Mammoth is designed to convert .docx documents,
such as those created by Microsoft Word,
and convert them to HTML.
Mammoth aims to produce simple and clean HTML by using semantic information in the document,
and ignoring other details.
For instance,
Mammoth converts any paragraph with the style Heading1
to h1
elements,
rather than attempting to exactly copy the styling (font, text size, colour, etc.) of the heading.
There's a large mismatch between the structure used by .docx and the structure of HTML, meaning that the conversion is unlikely to be perfect for more complicated documents. Mammoth works best if you only use styles to semantically mark up your document.
pip install mammoth
You can convert docx files by passing the path to the docx file and the output file. For instance:
mammoth document.docx output.html
If no output file is specified, output is written to stdout instead.
By default, images are included inline in the output HTML.
If an output directory is specified by --output-dir
,
the images are written to separate files instead.
For instance:
mammoth document.docx --output-dir=output-dir
Existing files will be overwritten if present.
A custom style map can be read from a file using --style-map
.
For instance:
mammoth document.docx output.html --style-map=custom-style-map
Where custom-style-map
looks something like:
p.AsideHeading => div.aside > h2:fresh
p.AsideText => div.aside > p:fresh
To convert an existing .docx file to HTML,
pass a file-like object to mammoth.convert_to_html
.
The file should be opened in binary mode.
For instance:
import mammoth
with open("document.docx", "rb") as docx_file:
result = mammoth.convert_to_html(docx_file)
html = result.value # The generated HTML
messages = result.messages # Any messages, such as warnings during conversion
By default,
Mammoth maps some common .docx styles to HTML elements.
For instance,
a paragraph with the style Heading1
is converted to a h1
element.
You can pass in a custom style map using the style_map
argument.
A description of the syntax for style maps can be found in the section "Writing style maps".
For instance, if paragraphs with the style SectionTitle
should be converted to h1
elements,
and paragraphs with the style SubSectionTitle
should be converted to h2
elements:
import mammoth
style_map = """
p.SectionTitle => h1:fresh
p.SubSectionTitle => h2:fresh
"""
with open("document.docx", "rb") as docx_file:
result = mammoth.convert_to_html(docx_file, style_map=style_map)
User-defined style mappings are used in preference to the default style mappings.
To stop using the default style mappings altogether,
set pass include_default_style_map=False
:
result = mammoth.convert_to_html(docx_file, style_map=style_map, include_default_style_map=False)
A style map is made up of a number of style mappings separated by new lines.
A style mapping has two parts:
- On the left, before the arrow, is the document element matcher.
- On the right, after the arrow, is the HTML path.
When converting each paragraph, Mammoth finds the first style mapping where the document element matcher matches the current paragraph. Mammoth then ensures the HTML path is satisfied.
When writing style mappings, it's helpful to understand Mammoth's notion of freshness. When generating, Mammoth will only close an HTML element when necessary. Otherwise, elements are reused.
For instance, suppose one of the specified style mappings is p.Heading1 => h1
.
If Mammoth encounters a .docx paragraph with the style Heading1
,
the .docx paragraph is converted to a h1
element with the same text.
If the next .docx paragraph also has the style Heading1
,
then the text of that paragraph will be appended to the existing h1
element,
rather than creating a new h1
element.
In most cases, you'll probably want to generate a new h1
element instead.
You can specify this by using the :fresh
modifier:
p.Heading1 => h1:fresh
The two consective Heading1
.docx paragraphs will then be converted to two separate h1
elements.
Reusing elements is useful in generating more complicated HTML structures.
For instance, suppose your .docx contains asides.
Each aside might have a heading and some body text,
which should be contained within a single div.aside
element.
In this case, style mappings similar to p.AsideHeading => div.aside > h2:fresh
and
p.AsideText => div.aside > p:fresh
might be helpful.
Match any paragraph:
p
Match any run:
r
To match a paragraph or run with a specific style name,
append a dot followed by the style name.
For instance, to match a paragraph with the style Heading1
:
p.Heading1
The simplest HTML path is to specify a single element.
For instance, to specify an h1
element:
h1
To give an element a CSS class, append a dot followed by the name of the class:
h1.section-title
To require that an element is fresh, use :fresh
:
h1:fresh
Modifiers must be used in the correct order:
h1.section-title:fresh
Use >
to specify nested elements.
For instance, to specify h2
within div.aside
:
div.aside > h2
You can nest elements to any depth.