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=head1 NAME

WWW::Scripter - For scripting web sites that have scripts

=head1 VERSION

0.028 (alpha)

=head1 SYNOPSIS

  use WWW::Scripter;
  $w = new WWW::Scripter;

  $w->use_plugin('Ajax');  # packaged separately
  
  $w->get('http://some.site.com/that/relies/on/ajax');
  $w->eval(' alert("Hello from JavaScript") ');
  $w->document->getElementsByTagName('div')->[0]->....

  $w->content; # returns the HTML content, possibly modified
               # by scripts

=head1 DESCRIPTION

This is a subclass of L<WWW::Mechanize> that uses the W3C DOM and provides
support for scripting.

No actual scripting engines are provided I<with> WWW::Scripter, but are
available as separate plugins.  (See also the L</SEE ALSO> section below.)

=head1 SINGLE VS MULTIPLE WINDOWS

There are two basic modes in which you can use WWW::Scripter:

If you only
need a single virtual window (which is usually the case), use WWW::Scripter
itself, as described below and in L<WWW::Mechanize>.

For multiple windows,
start with a window group (see
L<WWW::Scripter::WindowGroup>) and fetch the WWW::Scripter object via its
C<active_window> method before proceeding.

At any time you can attach an
existing window (WWW::Scripter object) to a window group using the latter's
C<attach> method. You can also C<< ->close >> a window to detach it from
its window group and put it back in single-window mode.

These two modes affect the behaviour of a few methods (C<open>, C<close>,
C<blur>, C<focus>) and hyperlinks and forms
with
explicit targets.

=head1 INTERFACE

See L<WWW::Mechanize> for a vast list of methods that this module inherits.

In addition to those, this module implements the well-known Window 
interface,
providing also a few routines for attaching scripting engines
and what-not.

In the descriptions below, C<$w> refers to the WWW::Scripter object. You
can think of it as short for either 'WWW::Scripter' or 'window'.

=head2 Constructor

 my $w = new WWW::Scripter %args

The constructor accepts named arguments.  There are only two that 
WWW::Scripter itself deals with directly.  The rest are passed on to the
superclass.  See L<WWW::Mechanize> and L<LWP::UserAgent> for details on
what
other arguments
the constructor accepts.

The two arguments are:

=over

=item max_docs

The maximum number of document objects to keep in history (along with their
corresponding request and response objects).  If
this is omitted, Mech's C<stack_depth> + 1 will be used.  This is off by
one
because C<stack_depth> is the number of pages you can go back to, so it is
one less than the number of recorded pages.  C<max_docs> considers 0 to be
equivalent to infinity.

=item max_history

If the number of items in history exceeds C<max_docs>, WWW::Scripter will still keep the request objects (so
you can go back more than C<max_docs> times and previously visited pages
will reload).  C<max_history> restricts the total number of items in
history (whether full document objects or just requests).  0 is equivalent
to 
infinity.

=back

=head2 The Window Interface

In addition to the methods listed here, see also L<HTML::DOM::View> and
L<HTML::DOM::EventTarget>.

=over

=item location

Returns the location object (see L<WWW::Scripter::Location>).
If you pass an argument, it sets the C<href>
attribute of the location object.

=item alert

=item confirm

=item prompt

Each of these calls the function assigned by one of the C<set_*> methods
below under L</Window-Related Methods>.

=item navigator

Returns the navigator object.  See L<WWW::Scripter::Navigator>.

=item screen

Returns the screen object.  It currently has no features.

=item setTimeout ( $code_string, $ms );

=item setTimeout ( $coderef, $ms, @args );

This schedules the code to run after C<$ms> milliseconds have elapsed, 
returning a
number uniquely identifying the time-out.  If the first argument is a
coderef or an object with C<&{}> overloading, it will be called as such.
Otherwise, it is parsed as a string of JavaScript code.  (If the JavaScript
plugin is not loaded, it will be ignored.)

=item setInterval ( $code_string, $ms );

=item setInterval ( $coderef, $ms, @args );

This method is just like C<setTimeout>, except that, when the code runs,
it schedules it to run again after C<$ms> milliseconds.

=item clearTimeout ( $timeout_id )

The cancels the time-out corresponding to the C<$timeout_id>.  This only
works for those registered with C<setTimeout>.

=item clearInterval ( $timer_id )

The cancels the timer corresponding to the C<$timer_id>.  This only
works for those registered with C<setInterval>.

=item open ( $url, $target, $features, $replace )

If C<$target> is not specified or if there is no window or frame named
C<$target>, this methods opens the C<$url> in a new
window in multiple-window mode, or at the top-level window in single-window
mode.

