I am new to web scraping and I'm trying to scrape the "statistics" page of yahoo finance for AAPL. Here's the link: https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/AAPL/key-statistics?p=AAPL
Here is the code I have so far...
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
from requests import get
url = 'https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/AAPL/key-statistics?p=AAPL'
response = get(url)
soup = BeautifulSoup(response.text, 'html.parser')
stock_data = soup.find_all("table")
for stock in stock_data:
print(stock.text)
When I run that, I return all of the table data on the page. However, I only want specific data from each table (e.g. "Market Cap", "Revenue", "Beta").
I tried messing around with the code by doing print(stock[1].text) to see if I could limit the amount of data returned to just the second value in each table but that returned an error message. Am I on the right track by using BeautifulSoup or do I need to use a completely different library? What would I have to do in order to only return particular data and not all of the table data on the page?
Examining the HTML-code gives you the best idea of how BeautifulSoup will handle what it sees.
The web page seems to contain several tables, which in turn contain the information you are after. The tables follow a certain logic.
First scrape all the tables on the web page, then find all the table rows (<tr>) and the table data (<td>) that those rows contain.
Below is one way of achieving this. I even threw in a function to print only a specific measurement.
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
from requests import get
url = 'https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/AAPL/key-statistics?p=AAPL'
response = get(url)
soup = BeautifulSoup(response.text, 'html.parser')
stock_data = soup.find_all("table")
# stock_data will contain multiple tables, next we examine each table one by one
for table in stock_data:
# Scrape all table rows into variable trs
trs = table.find_all('tr')
for tr in trs:
# Scrape all table data tags into variable tds
tds = tr.find_all('td')
# Index 0 of tds will contain the measurement
print("Measure: {}".format(tds[0].get_text()))
# Index 1 of tds will contain the value
print("Value: {}".format(tds[1].get_text()))
print("")
def get_measurement(table_array, measurement):
for table in table_array:
trs = table.find_all('tr')
for tr in trs:
tds = tr.find_all('td')
if measurement.lower() in tds[0].get_text().lower():
return(tds[1].get_text())
# print only one measurement, e.g. operating cash flow
print(get_measurement(stock_data, "operating cash flow"))
Although this isn't Yahoo Finance, you can do something very similar like this...
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
base_url = 'https://finviz.com/screener.ashx?v=152&o=price&t=MSFT,AAPL,SBUX,S,GOOG&o=price&c=0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,25,63,64,65,66,67'
html = requests.get(base_url)
soup = BeautifulSoup(html.content, "html.parser")
main_div = soup.find('div', attrs = {'id':'screener-content'})
light_rows = main_div.find_all('tr', class_="table-light-row-cp")
dark_rows = main_div.find_all('tr', class_="table-dark-row-cp")
data = []
for rows_set in (light_rows, dark_rows):
for row in rows_set:
row_data = []
for cell in row.find_all('td'):
val = cell.a.get_text()
row_data.append(val)
data.append(row_data)
# sort rows to maintain original order
data.sort(key=lambda x: int(x[0]))
import pandas
pandas.DataFrame(data).to_csv("C:\\your_path\\AAA.csv", header=False)
This is a nice substitute in case Yahoo decided to depreciate more of the functionality of their API. I know they cut out a lot of things (mostly historical quotes) a couple years ago. It was sad to see that go away.
Related
I am new to data scraping with Beautiful Soup. I would like to get data from pro-football-reference on these stats: https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/201009090nor.htm#all_pbp
I would like to iterate through every row under the 'Detail Column' under the Full Play-By-Play Table so that if the Detail contains the word "Penalty" I can save that. Any chance anyone knows how I could possibly do this? This table seems different than others.
# Any example of how I extracted another element (Referee Name)
# from the same page but different table
table = soup.select_one('#all_officials').find_next(text=lambda t: isinstance(t, Comment))
table = BeautifulSoup(table, 'html.parser')
for tr in table.select('tr'):
tds = [td.get_text(strip=True) for td in tr.select('td')]
if str(*tds) != "Officials":
referee = str(*tds)
break
The table is commented out. A common and reliable way is to import Comment and handle with for comment in soup.find_all(text=lambda text: isinstance(text, Comment)) as shown here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/60381103.
For this particular instance, I am just removing the comments strings through substitution.
Then I use :-soup-contains to target the appropriate rows, filtering on only those rows within the table where the text Penalty appears in the elements with data-stat attribute having value = detail i.e. the detail column.
