Provided by: libhtml-html5-outline-perl_0.006-1_all bug

NAME

       HTML::HTML5::Outline - implementation of the HTML5 Outline algorithm

SYNOPSIS

               use JSON;
               use HTML::HTML5::Outline;

               my $html = <<'HTML';
               <!doctype html>
               <h1>Hello</h1>
               <h2>World</h2>
               <h1>Good Morning</h1>
               <h2>Vietnam</h2>
               HTML

               my $outline = HTML::HTML5::Outline->new($html);
               print to_json($outline->to_hashref, {pretty=>1,canonical=>1});

DESCRIPTION

       This is an implementation of the HTML5 Outline algorithm, as per
       <http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/sections.html#outlines>.

       The module can output a JSON-friendly hashref, or an RDF model.

   Constructor
       •   "HTML::HTML5::Outline->new($html, %options)"

           Construct a new outline. $html is the HTML to generate an outline from, either as an
           HTML or XHTML string, or as an XML::LibXML::Document object.

           Options:

           •   default_language - default language to assume text is in when no lang/xml:lang
               attribute is available. e.g. 'en-gb'.

           •   element_subjects - rather advanced feature that doesn't bear explaining. See USE
               WITH RDF::RDFA::PARSER for an example.

           •   microformats - support "<ul class="xoxo">", "<ol class="xoxo">" and "<whatever
               class="figure">" as sectioning elements (like "<section>", "<figure>", etc).
               Boolean, defaults to false.

           •   parser - 'html' (default) or 'xml' - choose the parser to use for XHTML/HTML. If
               the constructor is passed an XML::LibXML::Document, this is ignored.

           •   suppress_collections - allows rdf:List stuff to be suppressed from RDF output. RDF
               output - especially in Turtle format - looks somewhat nicer without them, but if
               you care about the order of headings and sections, then you'll want them. Boolean,
               defaults to false.

           •   uri - the document URI for resolving relative URI references.  Only really used by
               the RDF output.

   Object Methods
       •   "to_hashref"

           Returns data as a nested hashref/arrayref structure. Dump it as JSON and you'll figure
           out the format pretty easily.

       •   "to_rdf"

           Returns data as a n RDF::Trine::Model. Requires RDF::Trine to be installed. Otherwise
           this method won't exist.

       •   "primary_outlinee"

           Returns a HTML::HTML5::Outline::Outlinee element representing the outline for the
           page.

   Class Methods
       •   "has_rdf"

           Indicates whether the "to_rdf" object method exists.

USE WITH RDF::RDFA::PARSER

       This module produces RDF data where many of the resources described are HTML elements.
       RDFa data typically does not, but RDF::RDFa::Parser does also support some extensions to
       RDFa which do (e.g. support for the "cite" and "role" attributes). It's useful to combine
       the RDF data from each, and RDF::RDFa::Parser 1.093 and upwards contains a few shims to
       make this possible.

       Without further ado...

               use HTML::HTML5::Outline;
               use RDF::RDFa::Parser 1.093;
               use RDF::TrineShortcuts;

               my $rdfa = RDF::RDFa::Parser->new(
                       $html_source,
                       $base_url,
                       RDF::RDFa::Parser::Config->new(
                               'html5', '1.1',
                               role_attr     => 1,
                               cite_attr     => 1,
                               longdesc_attr => 1,
                               ),
                       )->consume;

               my $outline = HTML::HTML5::Outline->new(
                       $rdfa->dom,
                       uri              => $rdfa->uri,
                       element_subjects => $rdfa->element_subjects,
                       );

               # Merging two graphs is pretty complicated in RDF::Trine
               # but a little easier with RDF::TrineShortcuts...
               my $combined = rdf_parse();
               rdf_parse($rdfa->graph,     model => $combined);
               rdf_parse($outline->to_rdf, model => $combined);

               my $NS = {
                       dc    => 'http://purl.org/dc/terms/',
                       o     => 'http://ontologi.es/outline#',
                       type  => 'http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/',
                       xs    => 'http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#',
                       xhv   => 'http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/vocab#',
                       };

               print rdf_string($combined => 'Turtle', namespaces => $NS);

SEE ALSO

       HTML::HTML5::Outline::RDF, HTML::HTML5::Outline::Outlinee, HTML::HTML5::Outline::Section.

       HTML::HTML5::Parser, HTML::HTML5::Sanity.

AUTHOR

       Toby Inkster, <tobyink@cpan.org>

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       This module is a fork of the document structure parser from Swignition
       <http://buzzword.org.uk/swignition/>.

       That in turn includes the following credits: thanks to Ryan King and Geoffrey Sneddon for
       pointing me towards [the HTML5] algorithm. I also used Geoffrey's python implementation as
       a crib sheet to help me figure out what was supposed to happen when the HTML5 spec was
       ambiguous.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE

       Copyright (C) 2008-2011 by Toby Inkster

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.