Test::HTML::W3C(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Test::HTML::W3C(3pm) |
NAME¶
Test::HTML::W3C - Perform W3C HTML validation testing
SYNOPSIS¶
use Test::HTML::W3C tests => $test_count; # or use Test::HTML::W3C 'show_detail'; # or when using both use Test::HTML::W3C tests => $test_count, 'show_detail'; is_valid_markup($my_html_scalar); is_valid_file("/path/to/my/file.html"); is_valid("http://example.com"); # Get the underlying WebService:;Validator::W3C::HTML object my $validator = validator();
DESCRIPTION¶
The purpose of this module is to provide a wrapper around the W3C that works with the Test::More testing framework.
ABUSE¶
Please keep in mind that the W3C validation pages and services are a shared resource. If you plan to do many many tests, please consider using your own installation of the validation programs, and then use your local install by modifying the local validtor:
my $v = validator(); $v->validator_uri($my_own_validator);
See the documentation for WebService:;Validator::W3C::HTML and the W3C's site at http://validator.w3.org/ for details
- validator();
- Description: Returns the underlying
WebService::Validator::HTML::W3C object
Parameters: None.
Returns: $validator
- plan();
- Description: Access to the underlying
"plan" method provided by Test::Builder.
Parameters: As per Test::Builder
- is_valid_markup($markup[, $name]);
- Description: is_valid_markup tests whether the text in the provided
scalar value correctly validates according to the W3C specifications. This
is useful if you have markup stored in a scalar that you wish to test that
you might get from using LWP or WWW::Mechanize for example...
Parameters: $markup, a scalar containing the data to test, $name, an optional descriptive test name.
Returns: None.
- is_valid_file($path[, $name]);
- Description: is_valid_file works the same way as is_valid_markup,
except that you can specify the text to validate with the path to a
filename. This is useful if you have pregenerated all your HTML files
locally, and now wish to test them.
Parameters: $path, a scalar, $name, an optional descriptive test name.
Returns: None.
- is_valid($url[, $name]);
- Description: is_valid, again, works very similarly to the
is_valid_file and is_valid_file, except you specify a document that is
already online with its URL. This can be useful if you wish to
periodically test a website or webpage that dynamically changes over time
for example, like a blog or a wiki, without first saving the html to a
file using your browswer, or a utility such as wget.
Parameters: $url, a scalar, $name, an optional descriptive test name.
Returns: None.
- diag_html($url);
- Description: If you want to display the actual errors reported by
the service for a particular test, you can use the diag_html function.
Please note that you must have imported 'show_detail' for this to work
properly.
use Test::HTML::W3C 'show_detail'; is_valid_markup("<html></html">, "My simple test") or diag_html();
Parameters: $url, a scalar.
Returns: None.
SEE ALSO¶
Test::Builder::Module for creating your own testing modules.
Test::More for another popular testing framework, also based on Test::Builder
Test::Harness for detils about how test results are interpreted.
AUTHORS¶
Victor <victor73@gmail.com> with inspiration from the authors of the Test::More and WebService::Validator::W3C:HTML modules.
BUGS¶
See http://rt.cpan.org to report and view bugs.
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright 2006 by Victor <victor73@gmail.com>.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
2021-01-07 | perl v5.32.0 |