NAME¶
HTML::Truncate - (beta software) truncate HTML by percentage or character count
while preserving well-formedness.
VERSION¶
0.20
ABSTRACT¶
When working with text it is common to want to truncate strings to make them fit
a desired context. E.g., you might have a menu that is only 100px wide and
prefer text doesn't wrap so you'd truncate it around 15-30 characters,
depending on preference and typeface size. This is trivial with plain text
using substr but with HTML it is somewhat difficult because whitespace has
fluid significance and open tags that are not properly closed destroy
well-formedness and can wreck an entire layout.
HTML::Truncate attempts to account for those two problems by padding truncation
for spacing and entities and closing any tags that remain open at the point of
truncation.
SYNOPSIS¶
use strict;
use HTML::Truncate;
my $html = '<p><i>We</i> have to test <b>something</b>.</p>';
my $readmore = '... <a href="/full-article">[readmore]</a>';
my $html_truncate = HTML::Truncate->new();
$html_truncate->chars(20);
$html_truncate->ellipsis($readmore);
print $html_truncate->truncate($html);
# or
use Encode;
my $ht = HTML::Truncate->new( utf8_mode => 1,
chars => 1_000,
);
print Encode::encode_utf8( $ht->truncate($html) );
XHTML¶
This module is designed to work with XHTML-style nested tags. More below.
WHITESPACE AND ENTITIES¶
Repeated natural whitespace (i.e., "\s+" and not "
") in HTML -- with rare exception (pre tags or user defined styles) -- is
not meaningful. Therefore it is normalized when truncating. Entities are also
normalized. The following is only counted 14 chars long.
\n<p>\nthis is ‘text’\n\n</p>
^^^^^^^12345----678--9------01234------^^^^^^^^
METHODS¶
- new
- Can take all the methods as hash style args. "percent" and
"chars" are incompatible so don't use them both. Whichever is
set most recently will erase the other.
my $ht = HTML::Truncate->new(utf8_mode => 1,
chars => 500, # default is 100
);
- utf8_mode
- Set/get, true/false. If "utf8_mode" is set, utf8_mode(1) is also
set in the underlying HTML::Parser, entities will be transformed with
decode and the default ellipsis will be a literal ellipsis and not the
default of "…".
- chars
- Set/get. The number of characters remaining after truncation,
excluding the "ellipsis".
Entities are counted as single characters. E.g., "©" is
one character for truncation counts.
Default is "100." Side-effect: clears any "percent" that
has been set.
- percent
- Set/get. A percentage to keep while truncating the rest. For a document of
1,000 chars, percent('15%') and chars(150) would be equivalent. The actual
amount of character that the percent represents cannot be known until the
given HTML is parsed.
Side-effect: clears any "chars" that has been set.
- ellipsis
- Set/get. Ellipsis in this case means --
The omission of a word or phrase necessary for a complete
syntactical construction but not necessary for understanding.
http://www.answers.com/topic/ellipsis
What it will probably mean in most real applications is "read
more." The default is "…" which if the utf8 flag
is true will render as a literal ellipsis, "chr(8230)".
The reason the default is "…" and not "..." is
this is meant for use in HTML environments, not plain text, and
"..." (dot-dot-dot) is not typographically correct or equivalent
to a real horizontal ellipsis character.
- truncate
- It returns the truncated XHTML if asked for a return value.
my $truncated = $ht->truncate($html);
It will truncate the string in place if no return value is expected
(wantarray is not defined).
$ht->truncate($html);
print $html;
Also can be called with inline arguments-
print $ht->truncate( $html,
$chars_or_percent,
$ellipsis );
No arguments are strictly required. Without HTML to operate upon it returns
undef. The two optional arguments may be preset with the methods
"chars" (or "percent") and "ellipsis".
Valid nesting of tags is required (alla XHTML). Therefore some old HTML
habits like <p> without a </p> are not supported and may cause
a fatal error. See "repair" for help with badly formed HTML.
Certain tags are omitted by default from the truncated output.
- •
- Skipped tags
These will not be included in truncated output by default.
<head>...</head> <script>...</script> <form>...</form>
<iframe></iframe> <title>...</title> <style>...</style>
<base/> <link/> <meta/>
- •
- Tags allowed to self-close
See emptyElement in HTML::Tagset.
