---
Title: Manipulate XML/HTML with Xidel
Date: 2023-10-29 22:00
Lang: en
Author: Fabrice
Category: software
Tags: xidel, html, xml, cli
Slug: xidel
table-of-contents: false
Header_Cover:
Summary: Some information I would have love to learn earlier in (Neo)Vim.
---
You may know [jq](https://jqlang.github.io/jq/) process
[json](https://www.json.org/json-en.html) files in command line. At some point I
was looking for the simplicity of such a swiss-knife tool for
[XML](https://www.w3.org/XML/)/[HTML](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/),
mostly for simple usages that don't require me to resort to a full-fledged
scripting language such as [python](https://python.org) or dabbing in [regular
expressions](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression) that will never
work because of a carriage return at an unexpected place, and guess what? It exists!
This tool is [xidel](https://www.videlibri.de/xidel.html). It is a bit more than
that as it also allows downloading files, which enables extra features such as
navigating a site following specific links. You can find more about it in the
[list of examples](https://www.videlibri.de/xidel.html#examples) given in the
project website, which is a nice introduction to the possibilities of the tool.
However, I mainly use it for simple cases, where I mix-and-match the best of
both worlds: a graphical client (such as
[firefox](https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/new/)), and a CLI tool, which in
this case is xidel.
To do this, we will see a simple use case, where filtering by hand can be a bit
tedious. Let us assume that we want to obtain the URL list of pdf versions of
Victor Hugo's novels in French from Wikisource if available.
We start from this page: ,
that lists which is available on .
Now, we can simply select the “Romans” section as it is and copy it. Normally
you can check that you indeed have the html in your clipboard by typing
`wl-paste -t text/html` on wayland or `xclip -selection clipboard -o -t
text/html` on X11 if you have xclip installed. In the following we will assume a
Wayland environment with
[wl-clipboard](https://github.com/bugaevc/wl-clipboard), but it should also work
with `xclip` (not tested, please let me know how it behaves).
Now that's good, but we now need to filter and parse it, we can start with a
simple test:
```bash
wl-paste -t text/html | xidel -e '//a/@href'
```
Which will show us the target of each links in our selection. To explain the
syntax, the option `-e` tells `xidel` to extract the content that is passed as
input, which is either a
[template](https://benibela.de/documentation/internettools/extendedhtmlparser.THtmlTemplateParser.html)
or following the [XPath](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XPath) syntax to parse
the [DOM](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_Object_Model) tree. In the
above example we used the latter, to obtain every anchors (`//a`) and then their
`href` attribute with `@href`.
From there we can see that pdf versions contains the string… “pdf”.
Now, we can see another nice part of XPath, is that we can filter using
functions:
```bash
wl-paste -t text/html | xidel -e '//a/@href[contains(., "pdf")]'
```
The last magical part here, is the dot notation, which refers to the current
item “value”. I’m not the most familiar with the subtleties here, and you can
refer to this stackoverflow [short answer](https://stackoverflow.com/a/38240971)
or long answer just above for more details.
You can also edit the way the filtering is done, for instance if the anchors you
are targeting are named “Download”, you can obtain the links with:
```bash
wl-paste -t text/html | xidel -e '//a[contains(., "Download")]/@href'
```
If you want strict equality because there are “Download PDF” and “Download epub”
links for instance:
```bash
wl-paste -t text/html | xidel -e '//a[text()="Download PDF"]/@href'
```
To go further, you can also pass HTTP headers and cookies to `xidel` via the
`--header/-H` and `--load-cookies` options respectively. It is also possible to
use the `--follow/-f` command to hop in the pages that matches (using the same
syntax as above) to obtain a link from it… or event directly download it with
the `--download` option and so on.
In this blogpost we only look at a local version of pre-filtered content using
you web browser, but the possibilities are endless!