HTML::Form - Class that represents an HTML form element |
HTML::Form - Class that represents an HTML form element
use HTML::Form; $form = HTML::Form->parse($html, $base_uri); $form->value(query => "Perl");
use LWP::UserAgent; $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new; $response = $ua->request($form->click);
Objects of the HTML::Form
class represents a single HTML
<form> ... </form>
instance. A form consists of a
sequence of inputs that usually have names, and which can take on
various values. The state of a form can be tweaked and it can then be
asked to provide HTTP::Request
objects that can be passed to the
request()
method of LWP::UserAgent
.
The following methods are available:
parse()
class method will parse an HTML document and build up
HTML::Form
objects for each <form> element found. If called in scalar
context only returns the first <form>. Returns an empty list if there
are no forms to be found.
The $base_uri is the URI used to retrieve the $html_document. It is
needed to resolve relative action URIs. If the document was retrieved
with LWP then this this parameter is obtained from the
$response->base()
method, as shown by the following example:
my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new; my $response = $ua->get("http://www.example.com/form.html"); my @forms = HTML::Form->parse($response->decoded_content, $response->base);
The parse()
method can parse from an HTTP::Response
object
directly, so the example above can be more conveniently written as:
my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new; my $response = $ua->get("http://www.example.com/form.html"); my @forms = HTML::Form->parse($response);
Note that any object that implements a decoded_content()
and base()
method
with similar behaviour as HTTP::Response
will do.
HTTP::Request
generated. It is a string like ``GET'' or ``POST''.
Example:
@f = HTML::Form->parse( $html, $foo ); @f = grep $_->attr("id") eq "foo", @f; die "No form named 'foo' found" unless @f; $foo = shift @f;
undef
if none match.
If $name is specified, then the input must have the indicated name.
If $type is specified, then the input must have the specified type. The following type names are used: ``text'', ``password'', ``hidden'', ``textarea'', ``file'', ``image'', ``submit'', ``radio'', ``checkbox'' and ``option''.
The $index is the sequence number of the input matched where 1 is the first. If combined with $name and/or $type then it select the nth input with the given name and/or type.
value()
method can be used to get/set the value of some input. If
no input has the indicated name, then this method will croak.
If multiple inputs have the same name, only the first one will be affected.
The call:
$form->value('foo')
is a short-hand for:
$form->find_input('foo')->value;
If called without arguments then it returns the names of all the inputs in the form. The names will not repeat even if multiple inputs have the same name. In scalar context the number of different names is returned.
If called with a single argument then it returns the value or values
of inputs with the given name. If called in scalar context only the
first value is returned. If no input exists with the given name, then
undef
is returned.
If called with 2 or more arguments then it will set values of the named inputs. This form will croak if no inputs have the given name or if any of the values provided does not fit. Values can also be provided as a reference to an array. This form will allow unsetting all values with the given name as well.
This interface resembles that of the param()
function of the CGI
module.
try_others()
method itself does
not return anything.
HTTP::Request
object that reflects the current setting
of the form. You might want to use the click()
method instead.
submit
or image
). The result of clicking is an HTTP::Request
object that can then be passed to LWP::UserAgent
if you want to
obtain the server response.
If a $name is specified, we will click on the first clickable input
with the given name, and the method will croak if no clickable input
with the given name is found. If $name is not specified, then it
is ok if the form contains no clickable inputs. In this case the
click()
method returns the same request as the make_request()
method
would do.
If there are multiple clickable inputs with the same name, then there
is no way to get the click()
method of the HTML::Form
to click on
any but the first. If you need this you would have to locate the
input with find_input()
and invoke the click()
method on the given
input yourself.
A click coordinate pair can also be provided, but this only makes a difference if you clicked on an image. The default coordinate is (1,1). The upper-left corner of the image is (0,0), but some badly coded CGI scripts are known to not recognize this. Therefore (1,1) was selected as a safer default.
In scalar context this method returns the number of key/value pairs generated.
An HTML::Form
objects contains a sequence of inputs. References to
the inputs can be obtained with the $form->inputs or $form->find_input
methods.
Note that there is not a one-to-one correspondence between input objects and <input> elements in the HTML document. An input object basically represents a name/value pair, so when multiple HTML elements contribute to the same name/value pair in the submitted form they are combined.
The input elements that are mapped one-to-one are ``text'', ``textarea'',
``password'', ``hidden'', ``file'', ``image'', ``submit'' and ``checkbox''. For
the ``radio'' and ``option'' inputs the story is not as simple: All
<input type=``radio''> elements with the same name will
contribute to the same input radio object. The number of radio input
objects will be the same as the number of distinct names used for the
<input type=``radio''> elements. For a <select> element
without the multiple
attribute there will be one input object of
type of ``option''. For a <select multiple> element there will
be one input object for each contained <option> element. Each
one of these option objects will have the same name.
The following methods are available for the input objects:
If the input only can take an enumerated list of values, then it is an error to try to set it to something else and the method will croak if you try.
You will also be able to set the value of read-only inputs, but a
warning will be generated if running under perl -w
.
When setting values using the value()
method it is also possible to
use the value names in place of the value itself.
This has the same effect as:
$input->value($input->possible_values[1]);
The input can be turned off with:
$input->value(undef);
click()
method returns the
corresponding HTTP::Request
object.
If the input is of type file
, then it has these additional methods:
value()
method. It sets the filename to
read data from.
file()
method.
Content-Type
reported for
the file.
the LWP manpage, the LWP::UserAgent manpage, the HTML::Parser manpage
Copyright 1998-2003 Gisle Aas.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
HTML::Form - Class that represents an HTML form element |