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Tips and tricks

Handle Non-UTF8 html Pages

The go.net/html package used by goquery requires that the html document is UTF-8 encoded. When you know the encoding of the html page is not UTF-8, you can use the iconv package to convert it to UTF-8 (there are various implementation of the iconv API, see godoc.org for other options):

$ go get -u github.com/djimenez/iconv-go

and then:

// Load the URL
res, err := http.Get(url)
if err != nil {
    // handle error
}
defer res.Body.Close()

// Convert the designated charset HTML to utf-8 encoded HTML.
// `charset` being one of the charsets known by the iconv package.
utfBody, err := iconv.NewReader(res.Body, charset, "utf-8")
if err != nil {
    // handler error
}

// use utfBody using goquery
doc, err := goquery.NewDocumentFromReader(utfBody)
if err != nil {
    // handler error
}
// use doc...

Thanks to github user @YuheiNakasaka.

Actually, the official go.text repository covers this use case too, see its godoc page for the details.

Handle Javascript-based Pages

goquery is great to handle normal html pages, but when most of the page is build dynamically using javascript, there's not much it can do. There are various options when faced with this problem:

  • Use a headless browser such as webloop.
  • Use a Go javascript parser package, such as otto.

You can find a code example using otto in this gist. Thanks to github user @cryptix.

For Loop

If all you need is a normal for loop over all nodes in the current selection, where Map/Each-style iteration is not necessary, you can use the following:

sel := Doc().Find(".selector")
for i := range sel.Nodes {
	single := sel.Eq(i)
    // use `single` as a selection of 1 node
}

Thanks to github user @jmoiron.