NAME Parse::BBCode - Module to turn BBCode into HTML or plain text SYNOPSIS To parse a bbcode string: use Parse::BBCode; my $p = Parse::BBCode->new(); my $code = 'some [b]b code[/b]'; my $parsed = $p->render($code); This sets up a parser with the default HTML defintions of Parse::BBCode::HTML. # or if you want to define your own tags: my $p = Parse::BBCode->new({ tags => { url => '%{parse}s', i => '%{parse}s', b => '%{parse}s', noparse => '
%{html}s',
code => sub {
my ($parser, $attr, $content, $attribute_fallback) = @_;
if ($attr eq 'perl') {
# use some syntax highlighter
$content = highlight_perl($content);
}
else {
$content = Parse::BBCode::escape_html($content);
}
"$content"
},
test => 'this is klingon: %{klingon}s',
},
escapes => {
klingon => sub {
my ($parser, $tag, $text) = @_;
return translate_into_klingon($text);
},
},
}
);
my $code = 'some [b]b code[/b]';
my $parsed = $p->render($code);
DESCRIPTION
Note: This module is still experimental, the syntax is subject to
change. I'm open for any suggestions on how to improve the syntax.
I wrote this module because HTML::BBCode is not extendable (or I didn't
see how) and BBCode::Parser seemed good at the first glance but has some
issues, for example it says that he following bbode
[code] foo [b] [/code]
is invalid, while I think you should be able to write unbalanced code in
code tags. Also BBCode::Parser dies if you have invalid code or
not-permitted tags, but in a forum you'd rather show a partly parsed
text then an error message.
What I also wanted is an easy syntax to define own tags, ideally - for
simple tags - as plain text, so you can put it in a configuration file.
This allows forum admins to add tags easily. Some forums might want a
tag for linking to perlmonks.org, other forums need other tags.
Another goal was to always output a result and don't die. I might add an
option which lets the parser die with unbalanced code.
METHODS
new Constructor. Takes a hash reference with options as an argument.
my $parser = Parse::BBCode->new({
tags => {
url => ...,
i => ...,
},
escapes => {
link => ...,
},
close_open_tags => 1, # default 0
strict_attributes => 0, # default 0
);
tags
See "TAG DEFINITIONS"
escapes
See "ESCAPES"
close_open_tags
If set to true (1), it will close open tags at the end or before
block tags.
strict_attributes
If set to true (1), tags with invalid attributes are left
unparsed. If set to false (0), the attribute for this tags will
be empty.
An invalid attribute:
[foo=bar far boo]...[/foo]
I might add an option to define your own attribute validation.
Contact me if you'd like to have this.
render
Input: The text to parse
Returns: the rendered text
my $parsed = $parser->render($bbcode);
parse
Input: The text to parse.
Returns: the parsed tree (a Parse::BBCode::Tag object)
my $tree = $parser->parse($bbcode);
render_tree
Input: the parse tree
Returns: The rendered text
my $parsed = $parser->render_tree($tree);
forbid
$parser->forbid(qw/ img url /);
Disables the given tags.
permit
$parser->permit(qw/ img url /);
Enables the given tags if they are in the tag definitions.
escape_html
Utility to substitute
<>&"'
with their HTML entities.
my $escaped = Parse::BBCode::escape_html($text);
error
If the given bbcode is invalid (unbalanced or wrongly nested
classes), currently Parse::BBCode::render() will either leave the
invalid tags unparsed, or, if you set the option "close_open_tags",
try to add closing tags. If this happened "error()" will return the
invalid tag(s), otherwise false. To get the corrected bbcode (if you
set "close_open_tags") you can get the tree and return the raw text
from it:
if ($parser->error) {
my $tree = $parser->get_tree;
my $corrected = $tree->raw_text;
}
TAG DEFINITIONS
Here is an example of all the current definition possibilities:
my $p = Parse::BBCode->new({
tags => {
'' => sub {
my $e = Parse::BBCode::escape_html($_[1]);
$e =~ s/\r?\n|\r/%{html}s',
quote => 'block:%s', code => { code => sub { my ($parser, $attr, $content, $attribute_fallback) = @_; if ($attr eq 'perl') { # use some syntax highlighter $content = highlight_perl($content); } else { $content = Parse::BBCode::escape_html($content); } "$content" }, parse => 0, class => 'block', }, }, } ); The following list explains the above tag definitions: Plain text not in tags This defines how plain text should be rendered: '' => sub { my $e = Parse::BBCode::escape_html($_[1]); $e =~ s/\r?\n|\r/
%{html}s'
[noparse] [some]unbalanced[/foo] [/noparse]
With this definition the output would be
[some]unbalanced[/foo]So inside a noparse tag you can write (almost) any invalid bbcode. The only exception is the noparse tag itself: [noparse] [some]unbalanced[/foo] [/noparse] [b]really bold[/b] [/noparse] Output: [some]unbalanced[/foo] really bold [/noparse] Because the noparse tag ends at the first closing tag, even if you have an additional opening noparse tag inside. The "%{html}s" defines that the content should be HTML escaped. If you don't want any escaping you can't say %s because the default is 'parse'. In this case you have to write "%{noescape}". Block tags quote => 'block:
%s', To force valid html you can add classes to tags. The default class is 'inline'. To declare it as a block add "'block:"" to the start of the string. Block tags inside of inline tags will either close the outer tag(s) or leave the outer tag(s) unparsed, depending on the option "close_open_tags". Define subroutine for tag All these definitions might not be enough if you want to define your own code, for example to add a syntax highlighter. Here's an example: code => { code => sub { my ($parser, $attr, $content, $attribute_fallback) = @_; if ($attr eq 'perl') { # use some syntax highlighter $content = highlight_perl($$content); } else { $content = Parse::BBCode::escape_html($$content); } "$content" }, parse => 0, class => 'block', }, So instead of a string you define a hash reference with a 'code' key and a sub reference. The other key is "parse" which is 0 by default. If it is 0 the content in the tag won't be parsed, just as in the noparse tag above. If it is set to 1 you will get the rendered content as an argument to the subroutine. The first argument to the subroutine is the Parse::BBCode object itself. The second argument is the attribute, the third the tag content as a scalar reference and the fourth argument is the attribute fallback which is set to the content if the attribute is empty. The fourth argument is just for convenience. ESCAPES my $p = Parse::BBCode->new( ... escapes => { link => sub { }, }, ); You can define or override escapes. Default escapes are html, uri, link, email, htmlcolor, num. An escape functions as a validator and filter. For example, the 'link' escape looks if it got a valid URI (starting with "/" or "\w+://") and html-escapes it. It returns the empty string if the input is invalid. See "default_escapes" in Parse::BBCode::HTML for the detailed list of escapes. TODO Add a bbcode-to-textile module. REQUIREMENTS perl >= 5.6.1, Class::Accessor::Fast, URI::Escape SEE ALSO BBCode::Parser, HTML::BBCode, HTML::BBReverse See "examples/compare.html" for a feature comparison of the modules and feel free to report mistakes. See "examples/bench.pl" for a benchmark of the modules. BUGS Please report bugs at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Parse-BBCode AUTHOR Tina Mueller CREDITS Thanks to Moritz Lenz for his suggestions about the implementation and the test cases. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright (C) 2008 by Tina Mueller This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.6.1 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.