If there is a window or frame named C<$target>, then the C<$url> is opened
in that window.  If C<$replace> is true, it replaces the current page.

A relative C<$url> is resolved according to the base URL of the current
window (the one that C<open> is called on), not the C<$target>.

The C<$features> argument is ignored.

=item close

In multiple-window mode, this detaches this window from its window group.
In single-window mode (when there is no window group) it goes back to the
previous entry in history (so that it is the opposite of C<open>).

=item focus

In multiple-window mode, this brings this window to the front.  In
single-window mode (when there is no window group) it does nothing.

=item blur

In multiple-window mode, this sends this window back one, if it is the
frontmost window.  In
single-window mode (when there is no window group) it does nothing.

=item history

Returns the history object. See L<WWW::Scripter::History>.

=item window

=item self

These two return the window object itself.

=item frames

Although the W3C DOM specifies that this return C<$w> (the window itself),
for efficiency's sake this returns a separate object which one can use as
a hash or array reference to access its sub-frames.  (The window object 
itself cannot be used that
way.)  The frames object (class WWW::Scripter::Frames) also has a C<window> 
method that returns C<$w>.

In list context a list of frames is returned.

=item length

Returns the number of frames. C<< $w->length >> is equivalent to 
C<< scalar @{$w->frames} >>.

=item top

Returns the 'top' window, which is the window itself if there are no
frames.

=item parent

Returns the parent frame, if there is one, or the window object itself
otherwise.

=item name

This returns the window's name, if applicable.  For a frame, this comes
from the frame element to which the window belongs.  For a top-level window
created by C<open>, this is the name that was passed as the second
argument.

=item scroll

=item scrollTo

=item scrollBy

These exist in case scripts try to call them.  They don't do anything.

=begin comment

=item status

=item defaultStatus

These are simple accessors.  They don't do much apart from storing the
assigned value as a string.  The value assigned is associated with the
current page.

=end comment

=back

=head2 Window-Related Methods

These methods are not part of the Window interface, but are closely related
to the object's window behaviour.

=over

=item set_alert_function

=item set_confirm_function

=item set_prompt_function

Use these to set the functions called by the above methods.  There are no
default C<confirm> and C<prompt> functions.  The default C<alert> prints to
the currently selected file handle, with a line break tacked on the end.

=item check_timers

This evaluates the code associated with each timeout registered with 
the C<setTimeout> method,
if the appropriate interval has elapsed.

=item count_timers

This returns the number of timers currently registered.

=item wait_for_timers ( %args )

This method waits for any registered timers to finish (calling
C<check_timers> repeatedly in a loop).  Its C<%args> are as follows:

  max_wait    Number indicating for how many seconds the loop
              should run before giving up and returning.
  min_timers  Only run until this many timers are left, not until
              they have all finished.
  interval    Number of seconds to wait before each iteration of
              the loop.  The default is .1.

Some websites have timers running constantly, that are never cleared.  For
these, you will usually need to set a value for C<min_timers> (or
C<max_wait>) to avoid an infinite loop.

=item window_group

This returns the window group that owns this window. See
L</SINGLE VS MULTIPLE WINDOWS>, above.

You can also pass an argument to set it, but you should only do so if you
know what you are doing, as it does not update the window group's list.
Consider using L<WWW::Scripter::WindowGroup>'s 
C<attach> method (which itself uses this method).

=item find_target ( $name )

This finds the WWW::Scripter object (window or frame) in which a link will
be opened. 

If C<$name> is not an empty string, it returns the window corresponding to
C<$name>.

If C<$name> is the empty string or undefined, it returns the default target
for this window,
based on the first C<< <base target> >> element.

If a named window cannot be found: in multiple-window mode, a new window is
opened and returned; in single-window mode, C<undef> is returned.

=back

=head2 Methods for Fetching Images

=over

=item fetch_images ( $new_val )

A boolean indicating whether images should be fetched.  Some sites use
images with special URLs as cookies and refuse to work if those images are
not fetched.  Most of the time, however, you probably want to leave this
off, for speed's sake.

Setting this does not affect any pages that are already loaded.

=item image_handler ( $coderef )

A subroutine for handling any images that are fetched.  The subroutine will
be passed three arguments: 0) the WWW::Scripter object, 1) the image or
input element and 2) the response object.

=back

=head2 Methods for Plugins, Scripting, etc.

=over

=item eval ( $code [, $scripting_language] )

Evaluates the C<$code> passed to it.  This method dies if there is no
script
handler registered for the C<$scripting_language>.

