datocms-html-to-structured-text
This package contains utilities to convert HTML (or a Hast to a DatoCMS Structured Text dast
(DatoCMS Abstract Syntax Tree) document.
Please refer to the dast
format docs to learn more about the syntax tree format and the available nodes.
Usage
The main utility in this package is htmlToStructuredText
which takes a string of HTML and transforms it into a valid dast
document.
htmlToStructuredText
returns a Promise
that resolves with a Structured Text document.
import { htmlToStructuredText } from 'datocms-html-to-structured-text';
const html = `
<article>
<h1>DatoCMS</h1>
<p>The most complete, user-friendly and performant Headless CMS.</p>
</article>
`;
htmlToStructuredText(html).then((structuredText) => {
console.log(structuredText);
});
htmlToStructuredText
is meant to be used in a browser environment.
In Node.js you can use the parse5ToStructuredText
helper which instead takes a document generated with parse5
.
import parse5 from 'parse5';
import { parse5ToStructuredText } from 'datocms-html-to-structured-text';
parse5ToStructuredText(
parse5.parse(html, {
sourceCodeLocationInfo: true,
}),
).then((structuredText) => {
console.log(structuredText);
});
Internally, both utilities work on a Hast. Should you have a hast
already you can use a third utility called hastToDast
.
Validate dast
documents
dast
is a strict format for DatoCMS' Structured Text fields. As such the resulting document is generally a simplified, content-centric version of the input HTML.
When possible, the library relies on semantic HTML to generate a valid dast
document.
The datocms-structured-text-utils
package provides a validate
utility to validate a value to make sure that the resulting tree is compatible with DatoCMS' Structured Text field.
import { validate } from 'datocms-structured-text-utils';
htmlToStructuredText(html).then((structuredText) => {
const { valid, message } = validate(structuredText);
if (!valid) {
throw new Error(message);
}
});
We recommend to validate every dast
to avoid errors later when creating records.
Advanced Usage
Options
All the *ToStructuredText
utils accept an optional options
object as second argument:
type Options = Partial<{
newlines: boolean,
handlers: Record<string, CreateNodeFunction>,
preprocess: (hast: HastRootNode) => HastRootNode,
allowedBlocks: Array<
BlockquoteType | CodeType | HeadingType | LinkType | ListType,
>,
allowedMarks: Mark[],
}>;
Transforming Nodes
The utils in this library traverse a hast
tree and transform supported nodes to dast
nodes. The transformation is done by working on a hast
node with a handler (async) function.
Handlers are associated to hast
nodes by tagName
or type
when node.type !== 'element'
and look as follow:
import { visitChildren } from 'datocms-html-to-structured-text';
async function p(createDastNode, hastNode, context) {
return createDastNode('paragraph', {
children: await visitChildren(createDastNode, hastNode, context),
});
}
Handlers can return either a promise that resolves to a dast
node, an array of dast
Nodes or undefined
to skip the current node.
To ensure that a valid dast
is generated the default handlers also check that the current hastNode
is a valid dast
node for its parent and, if not, they ignore the current node and continue visiting its children.
Information about the parent dast
node name is available in context.parentNodeType
.
Please take a look at the default handlers implementation for examples.
The default handlers are available on context.defaultHandlers
.
context
Every handler receives a context
object that includes the following information:
export interface GlobalContext {
baseUrlFound?: boolean;
baseUrl?: string;
}
export interface Context {
parentNodeType: NodeType;
parentNode: HastNode;
handlers: Record<string, Handler<unknown>>;
defaultHandlers: Record<string, Handler<unknown>>;
wrapText: boolean;
marks?: Mark[];
codePrefix?: string;
allowedBlocks: Array<
BlockquoteType | CodeType | HeadingType | LinkType | ListType,
>;
allowedMarks: Mark[];
global: GlobalContext;
}
Custom Handlers
It is possible to register custom handlers and override the default behavior via options:
import { paragraphHandler } from './customHandlers';
htmlToStructuredText(html, {
handlers: {
p: paragraphHandler,
},
}).then((structuredText) => {
console.log(structuredText);
});
It is highly encouraged to validate the dast
when using custom handlers because handlers are responsible for dictating valid parent-children relationships and therefore generating a tree that is compliant with DatoCMS' Structured Text.
preprocessing
Because of the strictness of the dast
spec it is possible that some semantic or elements might be lost during the transformation.
To improve the final result, you might want to modify the hast
before it is transformed to dast
with the preprocess
hook.
import { findAll } from 'unist-utils-core';
const html = `
<p>convert this to an h1</p>
`;
htmlToStructuredText(html, {
preprocess: (tree) => {
findAll(tree, (node) => {
if (node.type === 'element' && node.tagName === 'p') {
node.tagName = 'h1';
}
});
},
}).then((structuredText) => {
console.log(structuredText);
});
Examples
Split a node that contains an image.
In dast
images can be presented as Block
nodes but these are not allowed inside of ListItem
nodes (ul/ol lists). In this example we will split the list in 3 pieces and lift up the image.
The same approach can be used to split other types of branches and lift up nodes to become root nodes.
import { findAll } from 'unist-utils-core';
const html = `
<ul>
<li>item 1</li>
<li><div><img src="./img.png" alt></div></li>
<li>item 2</li>
</ul>
`;
const dast = await htmlToStructuredText(html, {
preprocess: (tree) => {
const liftedImages = new WeakSet();
const body = find(tree, (node) => node.tagName === 'body');
visit(body, (node, index, parents) => {
if (
!node ||
node.tagName !== 'img' ||
liftedImages.has(node) ||
parents.length === 1
) {
return;
}
const imgParent = parents[parents.length - 1];
imgParent.children.splice(index, 1);
let i = parents.length;
let splitChildrenIndex = index;
let childrenAfterSplitPoint = [];
while (--i > 0) {
const parent = parents[i];
const parentsParent = parents[i - 1];
childrenAfterSplitPoint = parent.children.splice(
splitChildrenIndex,
);
splitChildrenIndex = parentsParent.children.indexOf(parent);
if (i === 1) {
splitChildrenIndex += 1;
parentsParent.children.splice(splitChildrenIndex, 0, node);
liftedImages.add(node);
}
splitChildrenIndex += 1;
if (childrenAfterSplitPoint.length > 0) {
parentsParent.children.splice(splitChildrenIndex, 0, {
...parent,
children: childrenAfterSplitPoint,
});
}
if (parent.children.length === 0) {
splitChildrenIndex -= 1;
parentsParent.children.splice(splitChildrenIndex, 1);
}
}
});
},
handlers: {
img: async (createNode, node, context) => {
const item = '123';
return createNode('block', {
item,
});
},
},
});
Lift up an image node
const html = `
<ul>
<li>item 1</li>
<li><div><img src="./img.png" alt>item 2</div></li>
<li>item 3</li>
</ul>
`;
const dast = await htmlToStructuredText(html, {
preprocess: (tree) => {
findAll(tree, (node, index, parent) => {
if (node.tagName === 'img') {
tree.children.push(node);
parent.children.splice(index, 1);
return;
}
});
},
handlers: {
img: async (createNode, node, context) => {
const item = '123';
return createNode('block', {
item,
});
},
},
});
Utilities
To work with hast
and dast
trees we recommend using the unist-utils-core library.
License
MIT