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HTML::WikiConverter::Dialects - How to add a dialect
=head1 SYNOPSIS
# In your dialect module:
package HTML::WikiConverter::MySlimWiki;
use base 'HTML::WikiConverter';
sub rules { {
b => { start => '**', end => '**' },
i => { start => '//', end => '//' },
strong => { alias => 'b' },
em => { alias => 'i' },
hr => { replace => "\n----\n" }
} }
# In a nearby piece of code:
package main;
use Test::More tests => 5;
my $wc = new HTML::WikiConverter(
dialect => 'MySlimWiki'
);
is( $wc->html2wiki( '<b>text</b>' ), '**text**', b );
is( $wc->html2wiki( '<i>text</i>' ), '//text//', i );
is( $wc->html2wiki( '<strong>text</strong>' ), '**text**', 'strong' );
is( $wc->html2wiki( '<em>text</em>' ), '//text//', 'em' );
is( $wc->html2wiki( '<hr/>' ), '----', 'hr' );
=head1 DESCRIPTION
L<HTML::WikiConverter> (or H::WC, for short) is an HTML to wiki
converter. It can convert HTML source into a variety of wiki markups,
called wiki "dialects". This manual describes how you to create your
own dialect to be plugged into HTML::WikiConverter.
=head1 DIALECTS
Each dialect has a separate dialect module containing rules for
converting HTML into wiki markup specific for that dialect. Currently,
all dialect modules are in the C<HTML::WikiConverter::> package space
and subclass HTML::WikiConverter. For example, the MediaWiki dialect
module is L<HTML::WikiConverter::MediaWiki>, while PhpWiki's is
L<HTML::WikiConverter::PhpWiki>. However, dialect modules need not be
in the C<HTML::WikiConverter::> package space; you may just as easily
use C<package MyWikiDialect;> and H::WC will Do The Right Thing.
From now on, I'll be using the terms "dialect" and "dialect module"
interchangeably.
=head2 Subclassing
To interface with H::WC, dialects need to subclass it. This is done
like so at the start of the dialect module:
package HTML::WikiConverter::MySlimWiki;
use base 'HTML::WikiConverter';
=head2 Conversion rules
Dialects guide H::WC's conversion process with a set of rules that
define how HTML elements are turned into their wiki counterparts.
Each rule corresponds to an HTML tag and there may be any number of
rules. Rules are specified in your dialect's C<rules()> method, which
returns a reference to a hash of rules. Each entry in the hash maps a
tag name to a set of subrules, as in:
$tag => \%subrules
where C<$tag> is the name of the HTML tag (e.g., C<"b">, C<"em">,
etc.) and C<%subrules> contains subrules that specify how that tag
will be converted when it is encountered in the HTML input.
=head3 Subrules
The following subrules are recognized:
start
end
preserve
attributes
empty
replace
alias
block
line_format
line_prefix
trim
=head3 A simple example
The following rules could be used for a dialect that uses
C<*asterisks*> for bold and C<_underscores_> for italic text:
sub rules {
b => { start => '*', end => '*' },
i => { start => '_', end => '_' },
}
=head3 Aliases
To add C<E<lt>strongE<gt>> and C<E<lt>emE<gt>> as aliases of C<E<lt>bE<gt>> and
C<E<lt>iE<gt>>, use the C<alias> subrule:
strong => { alias => 'b' },
em => { alias => 'i' },
(The C<alias> subrule cannot be used with any other subrule.)
=head3 Blocks
Many dialects separate paragraphs and other block-level elements
with a blank line. To indicate this, use the C<block> subrule:
p => { block => 1 },
(To better support nested block elements, if a block elements are
nested inside each other, blank lines are only added to the outermost
element.)
=head3 Line formatting
Many dialects require that the text of an element be contained on a
single line of text, or that it cannot contain any newlines,
etc. These options can be specified using the C<line_format> subrule,
which can be assigned the value C<"single">, C<"multi">, or
C<"blocks">.
If the element must be contained on a single line, then the
C<line_format> subrule should be C<"single">. If the element can span
multiple lines, but there can be no blank lines contained within, then
use C<"multi">. If blank lines (which delimit blocks) are allowed,
then use C<"blocks">. For example, paragraphs are specified like so in
the MediaWiki dialect:
p => { block => 1, line_format => 'multi', trim => 'both' },
=head3 Trimming whitespace
The C<trim> subrule specifies whether leading or trailing whitespace
(or both) should be stripped from the element. To strip leading
whitespace only, use C<"leading">; for trailing whitespace, use
C<"trailing">; for both, use the aptly named C<"both">; for neither
(the default), use C<"none">.
