- Overhead: Images will be automatically downloaded. This provides unwanted overhead when the task it hand is simply to examine or retrieve the contents of the page itself.
- Dialog Boxes: Any page encountered with an unknown font, required password or any such problem will cause a dialog box to display, halting the application until it is closed.
- Hanging: Especially bad since Windows 2000 - I have had trouble with sessions that suddenly stop responding unless stopped and restarted.
In this article, we will develop a simple, light-weight HTML Container class that can be used for retrieving and processing web pages. We will look at how to grab an HTML document from the Web and how the parse the information once it has been retrieved.
Requesting a Page from the Web
The basic functions provided by the HTML Container class will be the ability to load source from a URL and parse the loaded HTML. Since we need something to parse before we can parse it, a look at how to request a page from the Web would seem to be the logical first step.
We will use the HttpWebRequest and HttpWebResponse classes, which are part of the System.Net namespace. A multi-step process is necessary to request and load a page from the Net. First, a web request is initiated by invoking the Create method, which is passed a URL and returns back an HttpWebRequest object. We then invoke the GetResponse method of this object to return an HttpWebResponse object. Now GetResponseStream method is called to return a Stream object, which can be read using a StreamReader. Once all the appropriate classes have been instantiated, we begin a loop using the Read method of the StreamReader to load 256 bytes at a time until we have reached the end of the stream. If that weren’t enough, we are still tasked with the job of converting our character array to a string object, which will then be concatenated to another string as each pass is read. The basic process is listed below:VB.Net:
Dim hrqURL As System.Net.HttpWebRequest _
= System.Net.HttpWebRequest.Create("http://www.bbc.co.uk")
Dim hrspURL As System.Net.HttpWebResponse _
= hrqURL.GetResponse()
Dim srdrInput _
As New System.IO.StreamReader(hrspURL.GetResponseStream)
Dim chrBuff(255) As Char
Dim intLen As Integer
Dim strSource As String
Do
intLen = srdrInput.Read(chrBuff, 0, 256)
Dim strBuff As New String(chrBuff, 0, intLen)
strSource = strSource & strBuff
Loop While (intLen)
m_strSource = strSource
C#:
System.Net.HttpWebRequest hrqURL
= (System.Net.HttpWebRequest)
System.Net.HttpWebRequest.Create("http://www.bbc.co.uk");
System.Net.HttpWebResponse hrspURL
= (System.Net.HttpWebResponse) hrqURL.GetResponse();
System.IO.StreamReader srdrInput
= new System.IO.StreamReader(hrspURL.GetResponseStream());
char[] chrBuff = new char[256];
int intLen = 0;
string strSource = "";
do
{
intLen = srdrInput.Read(chrBuff, 0, 256);
string strBuff = new string(chrBuff, 0, intLen);
strSource = strSource + strBuff;
}
while (intLen > 0);
m_strSource = strSource;
You can save a little typing by using the “Imports” statement in VB.Net or the “using” statement for C# to declare the namespaces at the beginning of the source code. This will allow you to skip typing the fully qualified names when using the classes. For this project, we will also want to import the System.Text and System.Text.RegularExpressions namespaces. Additionally, the C# version uses the System.Collections, which contains the ArrayList class, which will compensate for the missing ReDim statement, which is not supported.