=item use_plugin ( $plugin_name [, @options] )

This will automatically C<require()> the plugin for you, and then
initialise it.  To pass extra
options to the plugin after loading it, just use the same syntax again.
This will return the plugin object if the plugin has one.

=item plugin ( $plugin_name )

This will return the plugin object, if it has one.  Some plugins may
provide
this as a way to communicate directly with the plugin.

You can also use the return value as a boolean, to see whether a plugin is
loaded.

=item dom_enabled ( $new_val )

This returns a boolean indicating whether HTML pages are parsed and turned
into a DOM tree.  It is true
by default.  You can disable HTML parsing by passing a false value.  Of
course, if you are using WWW::Scripter to begin with, you won't want to
turn this off will you?  Nevertheless, this is useful for fetching files
behind the scenes when just the file contents are needed.

=item scripts_enabled ( $new_val )

This returns a boolean indicating whether scripts are enabled.  It is true
by default.  You can disable scripts by passing a false value.  When you
disable scripts, event handlers are also disabled, as is the registration
of event handlers by HTML event attributes.

=item script_handler ( $language_re, $object )

A script handler is a special object that knows how to run scripts in a
particular language.  Use this method to register such an object.

C<$language_re> is a regular expression that will be matched against a
scripting language name (from a 'language' HTML attribute) or MIME type
(<script type=...).  You can also use the special value 'default'.

C<$object> is the script handler object.  For its interface, 
see 
L</SCRIPT HANDLERS>, below.

=item class_info ( \%interfaces )

With this you can provide information for binding Perl classes to scripting
languages, so that scripts can
handle objects of those classes.

You should pass a hash ref that has the
structure described in L<HTML::DOM::Interface>, except that this method
also accepts a C<< _constructor >> hash element, which should be set to the
name of the method to be called when the constructor function is called
from the scripting language (e.g., C<< _constructor => 'new' >>) or a
subroutine reference.

The return value is a list of all hashrefs passed to C<class_info> so far
plus a few that WWW::Scripter has by default (to support the DOM).
You can call it without any arguments just to get that list.

=back

=head2 Other Methods

=over

=item forward

The equivalent of hitting the 'forward' button in a browser.  This, of
course, only works after C<back>.

=item clear_history ( $including_current_page )

This clears the history, preventing C<back> from working until after the
next request, and freeing up some memory. If supplied with a true
argument, it also clears the current page. It returns C<$w>.

=item max_history

=item max_history ( $new_value )

=item max_docs

=item max_docs ( $new_value )

These two return what was passed to the constructor, optionally setting it.

=back

=head1 EVENTS

=for comment
This should probably go inside an FAQ instead of here. We can put the
documentation about timers there, too.

To trigger events (and event handlers), use the C<trigger_event> method of
the object on which you want to trigger it. For instance:

 $w->trigger_event('resize');  # runs onresize handlers
 $w->document->links->[0]->trigger_event('mouseover');
 $w->current_form->trigger_event('submit');  # same as $w->submit

C<trigger_event> accepts more arguments. See L<HTML::DOM> and
L<HTML::DOM::EventTarget> for details.

=head1 CAVEATS

WWW::Scripter does not implement any event loop, so you have to call
C<check_timers> or C<wait_for_timers> yourself to trigger any timeouts. If
you set up a loop like this,

  sleep 1, $w->check_timers  while $w->count_timers;

or if you use C<wait_for_timers>, beware that these may cause an infinite
loop if a timeout sets another timeout, or if a timer is registered with
C<setInterval>. You basically have to know what works with the
pages you are browsing.

=head1 THE C<%WindowInterface> HASH

The hash named C<%WWW::Scripter::WindowInterface> lists the
interface members for the window object. It follows the same format as
hashes I<within> L<%HTML::DOM::Interface|HTML::DOM::Interface>, like this:

  (
      alert => VOID|METHOD,
      confirm => BOOL|METHOD,
      ...
  )

It only includes those methods listed above under L</The Window Interface>.

=head1 SCRIPT HANDLERS

This section is only of interest to those implementing scripting engines.
If you are not writing one, skip this section (or just read it anyway).

A script handler object must provide the following methods:

=over

=item eval ( $w, $code, $url, $line, $is_inline )

(where C<$w> is the WWW::Scripter object)

This is supposed to run the C<$code> passed to it. It must set C<$@> to a
true value if there is an error.

=item event2sub ( $w, $elem, $event_name, $code, $url, $line )

This is called for each HTML event attribute (onclick, etc.). It should
return a coderef that runs the C<$code>.