=head3 Line prefixes
Some elements require that each line be prefixed with a particular
string. This is specified with the C<line_prefix> subrule. For
example, preformatted text in MediaWiki is prefixed with a space:
pre => { block => 1, line_prefix => ' ' },
=head3 Replacement
In some cases, conversion from HTML to wiki markup is as simple as
string replacement. To replace a tag and its contents with a
particular string, use the C<replace> subrule. For example, in
PhpWiki, three percent signs, C<"%%%">, represents a line break,
C<E<lt>brE<gt>>, hence:
br => { replace => '%%%' },
(The C<replace> subrule cannot be used with any other subrule.)
=head3 Preserving HTML tags
Some dialects allow a subset of HTML in their markup. While H::WC
ignores unhandled HTML tags by default (i.e., if H::WC encounters a
tag that does not exist in a dialect's rule specification, then the
contents of the tag is simply passed through to the wiki markup), you
may specify that some be preserved using the C<preserve> subrule. For
example, to allow C<E<lt>fontE<gt>> tag in wiki markup:
font => { preserve => 1 },
Preserved tags may also specify a list of attributes that may also
passthrough from HTML to wiki markup. This is done with the
C<attributes> subrule:
font => { preserve => 1, attributes => [ qw/ style class / ] },
(The C<attributes> subrule can only be used if the C<preserve> subrule
is also present.)
Some HTML elements have no content (e.g., line breaks, images) and the
wiki dialect might require them to be preserved in a more
XHTML-friendly way. To indicate that a preserved tag should have no
content, use the C<empty> subrule. This will cause the element to be
replaced with C<"E<lt>tag /E<gt>"> and no end tag. For example,
MediaWiki handles line breaks like so:
br => {
preserve => 1,
attributes => [ qw/ id class title style clear / ],
empty => 1
},
This will convert, for example, C<"E<lt>br clear='both'E<gt>"> into
C<"E<lt>br clear='both' /E<gt>">. Without specifying the C<empty>
subrule, this would be converted into the (probably undesirable)
C<"E<lt>br clear='both'E<gt>E<lt>/brE<gt>">.
(The C<empty> subrule can only be used if the C<preserve> subrule is
also present.)
=head3 Rules that depend on attribute values
In some circumstances, you might want your dialect's conversion rules
to depend on the value of one or more attributes. This can be achieved
by producing rules in a conditional manner within C<rules()>. For
example:
sub rules {
my $self = shift;
my %rules = (
em => { start => "''", end => "''" },
strong => { start => "'''", end => "'''" },
);
$rules{i} = { preserve => 1 } if $self->preserve_italic;
$rules{b} = { preserve => 1 } if $self->preserve_bold;
return \%rules;
}
=head2 Dynamic subrules
Instead of simple strings, you may use coderefs as values for the
C<start>, C<end>, C<replace>, and C<line_prefix> subrules. If you do,
the code will be called when the subrule is applied, and will be
passed three arguments: the current H::WC object, the current
L<HTML::Element> node being operated on, and a reference to the hash
containing the dialect's subrules associated with elements of that
type.
For example, MoinMoin handles lists like so:
ul => { line_format => 'multi', block => 1, line_prefix => ' ' },
li => { start => \&_li_start, trim => 'leading' },
ol => { alias => 'ul' },
It then defines C<_li_start()>:
sub _li_start {
my( $self, $node, $subrules ) = @_;
my $bullet = '';
$bullet = '*' if $node->parent->tag eq 'ul';
$bullet = '1.' if $node->parent->tag eq 'ol';
return "\n$bullet ";
}
This prefixes every unordered list item with C<"*"> and every ordered
list item with C<"1.">, which MoinMoin requires. It also puts each
list item on its own line and places a space between the prefix and
the content of the list item.
=head2 Subrule validation
Certain subrule combinations are not allowed. Hopefully it's intuitive
why this is, but in case it's not, prohibited combinations have been
mentioned above parenthetically. For example, the C<replace> and
C<alias> subrules cannot be combined with any other subrules, and
C<attributes> can only be specified alongside C<preserve>. Invalid
subrule combinations will trigger a fatal error when the H::WC object
is instantiated.
=head2 Dialect attributes
H::WC's constructor accepts a number of attributes that help determine
how conversion takes place. Dialects can alter these attributes or add
their own by defining an C<attributes()> method, which returns a
reference to a hash of attributes. Each entry in the hash maps the
attribute's name to an attribute specification, as in:
$attr => \%spec
where C<$attr> is the name of the attribute and C<%spec> is a
L<Params::Validate> specification for the attribute.