After loading the source, we save it to the private variable, m_strSource which will be exposed to the object owner via a Source property. This property will be both read and write, so as to provide a way of loading the class directly from text. There are also some useful properties in the HTTPRequest object, like the host name and content type that will be populated upon a successful load as we shall see later on. These need to be cleared when the Source is set directly:
VB.Net:
Public Property Source() As String
Get
Source = m_strSource
End Get
Set(ByVal Value As String)
m_strSource = Value
m_strHost = ""
m_strCharacterSet = ""
m_strContentEncoding = ""
m_lngContentLength = 0
m_strContentType = ""
m_strLastModified = ""
End Set
End Property
C#:
public string Source
{
get
{ return(m_strSource); }
set
{
m_strSource = value;
m_strHost = "";
m_strCharacterSet = "";
m_strContentEncoding = "";
m_lngContentLength = 0;
m_strContentType = "";
m_strLastModified = "";
}
}
Parsing the HTML Document:
Now that we have a way to populate the class, let’s take a look at making sense of what’s there. If you are not familiar with Regular Expressions, you will have to operate a bit on faith here. There have been numerous books written on regular expressions, and even a quick look at the basics is beyond the scope of what space permits here. However, we can take a look at a very simple example that will at least whet your appetite for more. We will use several regular expressions to parse the HTML Document, but the simplest is the following:
<[^>]>
This tells the regular expression engine to find a pattern that begins with a less-than sign, ends with a greater-than sign and includes everything in between. This regular expression will match any tag. Now let’s look at matching an entire block, such a <HEAD></HEAD> entry. We can match everything in the HEAD block with the following regular expression:
<HEAD[^>]*>.*</HEAD\s*>
A special note is warranted here. You need to be aware of the conventions of the language in question when assigning strings such as the one above. C# will normally interpret the “\s” portion as an escape sequence. Embedded quotes are also a potential issue with either VB.Net or C#. With C#, it is possible to use an extra slash (“\\s”) but it is generally easier to prefix the string with an at-sign (“@”), which will tell C# to ignore escape sequences – similar to how a quoted string is encoded by VB.Net. The following table will illustrates the point:
Example:
Desired Regular Expression |
\s”\n |
C# (Method 1) |
“\\s\”\\n” |
C# (Method 2) |
@”\s””\s” |
VB.Net |
“\s””\n” |
Using the power of regular expressions, we can extract the raw text from our document using only a few lines of code. This type of regular expression for the HEAD tag will work for most but not all HTML tags. Some tags do not need a closing tag – such as <BR>. Other tags, such as a comment tag use a closing tag which is not in the standard form – a slash followed by the tag name. We will deal with the problem of non-closed blocks later, but for now we will write a function that will accept a tag name, returning the proper regular expression that will match that tag’s contents, assuming there is a corresponding closing tag:
VB.Net:
Private Function GetExpressionForTagContents _
(ByVal strTagName As String) As String
Dim strPatternTag As String
If strTagName = "!" Then
strPatternTag = "<!.*?-->"
ElseIf StrComp(strTagName, "!doctype", CompareMethod.Text) _
= 0 Then
strPatternTag = "<!doctype.*?>"
ElseIf StrComp(strTagName, "br", CompareMethod.Text) = 0 Then
strPatternTag = "<br\s*/?\s*>"
Else
strPatternTag _
= "<(" & strTagName & ")(>|\s+[^>]*>).*?</\1\s*>"
End If
GetExpressionForTagContents = strPatternTag
End Function
C#:
private string GetExpressionForTagContents
(string strTagName)
{
string strPatternTag;
if (strTagName == "!")
strPatternTag = "<!.*?-->";
else
if (string.Compare(strTagName, "!doctype", true) == 0)
strPatternTag = "<!doctype.*?>";
else
if (String.Compare(strTagName, "br", true) == 0)
strPatternTag = @"<br\s*/?\s*>";
else
strPatternTag
= @"<(" + strTagName + @")(>|\s+[^>]*>).*?</\1\s*>";
return(strPatternTag);
}
If there no closing tag is present, this match will fail and if so, we will take everything that lies between the tag in question and the less-than sign – or end of file. Let’s put all of this together and write a routine that will accept any tag name, and return the contents closing tag or not:
VB.Net:
Private Function GetTagByName _
(ByVal strTagName As String, ByVal strSource As String) As String
Dim strPatternTag As String = _
GetExpressionForTagContents(strTagName)
Dim strPatternTagNoClose = "<" & strTagName & "(>|\s+[^>]*>)[^<]"
Dim r As New Regex("")
Dim opts As RegexOptions _
= RegexOptions.IgnoreCase _
Or RegexOptions.Singleline
Dim m As Match
Dim mc As MatchCollection
Dim strGetTagByName As String
m = r.Match(strSource, strPatternTag, opts)
If m.Value = "" Then
m = r.Match(strSource, strPatternTagNoClose, opts)
If m Is Nothing Then
strGetTagByName = strSource
Else
strGetTagByName = m.Value
End If
Else
