mwparserfromhell (the MediaWiki Parser from Hell) is a Python package that provides an easy-to-use and outrageously powerful parser for MediaWiki wikicode. It supports Python 2 and Python 3.
Developed by Earwig with contributions from Σ, Legoktm, and others. Full documentation is available on ReadTheDocs. Development occurs on GitHub.
The easiest way to install the parser is through the Python Package Index;
you can install the latest release with pip install mwparserfromhell
(get pip). On Windows, make sure you have the latest version of pip
installed by running pip install --upgrade pip
.
Alternatively, get the latest development version:
git clone https://github.com/earwig/mwparserfromhell.git cd mwparserfromhell python setup.py install
You can run the comprehensive unit testing suite with
python setup.py test -q
.
Normal usage is rather straightforward (where text
is page text):
>>> import mwparserfromhell >>> wikicode = mwparserfromhell.parse(text)
wikicode
is a mwparserfromhell.Wikicode
object, which acts like an
ordinary str
object (or unicode
in Python 2) with some extra methods.
For example:
>>> text = "I has a template! {{foo|bar|baz|eggs=spam}} See it?" >>> wikicode = mwparserfromhell.parse(text) >>> print(wikicode) I has a template! {{foo|bar|baz|eggs=spam}} See it? >>> templates = wikicode.filter_templates() >>> print(templates) ['{{foo|bar|baz|eggs=spam}}'] >>> template = templates[0] >>> print(template.name) foo >>> print(template.params) ['bar', 'baz', 'eggs=spam'] >>> print(template.get(1).value) bar >>> print(template.get("eggs").value) spam
Since nodes can contain other nodes, getting nested templates is trivial:
>>> text = "{{foo|{{bar}}={{baz|{{spam}}}}}}" >>> mwparserfromhell.parse(text).filter_templates() ['{{foo|{{bar}}={{baz|{{spam}}}}}}', '{{bar}}', '{{baz|{{spam}}}}', '{{spam}}']
You can also pass recursive=False
to filter_templates()
and explore
templates manually. This is possible because nodes can contain additional
Wikicode
objects:
>>> code = mwparserfromhell.parse("{{foo|this {{includes a|template}}}}") >>> print(code.filter_templates(recursive=False)) ['{{foo|this {{includes a|template}}}}'] >>> foo = code.filter_templates(recursive=False)[0] >>> print(foo.get(1).value) this {{includes a|template}} >>> print(foo.get(1).value.filter_templates()[0]) {{includes a|template}} >>> print(foo.get(1).value.filter_templates()[0].get(1).value) template
Templates can be easily modified to add, remove, or alter params. Wikicode
objects can be treated like lists, with append()
, insert()
,
remove()
, replace()
, and more. They also have a matches()
method
for comparing page or template names, which takes care of capitalization and
whitespace:
>>> text = "{{cleanup}} '''Foo''' is a [[bar]]. {{uncategorized}}" >>> code = mwparserfromhell.parse(text) >>> for template in code.filter_templates(): ... if template.name.matches("Cleanup") and not template.has("date"): ... template.add("date", "July 2012") ... >>> print(code) {{cleanup|date=July 2012}} '''Foo''' is a [[bar]]. {{uncategorized}} >>> code.replace("{{uncategorized}}", "{{bar-stub}}") >>> print(code) {{cleanup|date=July 2012}} '''Foo''' is a [[bar]]. {{bar-stub}} >>> print(code.filter_templates()) ['{{cleanup|date=July 2012}}', '{{bar-stub}}']
You can then convert code
back into a regular str
object (for
saving the page!) by calling str()
on it:
>>> text = str(code) >>> print(text) {{cleanup|date=July 2012}} '''Foo''' is a [[bar]]. {{bar-stub}} >>> text == code True
Likewise, use unicode(code)
in Python 2.
mwparserfromhell
is used by and originally developed for EarwigBot;
Page
objects have a parse
method that essentially calls
mwparserfromhell.parse()
on page.get()
.
If you're using Pywikibot, your code might look like this:
import mwparserfromhell import pywikibot def parse(title): site = pywikibot.Site() page = pywikibot.Page(site, title) text = page.get() return mwparserfromhell.parse(text)
If you're not using a library, you can parse any page using the following code (via the API):
import json from urllib.parse import urlencode from urllib.request import urlopen import mwparserfromhell API_URL = "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php" def parse(title): data = {"action": "query", "prop": "revisions", "rvlimit": 1, "rvprop": "content", "format": "json", "titles": title} raw = urlopen(API_URL, urlencode(data).encode()).read() res = json.loads(raw) text = res["query"]["pages"].values()[0]["revisions"][0]["*"] return mwparserfromhell.parse(text)