- add_skip_tags( qw( tag list ) )
- Put one or more new tags into the list of those to be omitted from
truncated output. An example of when you might like to use this is if
you're thumb-nailing articles and they start with
"<h1>title</h1>" or such before the article body.
The heading level would be absurd with a list of excerpts so you could
drop it completely this way--
$ht->add_skip_tags( 'h1' );
- dont_skip_tags( qw( tag list ) )
- Takes tags out of the current list to be omitted from truncated
output.
- repair
- Set/get, true/false. If true, will attempt to repair unclosed HTML tags by
adding close-tags as late as possible (eg.
"<i><b>foobar</i>" becomes
"<i><b>foobar</b></i>"). Unmatched close
tags are dropped ("foobar</b>" becomes
"foobar").
- on_space
- This will make the truncation back up to the first space it finds so it
doesn't truncate in the the middle of a word. "on_space" runs
before "cleanly" if both are set.
- cleanly
- Set/get -- a regular expression. This is on by default and the default
cleaning regular expression is "cleanly(qr/[\s[:punct:]]+\z/)".
It will make the truncation strip any trailing spacing and punctuation so
you don't get things like "The End...." or "What? ..."
You can cancel it with "$ht->cleanly(undef)" or provide your
own regular expression.
COOKBOOK (well, a recipe)¶
For excerpting HTML in your Templates. Note the "add_skip_tags" which
is set to drop any images from the truncated output.
use Template;
use HTML::Truncate;
my %config =
(
FILTERS => {
truncate_html => [ \&truncate_html_filter_factory, 1 ],
},
);
my $tt = Template->new(\%config) or die $Template::ERROR;
# ... etc ...
sub truncate_html_filter_factory {
my ( $context, $len, $ellipsis ) = @_;
$len = 32 unless $len;
$ellipsis = chr(8230) unless defined $ellipsis;
my $ht = HTML::Truncate->new();
$ht->add_skip_tags(qw( img ));
return sub {
my $html = shift || return '';
return $ht->truncate( $html, $len, $ellipsis );
}
}
Then in your templates you can do things like this:
[% FOR item IN search_results %]
<div class="searchResult">
<a href="[% item.uri %]">[% item.title %]</a><br />
[% item.body | truncate_html(200) %]
</div>
[% END %]
See also Template::Filters.
AUTHOR¶
Ashley Pond V, "<ashley@cpan.org>".
LIMITATIONS¶
There may be places where this will break down right now. I'll pad out possible
edge cases as I find them or they are sent to me via the CPAN bug ticket
system.
This is not an HTML filter¶
Although this happens to do some crude HTML filtering to achieve its end, it is
not a fully featured filter. If you are looking for one, check out
HTML::Scrubber and HTML::Sanitizer.
BUGS, FEEDBACK, PATCHES¶
Please report any bugs or feature requests to
"bug-html-truncate@rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
<
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=HTML-Truncate>. I will
get the ticket, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress as I
make changes.
TO DO¶
Write a couple more tests (percent and skip stuff) then take out beta notice.
Try to make the 5.6 stuff work without decode...? Try a "drop_tags"
method?
Write an XML::LibXML based version to load when possible...? Or make that part
of XHTML::Util?
THANKS TO¶
Kevin Riggle for the "repair" functionality; patch, Pod, and tests.
Lorenzo Iannuzzi for the "on_space" functionality.
SEE ALSO¶
HTML::Entities, HTML::TokeParser, the "truncate" filter in Template,
and Text::Truncate.
HTML::Scrubber and HTML::Sanitizer.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE¶
Copyright (X) 2005-2009 Ashley Pond V.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it or modify it or both
under the same terms as Perl itself.
DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY¶
Because this software is licensed free of charge, there is no warranty for the
software, to the extent permitted by applicable law. Except when otherwise
stated in writing the copyright holders or other parties provide the software
"as is" without warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied,
including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and
fitness for a particular purpose. The entire risk as to the quality and
performance of the software is with you. Should the software prove defective,
you assume the cost of all necessary servicing, repair, or correction.
In no event unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing will any
copyright holder, or any other party who may modify and/or redistribute the
software as permitted by the above licence, be liable to you for damages,
including any general, special, incidental, or consequential damages arising
out of the use or inability to use the software (including but not limited to
loss of data or data being rendered inaccurate or losses sustained by you or
third parties or a failure of the software to operate with any other
software), even if such holder or other party has been advised of the
possibility of such damages.