strGetTagByName = m.Value
End If
GetTagByName = strGetTagByName
End Function
C#:
private string GetTagByName
(string strTagName, string strSource)
{
string strPatternTag
= GetExpressionForTagContents(strTagName);
string strPatternTagNoClose
= "<" + strTagName + @"(>|\s+[^>]*>)[^<]";
RegexOptions opts
= RegexOptions.IgnoreCase | RegexOptions.Singleline;
Match m;
string strGetTagByName;
m = System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex.Match
(strSource, strPatternTag, opts);
if (m.Value == "")
{
m = System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex.Match
(strSource, strPatternTagNoClose, opts);
if (m == null)
strGetTagByName = strSource;
else
strGetTagByName = m.Value;
}
else
strGetTagByName = m.Value;
return(strGetTagByName);
}
We can now pull out any single tag or the first of multiple tags given its name. As you may have noticed, the above function was declared as private so it is for in-class use only. Soon we will write a public function called GetTagsByName that will return an array of tag contents – which will be suitable for returning the data for any tag whether it is found one time or many times. First, let’s add properties to return the HEAD, TITLE and BODY. For the HEAD and TITLE properties, we can just return the results of GetTagByName, passing the appropriate tag name. For the BODY, we need to be a bit more careful. It is possible that we could encounter a document with no HEAD or BODY tag at all. In such a case, GetTagByName will return a null string in which case we will simply return the entire document:
VB.Net:
Public ReadOnly Property Head() As String
Get
Head = GetTagByName("Head", m_strSource)
End Get
End Property
Public ReadOnly Property Title() As String
Get
Title = GetTagByName("Title", m_strSource)
End Get
End Property
Public ReadOnly Property Body() As String
Get
Dim strBody As String _
= GetTagByName("Body", m_strSource)
If strBody = "" Then
strBody = Me.Source
End If
Body = strBody
End Get
End Property
C#:
public string Head
{
get
{
return(GetTagByName("Head", m_strSource));
}
}
public string Title
{
get
{
return(GetTagByName("Title", m_strSource));
}
}
public string Body
{
get
{
string strBody
= GetTagByName("Body", m_strSource);
if (strBody == "")
strBody = this.Source;
return(strBody);
}
}
Extracting the Text:
We now have everything to pull out the raw text from the document. The text will be found in the BODY portion of the document so we will start with this. Then any comments plus anything found between SCRIPT blocks will be stripped. Next we will remove all remaining tags. Everything left over should be the textual content of the page.
Having extracted the text from the surrounding tags, we still have the possibility of encoded ISO characters like the famous &NBSP;. We will write a routine (not listed) to search for each of these and replace the ISO character with its corresponding ASCII equivalent. Lastly, use a while loop to remove any repeated blanks. The code listing for the Text property as well as a helper function to strip the comments appears below:
VB.Net:
Public ReadOnly Property Text() As String
Get
Dim r As New Regex("")
Dim opts As RegexOptions _
= RegexOptions.IgnoreCase Or RegexOptions.Singleline
Dim strText As String = Me.Body
strText = StripComments(strText)
Dim strPattern As String _
= GetExpressionForTagContents("SCRIPT")
strText = r.Replace(strText, strPattern, "", opts)
strPattern = "<[^>]*>"
strText = r.Replace(strText, strPattern, " ", opts)
strText = ISOtoASCII(strText)
strText = Regex.Replace(strText, "&", "&", opts)
Dim m As MatchCollection
Do
strText = r.Replace(strText, "\s\s", " ")
m = r.Matches(strText, "\s\s")
Loop Until m.Count = 0
Text = Trim(strText)
End Get
End Property
Private Function StripComments(ByVal strSource As String) As String
Dim r As New Regex( _
GetExpressionForTagContents("!"))
StripComments = r.Replace(strSource, "")
End Function
C#:
public string Text
{
get
{
Regex r = new Regex("");
RegexOptions opts
= RegexOptions.IgnoreCase | RegexOptions.Singleline;
string strText = this.Body;
strText = StripComments(strText);
string strPattern = GetExpressionForTagContents("SCRIPT");
strText = Regex.Replace(strText, strPattern, "", opts);
strPattern = @"<[^>]*>";
strText = Regex.Replace(strText, strPattern, " ", opts);
strText = ISOtoASCII(strText);
strText = Regex.Replace(strText,"&","&",opts);
System.Text.RegularExpressions.MatchCollection m;
do
{
strText = Regex.Replace(strText, @"\s\s", " ");
m = Regex.Matches(strText, @"\s\s");
}
while (m.Count > 0);
return(strText.Trim());
}
}
string StripComments()
{
Regex r
= new Regex(GetExpressionForTagContents("!"));
return( r.Replace(m_strSource, ""));
}
Iterating the Tags:
We are now ready to write GetTagsByName, which will accept a tag name and return an array containing the contents of all matching items. We initially might be tempted to re-write the single tag routine GetTagByName to use a Match Collection rather than a single Match, returning the value of each item. This is not going to work. Consider the following HTML snippet:
<UL>
<UL>
<UL>
<LI>Hello Mars!
