Rendering HTML is far from "easy", especially with the "simple" things like tables and images. You might find some inspiration in the converters that convert HTML to Postscript and/or (La)TEX. For the actual rendering, you will also have to consider CSS and the like.
Under Win32, there are two relatively easy ways to capture the image of a webpage, either you automate Internet Explorer to display the HTML, and then take a screenshot, or you automate Internet Explorer to print the page into a file, and then postprocess that file.
Under Unix, I see only the way of printing to a file, but there is no such nice way of automating a browser as there is under Win32. You might be able to write some XS-glue to automate one of the rendering engines (KHTML, Gecko), but that's not "easy" per se (IMO).
perl -MHTTP::Daemon -MHTTP::Response -MLWP::Simple -e ' ; # The $d = new HTTP::Daemon and fork and getprint $d->url and exit;#spider ($c = $d->accept())->get_request(); $c->send_response( new #in the HTTP::Response(200,$_,$_,qq(Just another Perl hacker\n))); ' # web
In reply to Re: Rendering HTML / capturing pixels
by Corion
in thread Rendering HTML / capturing pixels
by SpaceAce
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