I am creating an iOS app that needs to get some data from a web page. My first though was to use NSXMLParser initWithContentsOfURL:
and parse the HTML with the NSXMLParser
delegate. However this approach seems like it could quickly become painful (if, for example, the HTML changed I would have to rewrite the parsing code which could be awkward).
Seeing as I'm loading a web page I took take a look at UIWebView
too. It looks like UIWebView
may be the way to go. stringByEvaluatingJavaScriptFromString:
seems like a very handy way to extract the data and would allow the javascript to be stored in a separate file that would be easy to edit if the HTML changed. However, using UIWebView
seems a bit hacky (seeing as UIWebView
is a UIView
subclass it may block the main thread, and the docs say that the javascript has a limit of 10MB).
Does anyone have any advice regarding parsing XML/HTML before I get stuck in?
UPDATE:
I wrote a blog post about my solution:HTML parsing/screen scraping in iOS
Parsing HTML with an XML parser usually does not work anyway because many sites have incorrect HTML, which a web browser will deal with, but a strict XML parser like
NSXMLParser
will totally fail on.For many scripting languages there are great scraping libraries that are more merciful. Like Python's Beautiful Soup module. Unfortunately I do not know of such modules for Objective-C.
Loading stuff into a
UIWebView
might be the simplest way to go here. Note that you do not have to put theUIWebView
on screen. You can create a separateUIWindow
and add theUIWebView
to it, so that you do full off-screen rendering. There was a WWDC2009 video about this I think. As you already mention, it will not be lightweight though.Depending on the data that you want and the complexity of the pages that you need to parse, you might also be able to parse it by using regular expressions or even a hand written parser. I have done this many times, and for simple data this works well.
I've done this a few times. The best approach I've found is to use libxml2 which has a mode for HTML. Then you can use XPath to query the document.
Working with the libxml2 API is not the most enjoyable. So, I usually bring over the XPathQuery.h/.m files documented on this page:
http://cocoawithlove.com/2008/10/using-libxml2-for-parsing-and-xpath.html
Then I fetch the data using a NSConnection and query the data with something like this:
Summary:
Add libxml2 to your project, here are some quick instructions for XCode4: http://cmar.me/2011/04/20/adding-libxml2-to-an-xcode-4-project/
Get the XPathQuery.h/.m
Use an XPath statement to query the html document.