String
class, which I know, does not help much .
String
class, which I know, does not help much .
Using the Jsoup library is very simple.
documentation gives the following example:
File input = new File("/tmp/input.html");
Document doc = Jsoup.parse(input, "UTF-8", "http://example.com/");
Elements links = doc.select("a[href]"); // a with href
The third argument of the parse
method with the http://example.com/
value is to set a base URL to resolve relative URLs.
From this example you can use any selector to search through the links.
There is also another more complete example that returns various types of URLs found on the page, including scripts, styles and images:
public class ListLinks {
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
Validate.isTrue(args.length == 1, "usage: supply url to fetch");
String url = args[0];
print("Fetching %s...", url);
Document doc = Jsoup.connect(url).get();
Elements links = doc.select("a[href]");
Elements media = doc.select("[src]");
Elements imports = doc.select("link[href]");
print("\nMedia: (%d)", media.size());
for (Element src : media) {
if (src.tagName().equals("img"))
print(" * %s: <%s> %sx%s (%s)",
src.tagName(), src.attr("abs:src"), src.attr("width"), src.attr("height"),
trim(src.attr("alt"), 20));
else
print(" * %s: <%s>", src.tagName(), src.attr("abs:src"));
}
print("\nImports: (%d)", imports.size());
for (Element link : imports) {
print(" * %s <%s> (%s)", link.tagName(),link.attr("abs:href"), link.attr("rel"));
}
print("\nLinks: (%d)", links.size());
for (Element link : links) {
print(" * a: <%s> (%s)", link.attr("abs:href"), trim(link.text(), 35));
}
}
private static void print(String msg, Object... args) {
System.out.println(String.format(msg, args));
}
private static String trim(String s, int width) {
if (s.length() > width)
return s.substring(0, width-1) + ".";
else
return s;
}
}