element",
"tagName": "div",
"attributes": {
"className": [
"post",
"post-featured"
]
},
"children": [
{
"type": "Element",
"tagName": "p",
"attributes": {},
"children": [
{
"type": "Text",
"content": "Himalaya parsed me..."
}
]
},
{
"type": "Comment",
"content": " ...and I liked it. "
}
]
}
]
// Version 1
[{
type: 'element',
tagName: 'div',
attributes: [{
key: 'class',
value: 'post post-featured'
}],
children: [{
type: 'element',
tagName: 'p',
attributes: [],
children: [{
type: 'text',
content: 'Himalaya parsed me...'
}]
}, {
type: 'comment',
content: ' ...and I liked it. '
}]
}]
Note: Text nodes consisting of whitespace are not shown for readability.
Himalaya transforms HTML into JSON, that's it. Himalaya is synchronous and does not require any complicated callbacks.
Himalaya does a couple transformations when processing attributes:
- Camel-cases attribute names
- Attributes without values use their names as values. For example,
disabled
turns intodisabled="disabled"
- Groups
data-*
attributes into adataset
object - Attempts to cast any value to a number if
!Nan
- Parses the
style
attribute into a hash map
Himalaya handles a lot of HTML's fringe cases, like:
- Closes unclosed tags
<p><b>...</p>
- Ignores extra closing tags
<span>...</b></span>
- Properly handles void tags like
<meta>
and<img>
- Properly handles self-closing tags like
<input/>
- Handles
<!doctype>
and<-- comments -->
- Does not parse the contents of
<script>
,<style>
, and HTML5<template>
tags
Himalaya does not cut corners and returns an accurate representation of the HTML supplied. To remove whitespace, post-process the JSON; check out an example script.
Himalaya provides translation functions that can take the Himalaya AST and output HTML and Pug.
The following example does nothing. It parses the HTML to JSON then parses the JSON back into HTML, which is the exact same as the original. Himalaya does buff out the kinks of malformed originals.
var fs = require('fs')
var himalaya = require('himalaya')
var toHTML = require('himalaya/translate').toHTML
var html = fs.readFileSync('/webpage.html', {encoding: 'utf8'})
var json = himalaya.parse(html)
fs.writeFileSync('/webpage.html', toHTML(json))
Version 0 translation supports Pug using toPug
. See the reference document for translations.
First, my friends weren't helpful. Except Josh, Josh had my back.
While I was testing the parser, I threw a download of my Twitter homepage in and got a giant JSON blob out. My code editor Sublime Text has a mini-map and looking at it sideways the data looked like a never-ending mountain range. Also, "himalaya" has H, M, L in it.
My first implementation used look-ahead, found the matching closing tag, and then recursively parsed the inners until a tree results. That was problematic. This implementation uses no look-ahead and instead uses a stack to keep track of nesting while processing the source HTML. At an end tag the stack it cut to match and then parsing picks up again at the higher level.
We can always have more tests: if you find a bug, create an issue or be fabulous and fix the problem and write the tests up yourself in a coherent pull request.
Run tests with the npm test
command.
Follow me on Twitter for updates or for the lolz and please check out my other repositories if I have earned it. I thank you for reading.