parsoid-jsapi v0.0.1
Parsoid JSAPI
Usage of the JavaScript API
This file describes usage of Parsoid as a standalone wikitext parsing
package, in the spirit of mwparserfromhell. This is not the typical
use case for Parsoid; it is more often used as a network service.
See the HTTP API guide or Parsoid service on the wiki
for more details.
These examples will use the prfun library and ES6 generators in
order to fluently express asynchronous operations. The library also
exports vanilla Promises if you wish to maintain compatibility
with old versions of node at the cost of a little bit of readability.
Since many methods in the API return Promises, we've also provided
a Promise-aware REPL, that will wait for a promise to be resolved
before printing its value. This can be started from the
shell using:
node -e 'require("parsoid-jsapi").repl()'Use "./" instead of "parsoid" if you are running this from a
checked-out repository. Code examples below which contain lines
starting with > show sessions using this REPL. (You may also
wish to look in tests/mocha/jsapi.js for examples using a more
traditional promise-chaining style.)
Use of Parsoid as a wikitext parser is straightforward (where text is
wikitext input):
#/usr/bin/node --harmony-generators
var Promise = require('prfun');
var Parsoid = require('parsoid-jsapi');
var main = Promise.async(function*() {
var text = "I love wikitext!";
var pdoc = yield Parsoid.parse(text, { pdoc: true });
console.log(pdoc.document.outerHTML);
});
// start me up!
main().done();As you can see, there is a little bit of boilerplate needed to get the
asynchronous machinery started. The body of the main() method can
be replaced with your code.
The pdoc variable above holds a PDoc object, which has
helpful methods to filter and manipulate the document. If you want
to access the raw Parsoid DOM, however, it is easily accessible
via the document property, as shown above,
and all normal DOM manipulation functions can be used on it (Parsoid uses
domino to implement these methods). Be sure to call
update() after any direct DOM manipulation.
PDoc is a subclass of PNodeList, which provides a number of
useful access and mutation methods -- and if you use these you won't need
to manually call update(). These provided methods can be quite useful.
For example:
> var text = "I has a template! {{foo|bar|baz|eggs=spam}} See it?\n";
> var pdoc = yield Parsoid.parse(text, { pdoc: true });
> console.log(yield pdoc.toWikitext());
I has a template! {{foo|bar|baz|eggs=spam}} See it?
> var templates = pdoc.filterTemplates();
> console.log(yield Promise.map(templates, Parsoid.toWikitext));
[ '{{foo|bar|baz|eggs=spam}}' ]
> var template = templates[0];
> console.log(template.name);
foo
> template.name = 'notfoo';
> console.log(yield template.toWikitext());
{{notfoo|bar|baz|eggs=spam}}
> console.log(template.params.map(function(p) { return p.name; }));
[ '1', '2', 'eggs' ]
> console.log(yield template.get(1).value.toWikitext());
bar
> console.log(yield template.get("eggs").value.toWikitext());
spamGetting nested templates is trivial:
> var text = "{{foo|bar={{baz|{{spam}}}}}}";
> var pdoc = yield Parsoid.parse(text, { pdoc: true });
> console.log(yield Promise.map(pdoc.filterTemplates(), Parsoid.toWikitext));
[ '{{foo|bar={{baz|{{spam}}}}}}',
'{{baz|{{spam}}}}',
'{{spam}}' ]You can also pass { recursive: false } to
filterTemplates() and explore
templates manually. This is possible because the
get method on a
PTemplate object returns an object containing further PNodeLists:
> var text = "{{foo|this {{includes a|template}}}}";
> var pdoc = yield Parsoid.parse(text, { pdoc: true });
> var templates = pdoc.filterTemplates({ recursive: false });
> console.log(yield Promise.map(templates, Parsoid.toWikitext));
[ '{{foo|this {{includes a|template}}}}' ]
> var foo = templates[0];
> console.log(yield foo.get(1).value.toWikitext());
this {{includes a|template}}
> var more = foo.get(1).value.filterTemplates();
> console.log(yield Promise.map(more, Parsoid.toWikitext));
[ '{{includes a|template}}' ]
> console.log(yield more[0].get(1).value.toWikitext());
templateTemplates can be easily modified to add, remove, or alter params.
Templates also have a nameMatches()
method for comparing template names, which takes care of capitalization and
white space:
> var text = "{{cleanup}} '''Foo''' is a [[bar]]. {{uncategorized}}";
> var pdoc = yield Parsoid.parse(text, { pdoc: true });
> pdoc.filterTemplates().forEach(function(template) {
... if (template.nameMatches('Cleanup') && !template.has('date')) {
... template.add('date', 'July 2012');
... }
... if (template.nameMatches('uncategorized')) {
... template.name = 'bar-stub';
... }
... });
> console.log(yield pdoc.toWikitext());
{{cleanup|date = July 2012}} '''Foo''' is a [[bar]]. {{bar-stub}}At any time you can convert the pdoc into HTML conforming to the
MediaWiki DOM spec (by referencing the
document property) or into wikitext (by
invoking toWikitext(), which
returns a Promise for the wikitext string). This allows you
to save the page using either standard API methods or the RESTBase API
(once T101501 is resolved).
For more tips, check out PNodeList's full method list and the list of PNode subclasses.
License
Copyright (c) 2011-2015 Wikimedia Foundation and others.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
9 years ago