For example, to add a boolean attribute called C<camel_case> which is
disabled by default:
sub attributes {
camel_case => { default => 0 },
}
Attributes defined liks this are given accessor and mutator methods
via Perl's C<AUTOLOAD> mechanism, so you can later say:
my $ok = $wc->camel_case;
$wc->camel_case(0);
You may override the default H::WC attributes using this
mechanism. For example, while H::WC considers the C<base_uri>
attribute optional, it is required for the PbWiki dialect. PbWiki can
override this default-optional behavior by saying:
sub attributes {
base_uri => { optional => 0 }
}
=head2 Preprocessing
The first step H::WC takes in converting HTML source to wiki markup is
to parse the HTML into a syntax tree using L<HTML::TreeBuilder>. It is
often useful for dialects to preprocess the tree prior to converting
it into wiki markup. Dialects that need to preprocess the tree can
define a C<preprocess_node> method that will be called on each node of
the tree (traversal is done in pre-order). The method receives two
arguments, the H::WC object, and the current L<HTML::Element> node
being traversed. It may modify the node or decide to ignore it; its
return value is discarded.
=head3 Built-in preprocessors
Because they are commonly needed, H::WC automatically carries out two
preprocessing steps, regardless of the dialect: 1) relative URIs in
images and links are converted to absolute URIs (based upon the
C<base_uri> parameter), and 2) ignorable text (e.g. between a
C<E<lt>/tdE<gt>> and C<E<lt>tdE<gt>>) is discarded.
H::WC also provides additional preprocessing steps
that may be explicitly enabled by dialect modules.
=over
=item strip_aname
Removes any anchor elements that do not contain an C<href> attribute.
=item caption2para
Removes table captions and reinserts them as paragraphs before the
table.
=back
Dialects may apply these optional preprocessing steps by calling them
as methods on the dialect object inside C<preprocess_node>. For
example:
sub preprocess_node {
my( $self, $node ) = @_;
$self->strip_aname($node);
$self->caption2para($node);
}
=head2 Postprocessing
Once the work of converting HTML is complete, it is sometimes useful
to postprocess the resulting wiki markup. Postprocessing can be used
to clean up whitespace, fix subtle bugs introduced in the markup
during conversion, etc.
Dialects that want to postprocess the wiki markup should define a
C<postprocess_output> method that will be called just before the
C<html2wiki> method returns to the client. The method will be passed
two arguments, the H::WC object and a reference to the wiki
markup. The method may modify the wiki markup that the reference
points to; its return value is discarded.
For example, to replace a series of line breaks with a pair of
newlines, a dialect might implement this:
sub postprocess_output {
my( $self, $outref ) = @_;
$$outref =~ s/<br>\s*<br>/\n\n/gs;
}
(This example assumes that HTML line breaks were replaced with
C<E<lt>brE<gt>> in the wiki markup.)
=head2 Dialect utility methods
H::WC defines a set of utility methods that dialect modules may find
useful.
=head3 get_elem_contents
my $wiki = $wc->get_elem_contents( $node );
Converts the contents of C<$node> into wiki markup and returns the
resulting wiki markup.
=head3 get_wiki_page
my $title = $wc->get_wiki_page( $url );
Attempts to extract the title of a wiki page from the given URL,
returning the title on success, C<undef> on failure. If C<wiki_uri> is
empty, this method always return C<undef>. See
L<HTML::WikiConverter/ATTRIBUTES> for details on how the C<wiki_uri>
attribute is interpreted.
=head3 is_camel_case
my $ok = $wc->is_camel_case( $str );
Returns true if C<$str> is in CamelCase, false
otherwise. CamelCase-ness is determined using the same rules that
L<Kwiki>'s formatting module uses.
=head3 get_attr_str
my $attr_str = $wc->get_attr_str( $node, @attrs );
Returns a string containing the specified attributes in the given
node. The returned string is suitable for insertion into an HTML tag.
For example, if C<$node> contains the HTML
<style id="ht" class="head" onclick="editPage()">Header</span>
and C<@attrs> contains C<"id"> and C<"class">, then C<get_attr_str()>
will return C<'id="ht" class="head"'>.
=head3 _attr
my $value = $wc->_attr( $name );
Returns the value of the named attribute. This is rarely needed since
you can access attribute values by treating the attribute name as a
method (i.e., C<$wc-E<gt>$name>). This low-level method of accessing
attributes is provided for when you need to override an attribute's
accessor/mutator method, as in:
sub attributes { {
my_attr => { default => 1 },
} }
sub my_attr {
my( $wc, $name, $new_value ) = @_;
# do something special
return $wc->_attr( $name => $new_value );
}
=head1 AUTHOR
David J. Iberri <diberri@cpan.org>
=head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2006 David J. Iberri, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
=cut
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