I found using hpple quite useful to parse messy HTML. Hpple project is a Objective-C wrapper on the XPathQuery library for parsing HTML. Using it you can send an XPath query and receive the result .
Requirements:
-Add libxml2 includes to your project
- Menu Project->Edit Project Settings
- Search for setting "Header Search Paths"
- Add a new search path "${SDKROOT}/usr/include/libxml2"
- Enable recursive option
-Add libxml2 library to to your project
- Menu Project->Edit Project Settings
- Search for setting "Other Linker Flags"
- Add a new search flag "-lxml2"
-From hpple get the following source code files an add them to your project:
- TFpple.h
- TFpple.m
- TFppleElement.h
- TFppleElement.m
- XPathQuery.h
- XPathQuery.m
-Take a walk on w3school XPath Tutorial to feel comfortable with the XPath language.
Code Example
#import "TFHpple.h"
NSData *data = [[NSData alloc] initWithContentsOfFile:@"example.html"];
// Create parser
xpathParser = [[TFHpple alloc] initWithHTMLData:data];
//Get all the cells of the 2nd row of the 3rd table
NSArray *elements = [xpathParser searchWithXPathQuery:@"//table[3]/tr[2]/td"];
// Access the first cell
TFHppleElement *element = [elements objectAtIndex:0];
// Get the text within the cell tag
NSString *content = [element content];
[xpathParser release];
[data release];
Known issues
As hpple is a wrapper over XPathQuery which is another wrapper, this option probably is not the most efficient. If performance is an issue in your project, I recommend to code your own lightweight solution based on hpple and xpathquery library code.