NAME
URI::ParseSearchString::More - Extract search strings from more referrers.
VERSION
version 0.19
SYNOPSIS
use URI::ParseSearchString::More ();
my $more = URI::ParseSearchString::More->new;
my $search_terms = $more->se_term( 'https://www.google.ca/search?q=perl' );
DESCRIPTION
This module is a subclass of URI::ParseSearchString, so you can call any methods on this object that you would call on a URI::ParseSearchString object. This module works a little harder than its SuperClass to get you results. If it fails, it will return to you the results that URI::ParseSearchString would have returned to you anyway, so it should function well as a drop-in replacement.
WWW::Mechanize is used to extract search strings from some URLs which contain session info rather than search params. Optionally, WWW::Mechanize::Cached can be used to cache your lookups. There is additional parsing and also a guess() method which will return good results in many cases of doubt.
Repository: http://github.com/oalders/uri-parsesearchstring-more/tree/master
USAGE
use URI::ParseSearchString::More ();
my $more = URI::ParseSearchString::More->new;
my $search_terms = $more->se_term( $url );
URI::ParseSearchString
parse_search_string( $url )
At this point, this is the only "extended" URI::ParseSearchString method. This method performs the following bit of logic:
1) If the URL supplied looks to be a search query with session info rather than search data in the URL, it will attempt to access the URL and extract the search terms from the page returned.
2) If this returns no results, the URL will be processed by parse_more()
3) If there are still no results, the results of URI::ParseSearchString::se_term will be returned.
WWW::Mechanize::Cached can be used to speed up your movement through large log files which may contain multiple similar URLs:
use URI::ParseSearchString::More ();
my $more = URI::ParseSearchString::More->new;
$more->set_cached( 1 );
my $search_terms = $more->se_term( $url );
One interesting thing to note is that maps.google.* URLs have 2 important params: "q" and "near". The same can be said for local.google.* I would think the results would be incomplete without including the value of "near" in the search terms for these searches. So, expect the following results:
my $url = 'http://local.google.ca/local?sc=1&hl=en&near=Stratford%20ON&btnG=Google%20Search&q=home%20health';
my $terms = $more->parse_search_string( $url );
# $terms will = "home health Stratford ON"
Engines with session info currently supported:
aol.com
se_term( $url )
A convenience method which calls parse_search_string.
URI::ParseSearchString::More
blame
Returns the name of the module that came up with the results on the last string parsed by parse_search_string(). Possible results:
URI::ParseSearchString
URI::ParseSearchString::More
set_cached( 0|1 )
Turn caching off and on. As of version 0.08 caching is OFF by default. See KNOWN ISSUES below for more info on this.
get_cached
Returns 1 if caching is currently on, 0 if it is not.
get_mech
This gives you direct access to the Mechanize object. If caching is enabled, a WWW::Mechanize::Cached object will be returned. If caching is disabled, a WWW::Mechanize object will be returned.
If you know what you're doing, play around with it. Caveat emptor.
use URI::ParseSearchString::More ();
my $more = URI::ParseSearchString::More->new;
my $mech = $more->get_mech();
$mech->agent('My Agent Name');
my $url = '...';
my $search_terms = $more->se_term( $url );
parse_more( $url )
Handles the bulk of More's parsing. This is automatically called (if needed) when you pass a search string to se_term(). However, you may also call it directly. Just keep in mind that this method will NOT try to get results from URI::ParseSearchString if it comes up empty.
guess( $url )
For the most part, the parsing that goes on is done with specific search engines (ie. the ones that we already know about) in mind. However, in a lot cases, a good guess is all that you need. For example, a URI which contains a query string with the parameter "q" or "query" is generally the product of a search. If se_term() or parse_more() has come up empty, guess may just provide you with a valid search term. Then again, it may not. Caveat emptor.
TO DO
I've pretty much added all of the search engines I care about. If you'd like something added, please get in touch.
NOTES
Despite its low version number, this module is now stable.
KNOWN ISSUES
As of 0.13 WWW::Mechanize::Cached 1.33 is required. This solves the errors which were being thrown by Storable.
AUTHOR
Olaf Alders <olaf@wundercounter.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012-2018 by Olaf Alders.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.