</UL>
</UL>
</UL>
If we want to return the <UL> tag contents, the regular expression used by GetTagByName will return the entire snippet. This is correct for the first UL tag’s contents – but the remaining <UL> tags will be ignored. To solve this problem, we will first create a Match Collection that matches just the opening tag rather than the entire contents – the <UL> tag itself in this case. Then we will iterate through each of these matches, calling GetTagByName – but passing only the portion of the document that begins at the point of that particular match. Let’s take a look at how to put it all together. GetTagsByName will begin as usual by stripping out comments. Of course we will only want to do this if the tag being requested is not itself a comment. Next we will create a Match Collection by applying a regular expression that will return a Match object for each matching item. Finally, we will loop through the collection, calling GetTagByName for each matching tag. Note that the Index property of the Match object will indicate the position of the match – so it is a simple matter to pass only the portion of the document that begins where that tag begins:
VB.Net:
Public Function GetTagsByName(ByVal TagName As String, _
ByVal Source As String) As String()
Dim r As New Regex("")
Dim opts As RegexOptions _
= RegexOptions.IgnoreCase Or RegexOptions.Singleline
Dim strPattern As String
If TagName <> "!" Then
Source = StripComments(Source)
strPattern = "<(?<TagName>" & TagName & ")(>|\s+[^>]*>)"
Else
strPattern = "<(?<TagName>" + TagName + ")--"
End If
Dim mc As MatchCollection _
= r.Matches(Source, strPattern, opts)
Dim m As Match
Dim strTagContents() As String
Dim intIndex As Integer = 0
For Each m In mc
ReDim Preserve strTagContents(intIndex)
strTagContents(intIndex) _
= GetTagByName(TagName, _
Mid(Source, m.Groups("TagName").Index))
intIndex = intIndex + 1
Next
GetTagsByName = strTagContents
End Function
C#:
public string[] GetTagsByName(string TagName
, string Source)
{
RegexOptions opts
= RegexOptions.IgnoreCase | RegexOptions.Singleline;
string strPattern;
if (TagName != "!")
{
Source = StripComments(Source);
strPattern
= "<(?<TagName>" + TagName + @")(>|\s+[^>]*>)";
}
else
strPattern
= "<(?<TagName>" + TagName + @")--";
MatchCollection mc
= Regex.Matches(Source, strPattern, opts);
ArrayList strTagContents = new ArrayList();
foreach(Match m in mc)
{
strTagContents.Add(GetTagByName(TagName,
Source.Substring
(m.Groups["TagName"].Index-1)));
}
return((string[]) strTagContents.ToArray(typeof(String)));
}
Another useful function to add would be one to return all HRefs on each page. We could write a routine to retrieve all the anchor tags, and then pull out the HRef portion, but we can get a little better throughput by writing a specific regular expression especially for this purpose:
<a[^>]*href\s*=\s*""?(?<HRef>[^"">\s]*)""?[^>]*>
The ?<HRef> in the expression will capture the appropriate portion of the anchor tag and assign it a group name of HRef, allowing us to refer to it later using the syntax:
m.Groups("HRef").Value
We will also go ahead and normalize the HRefs as well by prefixing the server or protocol if missing. So, if the current page is www.bbc.co.uk, an entry such as:
/MoreStuff.html
Will be normalized to:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/MoreStuff.html
The normalization will be skipped for any null tags or tags beginning with the “#” character. Here is the complete listing:
VB.Net:
Public Function GetHRefs() As String()
Dim strSource As String = StripComments(m_strSource)
Dim r As New Regex( _
"<a[^>]*href\s*=\s*""?(?<HRef>[^"">\s]*)""?[^>]*>", _
RegexOptions.IgnoreCase Or RegexOptions.Singleline)
Dim mc As MatchCollection _
= r.Matches(Source)
Dim m As Match
Dim intIndex As Integer = 0
Dim strHRefs() As String
For Each m In mc
Dim strHRef = Trim(m.Groups("HRef").Value)
If strHRef <> "" Then
If Left(strHRef, 1) <> "#" Then
If Left(strHRef, 1) = "/" Then
strHRef = m_strServerURL & strHRef
ElseIf StrComp(Left(strHRef, 7), "http://", _
CompareMethod.Text) <> 0 Then
If StrComp(Left(strHRef, 3), "www", _
CompareMethod.Text) = 0 Then
strHRef = "http://" & strHRef
Else
strHRef = m_strPathURL & strHRef
End If
End If
End If
End If
ReDim Preserve strHRefs(intIndex)
