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Entwicklerinformationen
|  |  | libcss-parser-pp0 | simple CSS1 parser library for C++ | Mehr ... |  
| htmlcxx is a simple non-validating CSS1 and HTML parser for C++. Although there are several other html parsers available, htmlcxx has some
 characteristics that make it unique:
 .
 * STL like navigation of DOM tree, using excellent tree.hh library from
 Kasper Peeters
 * It is possible to reproduce exactly, character by character, the original
 document from the parse tree
 * Bundled CSS parser
 * Optional parsing of attributes
 * C++ code that looks like C++ (not so true anymore)
 * Offsets of tags/elements in the original document are stored in the nodes
 of the DOM tree
 .
 The parsing politics of htmlcxx were created trying to mimic Mozilla Firefox
 (http://www.mozilla.org) behavior. So you should expect parse trees similar to
 those create by Firefox. However, differently from Firefox, htmlcxx does not
 insert non-existent stuff in your html. Therefore, serializing the DOM tree
 gives exactly the same bytes contained in the original HTML document.
 .
 This package contains the C++ runtime library for CSS parsing.
 |  | libcss-parser0 | simple CSS1 parser library for C | Mehr ... |  
| htmlcxx is a simple non-validating CSS1 and HTML parser for C++. Although there are several other html parsers available, htmlcxx has some
 characteristics that make it unique:
 .
 * STL like navigation of DOM tree, using excellent tree.hh library from
 Kasper Peeters
 * It is possible to reproduce exactly, character by character, the original
 document from the parse tree
 * Bundled CSS parser
 * Optional parsing of attributes
 * C++ code that looks like C++ (not so true anymore)
 * Offsets of tags/elements in the original document are stored in the nodes
 of the DOM tree
 .
 The parsing politics of htmlcxx were created trying to mimic Mozilla Firefox
 (http://www.mozilla.org) behavior. So you should expect parse trees similar to
 those create by Firefox. However, differently from Firefox, htmlcxx does not
 insert non-existent stuff in your html. Therefore, serializing the DOM tree
 gives exactly the same bytes contained in the original HTML document.
 .
 This package contains the C runtime library for CSS parsing.
 |  | libhtmlcxx-dev | simple HTML/CSS1 parser library for C++ (development) | Mehr ... |  
| htmlcxx is a simple non-validating CSS1 and HTML parser for C++. Although there are several other html parsers available, htmlcxx has some
 characteristics that make it unique:
 .
 * STL like navigation of DOM tree, using excellent tree.hh library from
 Kasper Peeters
 * It is possible to reproduce exactly, character by character, the original
 document from the parse tree
 * Bundled CSS parser
 * Optional parsing of attributes
 * C++ code that looks like C++ (not so true anymore)
 * Offsets of tags/elements in the original document are stored in the nodes
 of the DOM tree
 .
 The parsing politics of htmlcxx were created trying to mimic Mozilla Firefox
 (http://www.mozilla.org) behavior. So you should expect parse trees similar to
 those create by Firefox. However, differently from Firefox, htmlcxx does not
 insert non-existent stuff in your html. Therefore, serializing the DOM tree
 gives exactly the same bytes contained in the original HTML document.
 .
 This package contains files required for developing software that makes use of
 htmlcxx.
 |  | libhtmlcxx3 | simple HTML parser library for C++ | Mehr ... |  
| htmlcxx is a simple non-validating CSS1 and HTML parser for C++. Although there are several other html parsers available, htmlcxx has some
 characteristics that make it unique:
 .
 * STL like navigation of DOM tree, using excellent tree.hh library from
 Kasper Peeters
 * It is possible to reproduce exactly, character by character, the original
 document from the parse tree
 * Bundled CSS parser
 * Optional parsing of attributes
 * C++ code that looks like C++ (not so true anymore)
 * Offsets of tags/elements in the original document are stored in the nodes
 of the DOM tree
 .
 The parsing politics of htmlcxx were created trying to mimic Mozilla Firefox
 (http://www.mozilla.org) behavior. So you should expect parse trees similar to
 those create by Firefox. However, differently from Firefox, htmlcxx does not
 insert non-existent stuff in your html. Therefore, serializing the DOM tree
 gives exactly the same bytes contained in the original HTML document.
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