I have 5 html files and I have a search form that I would like to use to search for text in these html files .
<form>
<input type ='text' />
<input type ='submit' />
</form>
I have an idea of using xmlhttprequest to get the files
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open("GET", "file1.html", false);
xhr.send();
var guid = xhr.responseText;
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open("GET", "file2.html", false);
xhr.send();
var guid = xhr.responseText;
...
then search for text in these files but I don't know how to search in the files using javascript.
How to search the files after getting it using xmlhttprequest ? Or Is there is another way to do the search using javascript ?
I have 5 html files and I have a search form that I would like to use to search for text in these html files .
<form>
<input type ='text' />
<input type ='submit' />
</form>
I have an idea of using xmlhttprequest to get the files
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open("GET", "file1.html", false);
xhr.send();
var guid = xhr.responseText;
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open("GET", "file2.html", false);
xhr.send();
var guid = xhr.responseText;
...
then search for text in these files but I don't know how to search in the files using javascript.
How to search the files after getting it using xmlhttprequest ? Or Is there is another way to do the search using javascript ?
Share Improve this question asked Oct 18, 2017 at 18:02 tommytommy 451 gold badge1 silver badge2 bronze badges 2- 1 Regular expressions could work, or indexOf() ... but you need to wait for the request to finish before you try to process the content. Google XMLHttpeRequest events for more info on how to do that. – theGleep Commented Oct 18, 2017 at 18:06
- @theGleep , Please if you have an example or a resource to get what I want tell me – tommy Commented Oct 18, 2017 at 18:30
1 Answer
Reset to default 5I'd use the DOMParser
to make sure we're doing some "smart" searching. Let's say you are looking for texts about the word "viewport"; you don't want any HTML file that has the <meta>
tag "viewport" to return as a valid result, would you?
Step one is parsing the string to a Document instance:
const parseHTMLString = (() => {
const parser = new DOMParser();
return str => parser.parseFromString(str, "text/html");
})();
Put a valid HTML string in here, and you'll get a document in return that behaves just like window.document
! This means we can do all kinds of cool stuff like using querySelector
and properties like innerText
.
The next step is to define what we want to search. Here's an example that joins in a document's title and body text:
const getSearchStringForDoc = doc => {
return [ doc.title, doc.body.innerText ]
.map(str => str.toLowerCase().trim())
.join(" ");
};
Pass your parsed document to this function, and you'll get a plain string in return that features just content, without attributes, tag names and meta data.
Now, it's a matter of defining the right search method. Could be a RegExp based match, or just a (less fast) split
& includes
:
const stringMatchesQuery = (str, query) => {
return query
.toLowerCase()
.split(/\W+/)
.some(q => str.includes(q))
};
Chain those methods together and you got the conversion like:
String -> Document -> String -> Boolean
If you ever want to include more information in the search content, you just update the getSearchStringForDoc
function using the standardized API.
A running example (that's a bit messy and could do with some refactoring, but hopefully gets the point across):
const htmlString = (
`<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
<title>The title</title>
</head>
<body>
Some text about an interesting thing.
</body>
</html>`);
const parseHTMLString = (() => {
const parser = new DOMParser();
return str => parser.parseFromString(str, "text/html");
})();
const getSearchStringForDoc = doc => {
return [
doc.title,
doc.body.innerText
].map(str => str.trim())
.join(" ");
};
const stringMatchesQuery = (str, query) => {
str = str.toLowerCase();
query = query.toLowerCase();
return query
.split(/\W+/)
.some(q => str.includes(q))
};
const htmlStringMatchesQuery = (str, query) => {
const htmlDoc = parseHTMLString(str);
const htmlSearchString = getSearchStringForDoc(htmlDoc);
return stringMatchesQuery(htmlSearchString, query);
};
console.log("Match 'viewport':", htmlStringMatchesQuery(htmlString, "viewport"));
console.log("Match 'Interesting':", htmlStringMatchesQuery(htmlString, "Interesting"));