On Google Chrome (Canary), it seems no string can make the DOM parser fail. I'm trying to parse some HTML, but if the HTML isn't completely, 100%, valid, I want it to display an error. I've tried the obvious:
var newElement = document.createElement('div');
newElement.innerHTML = someMarkup; // Might fail on IE, never on Chrome.
I've also tried the method in this question. Doesn't fail for invalid markup, even the most invalid markup I can produce.
So, is there some way to parse HTML "strictly" in Google Chrome at least? I don't want to resort to tokenizing it myself or using an external validation utility. If there's no other alternative, a strict XML parser is fine, but certain elements don't require closing tags in HTML, and preferably those shouldn't fail.
Use the DOMParser to check a document in two steps:
HTMLUnknownElement. For this purpose, getElementsByTagName('*') fits well.<area> in <map>)/* DOM parser for text/html, see https://stackoverflow.com/a/9251106/938089 */
;(function(DOMParser) {"use strict";var DOMParser_proto=DOMParser.prototype,real_parseFromString=DOMParser_proto.parseFromString;try{if((new DOMParser).parseFromString("", "text/html"))return;}catch(e){}DOMParser_proto.parseFromString=function(markup,type){if(/^\s*text\/html\s*(;|$)/i.test(type)){var doc=document.implementation.createHTMLDocument(""),doc_elt=doc.documentElement,first_elt;doc_elt.innerHTML=markup;first_elt=doc_elt.firstElementChild;if (doc_elt.childElementCount===1&&first_elt.localName.toLowerCase()==="html")doc.replaceChild(first_elt,doc_elt);return doc;}else{return real_parseFromString.apply(this, arguments);}};}(DOMParser));
/*
 * @description              Validate a HTML string
 * @param       String html  The HTML string to be validated 
 * @returns            null  If the string is not wellformed XML
 *                    false  If the string contains an unknown element
 *                     true  If the string satisfies both conditions
 */
function validateHTML(html) {
    var parser = new DOMParser()
      , d = parser.parseFromString('<?xml version="1.0"?>'+html,'text/xml')
      , allnodes;
    if (d.querySelector('parsererror')) {
        console.log('Not welformed HTML (XML)!');
        return null;
    } else {
        /* To use text/html, see https://stackoverflow.com/a/9251106/938089 */
        d = parser.parseFromString(html, 'text/html');
        allnodes = d.getElementsByTagName('*');
        for (var i=allnodes.length-1; i>=0; i--) {
            if (allnodes[i] instanceof HTMLUnknownElement) return false;
        }
    }
    return true; /* The document is syntactically correct, all tags are closed */
}
console.log(validateHTML('<div>'));  //  null, because of the missing close tag
console.log(validateHTML('<x></x>'));// false, because it's not a HTML element
console.log(validateHTML('<a></a>'));//  true, because the tag is closed,
                                     //       and the element is a HTML element
See revision 1 of this answer for an alternative to XML validation without the DOMParser.
null for <input type="text">, while it's valid HTML5 (because the tag is not closed).If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
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