strHRefs(intIndex) = strHRef
intIndex = intIndex + 1
Next
GetHRefs = strHRefs
End Function
C#:
public string[] GetHRefs()
{
string strSource = StripComments(m_strSource);
Regex r = new
Regex(@"<a[^>]*href\s*=\s*""?(?<HRef>[^"">\s]*)""?[^>]*>",
RegexOptions.IgnoreCase | RegexOptions.Singleline);
MatchCollection mc = r.Matches(Source);
ArrayList strHRefs = new ArrayList();
foreach(Match m in mc)
{
string strHRef = m.Groups["HRef"].Value;
strHRef.Trim();
if (strHRef != "")
if (Left(strHRef,1) != "#")
if (Left(strHRef,1) == "/")
strHRef = m_strServerURL + strHRef;
else
{
if (String.Compare(Left(strHRef,7),
"http://", true) != 0)
if (String.Compare(Left(strHRef, 3),
"www", true) == 0)
strHRef = "http://" + strHRef;
else
strHRef = m_strPathURL + strHRef;
}
strHRefs.Add(strHRef);
}
return(string[]) strHRefs.ToArray(typeof(string));
}
private string Left(string strString, int intLen)
{
if (strString.Length <= intLen)
return(strString);
else
return(strString.Substring(0,intLen));
}
Let’s Have Some Feedback!
I am a stickler for feedback. I am one of those people who think there are few things worse in life than waiting for a computer. Assuming we have done our best to provide reasonable response time – the next best thing to do is to inform the user with status information when available. Our vulnerable area in this project is during the LoadSource routine which is dependant on the whims of the Internet Goddess. Let’s add a couple of events that we can use to pass back status information to the user. One will fire during the loop that loads the content from the StreamReader, indicating the number of bytes loaded so far along with the total length. These can be subsequently used to populate the Value and Maximum properties of a Progress Bar. The second event will pass back textual status information. Here is the full LoadSource function, complete with the added events and a timeout feature, which should always be present in such a loop. Note that the content length is not always returned by the server, so a default length is used if none is available:
VB.Net:
Public Function LoadSource(ByVal URL As String) As Boolean
m_strURL = URL
Const DEFAULT_CONTENT_LENGTH As Integer = 40000
Dim strSource As String = ""
Dim strHost As String = ""
Dim strServerURL As String = ""
Dim strPathURL As String = ""
Dim strCharacterSet As String = ""
Dim strContentEncoding As String = ""
Dim lngContentLength As Long = 0
Dim strContentType As String = ""
Dim strServer As String = ""
Dim strLastModified As String = ""
Dim intTotalLength As Integer
If m_strURL = "" Then
RaiseEvent LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Error")
LoadSource = False
Else
Try
RaiseEvent LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Request")
RaiseEvent LoadProgress(m_strURL, 0, 0)
Dim hrqURL As HttpWebRequest _
= HttpWebRequest.Create(m_strURL)
Dim hrspURL As HttpWebResponse = hrqURL.GetResponse()
Dim srdrInput _
As New StreamReader(hrspURL.GetResponseStream())
Dim chrBuff(255) As Char
Dim intLen As Integer
If lngContentLength <= 0 Then
lngContentLength = DEFAULT_CONTENT_LENGTH
End If
RaiseEvent LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Load")
Dim tmeExpire As DateTime _
= DateAdd(DateInterval.Second, _
m_intTimeOutSeconds, Now)
Do
intLen = srdrInput.Read(chrBuff, 0, 256)
Dim strBuff As New String(chrBuff, 0, intLen)
strSource = strSource & strBuff
intTotalLength = intTotalLength + intLen
If intTotalLength > lngContentLength Then
lngContentLength = 2 * intTotalLength
End If
RaiseEvent LoadProgress _
(m_strURL, lngContentLength, intTotalLength)
If DateDiff(DateInterval.Second, tmeExpire, Now) _
> 0 Then
RaiseEvent LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Error")
LoadSource = False
Exit Do
End If
Loop While intLen
srdrInput.Close()
hrspURL.Close()
With hrspURL
strHost = .ResponseUri.Host
Dim m As Match _
= Regex.Match(.ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri, _
"/", RegexOptions.RightToLeft)
If m Is Nothing Then
strPathURL = .ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri & "/"
Else
strPathURL _
= .ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri.Substring(0, m.Index) _
& "/"
End If
m = Regex.Match(.ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri, _