If it could not create a code ref, it should return C<undef> and put the
error message, if any, in C<$@>.

=head1 WRITING PLUGINS

Plugins are usually under the WWW::Scripter::Plugin:: namespace. If a
plugin name has a hyphen (-) in it, the module name will contain a double
colon (::). If, when you pass a plugin name to C<use_plugin> or C<plugin>,
it has a double colon in its name, it will be treated as a fully-qualified
module name (possibly) outside the usual plugin namespace. Here are
some examples:

    Plugin Name       Module Name
    -----------       -----------
    Chef              WWW::Scripter::Plugin::Chef
    Man-Page          WWW::Scripter::Plugin::Man::Page
    My::Odd::Plugin   My::Odd::Plugin

This module will need to have an C<init> method, and possibly two more
named C<options> and C<clone>, respectively:

=over

=item init

C<init> will be called as a class method the first time C<use_plugin>
is called for a particular plugin. The second argument (C<$_[1]>) will be 
the WWW::Scripter object. The third argument will be an array ref
of options (see L</options>, below).

It may return an object if the plugin has one.

=item options

When C<< $w->use_plugin >> is called, if there are any arguments after
the plugin name, then the plugin object's C<options> method will be called
with the options themselves as the arguments.

If a plugin does not provide an object, an error will be thrown if options
are passed to C<use_plugin>.

The C<init> method can override this, however. When I<it> is called, its
third argument is a reference to an array containing the options passed
to C<use_plugin>. The contents of that same array will be used when 
C<options> is called,
so C<init> can modify it and even prevent C<options> from being called
altogether, by emptying the array.

=item clone

When the WWW::Scripter object is cloned (via the C<clone> method), every
plugin that has a clone method (as determined by
S<<< C<< ->can('clone') >> >>>), will also be cloned. The new clone of the
WWW::Scripter object is passed as
its argument.

=back

If the plugin needs to record data pertinent to the
current page, it can do so by associating them with the document or the
request via a field hash. See 
L<Hash::Util::FieldHash> and L<Hash::Util::FieldHash::Compat>.

=head2 Handlers

See LWP's L<Handlers|LWP::UserAgent/Handlers> feature.

From within LWP's C<request_*> and C<response_*> handlers, you can call 
C<WWW::Scripter::abort> to abort the request 
and prevent a new entry from being created in browser history. (The
JavaScript plugin does this with javascript: URLs.)

WWW::Scripter will export this function upon request:

  use WWW::Scripter qw[ abort ];

or you can call it with a fully qualified name:

  WWW::Scripter::abort();

=head1 BUGS

This is still an unfinished work. There are probably scores of bugs
crawling all over the place. Here are some that are known (apart from the
fact that so many features are still missing):

=over 4

=item *

There is no support for XHTML, but HTML::Parser can handle most XHTML pages
anyway, so
maybe this is not a problem.

=item *

There is nothing to prevent infinite recursion when frames have
circular references.

=back

To report a bug, please send an e-mail to L<bug-WWW-Scripter@rt.cpan.org>
or use the web interface at L<http://rt.cpan.org/>.

=head1 PREREQUISITES

L<perl> 5.8.3 or higher (5.8.4 or higher recommended)

L<HTML::DOM> 0.045 or higher

L<LWP> 5.77 or higher

L<URI>

L<WWW::Mechanize> 1.2 or higher

L<Tie::RefHash::Weak> 0.08 or higher for perl 5.8.x.

=head1 AUTHOR & COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2009-12, Father Chrysostomos (sprout at, um, cpan dot org)

This program is free software; you may redistribute or modify it (or both)
under the same terms as perl.

=head1 CONFESSION

Some of the code in here was stolen from the immediate superclass, 
WWW::Mechanize, as were some of the tests and test data.

=head1 SEE ALSO

WWW::Scripter sub-modules: L<::Location|WWW::Scripter::Location>,
L<::History|WWW::Scripter::History> and
L<::Navigator|WWW::Scripter::Navigator>.

See L<WWW::Mechanize>, of which this is a subclass.

See also the following plugins:

=over

=item L<WWW::Scripter::Plugin::JavaScript>

=item L<WWW::Scripter::Plugin::Ajax>

=back

And, if you are curious, have a look at the plugin version of 
WWW::Mechanize and WWW::Mechanize::Plugin::DOM (experimental and now 
deprecated) that this was originally
based on:
http://www-mechanize.googlecode.com/svn/wm/branches/plugins/


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