This module contains several data tables useful in various kinds of
HTML parsing operations.
Note that all tag names used are lowercase.
In the following documentation, a ``hashset'' is a hash being used as a
set -- the hash conveys that its keys are there, and the actual values
associated with the keys are not significant. (But what values are
there, are always true.)
This hashset has as values the tag-names (GIs) of elements that cannot
have content. (For example, ``base'', ``br'', ``hr''.) So
$HTML::Tagset::emptyElement{'hr'} exists and is true.
$HTML::Tagset::emptyElement{'dl'} does not exist, and so is not true.
This hashset lists tag-names for elements that can have content, but whose
end-tags are generally, ``safely'', omissible. Example:
$HTML::Tagset::emptyElement{'li'} exists and is true.
Values in this hash are tagnames for elements that might contain
links, and the value for each is a reference to an array of the names
of attributes whose values can be links.
This hash (not hashset) lists what attributes of what elements can be
printed without showing the value (for example, the ``noshade'' attribute
of ``hr'' elements). For elements with only one such attribute, its value
is simply that attribute name. For elements with many such attributes,
the value is a reference to a hashset containing all such attributes.
This array has a meaning that I have only seen a need for in
HTML::TreeBuilder, but I include it here on the off chance that someone
might find it of use:
When we see a ``<p>'' token, we go lookup up the lineage for a p
element we might have to minimize. At first sight, we might say that if there's a p anywhere in the lineage of this new p, it should be
closed. But that's wrong. Consider this document:
You may find it useful to alter the behavior of modules (like
HTML::Element or HTML::TreeBuilder) that use HTML::Tagset's
data tables by altering the data tables themselves. You are welcome
to try, but be careful; and be aware that different modules may or may
react differently to the data tables being changed.
Note that it may be inappropriate to use these tables for producing
HTML -- for example, %isHeadOrBodyElement lists the tagnames
for all elements that can appear either in the head or in the body,
such as ``script''. That doesn't mean that I am saying your code that
produces HTML should feel free to put script elements in either place!
If you are producing programs that spit out HTML, you should be
intimately familiar with the DTDs for HTML or XHTML (available at
http://www.w3.org/), and you should slavishly obey them, not
the data tables in this document.
Most of the code/data in this module was adapted from code written
by Gisle Aas for HTML::Element, HTML::TreeBuilder, and
HTML::LinkExtor. Then it was maintained by Sean M. Burke.
Please report any bugs or feature requests to
bug-html-tagset at rt.cpan.org, or through the web interface at
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html. I will
be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on
your bug as I make changes.