strHost, RegexOptions.RightToLeft _
Or RegexOptions.IgnoreCase)
If m Is Nothing Then
strServerURL = .ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri
Else
strServerURL _
= .ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri.Substring _
(0, m.Index + strHost.Length)
End If
strCharacterSet = .CharacterSet
strContentEncoding = .ContentEncoding
lngContentLength = .ContentLength
strContentType = .ContentType
strLastModified = .LastModified
End With
RaiseEvent LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Complete")
LoadSource = True
Catch
RaiseEvent LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Error")
LoadSource = False
End Try
End If
m_strHost = strHost
m_strServerURL = strServerURL
m_strPathURL = strPathURL
m_strSource = strSource
m_strCharacterSet = strCharacterSet
m_strContentEncoding = strContentEncoding
m_lngContentLength = lngContentLength
m_strContentType = strContentType
m_strLastModified = strLastModified
RaiseEvent LoadProgress(m_strURL, intTotalLength, _
intTotalLength)
End Function
C#:
public bool LoadSource(string URL)
{
m_strURL = URL;
const int DEFAULT_CONTENT_LENGTH = 40000;
string strSource = "";
string strHost = "";
string strServerURL = "";
string strPathURL = "";
string strCharacterSet = "";
string strContentEncoding = "";
long lngContentLength = 0;
string strContentType = "";
string strLastModified = "";
int intTotalLength = 0;
if (m_strURL == "")
{
if (LoadStatus != null)
LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Error");
return(false);
}
else
{
try
{
if (LoadStatus != null)
LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Request");
if (LoadProgress != null)
LoadProgress(m_strURL, 0, 0);
HttpWebRequest hrqURL
= (HttpWebRequest)
HttpWebRequest.Create(m_strURL);
HttpWebResponse hrspURL
= (HttpWebResponse)
hrqURL.GetResponse();
StreamReader srdrInput
= new StreamReader
(hrspURL.GetResponseStream());
char[]chrBuff = new char[256];
int intLen;
if (lngContentLength <= 0)
lngContentLength = DEFAULT_CONTENT_LENGTH;
if (LoadStatus != null)
LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Load");
DateTime tmeExpire
= new DateTime(DateTime.Now.Ticks);
tmeExpire
= tmeExpire.AddSeconds(m_intTimeOutSeconds);
do
{
intLen = srdrInput.Read(chrBuff, 0, 256);
string strBuff = new string(chrBuff, 0, intLen);
strSource = strSource + strBuff;
intTotalLength = intTotalLength + intLen;
if (intTotalLength > lngContentLength)
lngContentLength = 2 * intTotalLength;
if (LoadProgress != null)
LoadProgress(m_strURL, lngContentLength,
intTotalLength);
if (System.DateTime.Compare(tmeExpire,
System.DateTime.Now ) < 0)
{
if (LoadStatus != null)
LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Error");
return(false);
}
}
while(intLen>0);
srdrInput.Close();
hrspURL.Close();
strHost = hrspURL.ResponseUri.Host;
Match m
= Regex.Match(hrspURL.ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri,
"/", RegexOptions.RightToLeft);
if (m == null)
strPathURL = hrspURL.ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri + "/";
else
strPathURL
= hrspURL.ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri.Substring_
(0, m.Index) + "/";
m = Regex.Match(hrspURL.ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri,
strHost, RegexOptions.RightToLeft
| RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
if (m == null)
strServerURL = hrspURL.ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri;
else
strServerURL
= hrspURL.ResponseUri.AbsoluteUri.Substring
(0, m.Index + strHost.Length);
strCharacterSet = hrspURL.CharacterSet;
strContentEncoding = hrspURL.ContentEncoding;
lngContentLength = hrspURL.ContentLength;
strContentType = hrspURL.ContentType;
strLastModified = hrspURL.LastModified.ToString();
if (LoadStatus != null)
LoadStatus(m_strURL, "Complete");
}
catch
{
if (LoadStatus != null)
LoadStatus(m_strURL, "error");
return(false);
}
}
m_strHost = strHost;
m_strServerURL = strServerURL;
m_strPathURL = strPathURL;
m_strSource = strSource;
m_strCharacterSet = strCharacterSet;
m_strContentEncoding = strContentEncoding;
m_lngContentLength = lngContentLength;
m_strContentType = strContentType;
m_strLastModified = strLastModified;
if (LoadProgress != null)
LoadProgress(m_strURL, intTotalLength, intTotalLength);
return(true);
}
Note by :yungangwu
By Jon Vote