I then use pandas to reconstitute the table from the filtered trs html joined and then book-ended by table tags
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup as bs
import pandas as pd
import requests
import re
r = requests.get('https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/201009090nor.htm#all_pbp',
headers={'User-Agent': 'Mozilla/5.0'})
s = re.sub(r'<!--|-->', '', r.text)
soup = bs(s, 'lxml')
s2 = '<table>' + ''.join([str(i) for i in soup.select(
'#pbp tr:has([data-stat=detail]:-soup-contains("Penalty"))')]) + '</table>'
df = pd.read_html(s2)[0]
df.columns = [i.text for i in soup.select('#pbp thead > tr > th')]
df
I am trying to scrape the bitcoin price off of coinbase and cannot find the proper syntax. When I run the program (without the line with question marks) I get the block of html that I need, but I don't know how to narrow down and retrieve the price itself. Any help appreciated, thanks.
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
url = 'https://www.coinbase.com/charts'
data = requests.get(url)
nicedata = data.text
soup = BeautifulSoup(nicedata, 'html.parser')
prettysoup = soup.prettify()
bitcoin = soup.find('h4', {'class':
'Header__StyledHeader-sc-1q6y56a-0 hZxUBM
TextElement__Spacer-sc-18l8wi5-0 hpeTzd'})
price = bitcoin.find('???')
print(price)
The attached image contains the html
To get text from item:
price = bitcoin.text
But this page has many items <h4> with this class but find() gets only first one and it has text Bitcoin, not price from your image. You may need find_all() to get list with all items and then you can use index [index] or slicing [start:end] to get some items, or you can use for-loop to work with every item on list.
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
url = 'https://www.coinbase.com/charts'
r = requests.get(url)
soup = BeautifulSoup(r.text, 'html.parser')
all_h4 = soup.find_all('h4', {'class': 'Header__StyledHeader-sc-1q6y56a-0 hZxUBM TextElement__Spacer-sc-18l8wi5-0 hpeTzd'})
for h4 in all_h4:
print(h4.text)
It can be easier to work with data if you keep it in list of list or array or DataFrame. But to create list of lists it would be easier to find rows <tr> and inside every row search <h4>
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
url = 'https://www.coinbase.com/charts'
r = requests.get(url, headers=headers)
soup = BeautifulSoup(r.text, 'html.parser')
all_tr = soup.find_all('tr')
data = []
for tr in all_tr:
row = []
for h4 in tr.find_all('h4'):
row.append(h4.text)
if row: # skip empty row
data.append(row)
for row in data:
print(row)
It doesn't need class to get all h4.
BTW: This page uses JavaScript to append new rows when you scroll page but requests and BeautifulSoup can't run JavaScript - so if you will need all rows then you may need Selenium to control web browser which runs JavaScript
I am currently running the following python script:
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
origin= ["USD","GBP","EUR"]
i=0
while i < len(origin):
page = requests.get("https://www.x-rates.com/table/?from="+origin[i]+"&amount=1")
soup = BeautifulSoup(page.content, "html.parser")
tables = soup.findChildren('table')
my_table = tables[0]
rows = my_table.findChildren(['td'])
i = i +1
for rows in rows:
cells = rows.findChildren('a')
for cell in cells:
value = cell.string
print(value)
To scrape data from this HTML:
https://i.stack.imgur.com/DkX83.png
The problem I have is that I'm struggling to only scrape the first column without scraping the second one as well because they are both under tags and in the same table row as each other. The href is the only thing which differentiates between the two tags and I have tried filtering using this but it doesn't seem to work and returns a blank value. Also when i try to sort the data manually the output is amended vertically and not horizontally, I am new to coding so any help would be appreciated :)
There is another way you might wanna try as well to achieve the same:
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
keywords = ["USD","GBP","EUR"]
for keyword in keywords:
page = requests.get("https://www.x-rates.com/table/?from={}&amount=1".format(keyword))
soup = BeautifulSoup(page.content, "html.parser")
for items in soup.select_one(".ratesTable tbody").find_all("tr"):
data = [item.text for item in items.find_all("td")[1:2]]
print(data)
It is easier to follow what happens when you print every item you got from the top e.g. in this case from table item. The idea is to go one by one so you can follow.
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
origin= ["USD","GBP","EUR"]
i=0
while i < len(origin):
page = requests.get("https://www.x-rates.com/table/?from="+origin[i]+"&amount=1")
soup = BeautifulSoup(page.content, "html.parser")
tables = soup.findChildren('table')
my_table = tables[0]
i = i +1
rows = my_table.findChildren('tr')
for row in rows:
cells = row.findAll('td',class_='rtRates')
if len(cells) > 0:
first_item = cells[0].find('a')
value = first_item.string
print(value)
I am writing a Python script using BeautifulSoup to scrape values from this webpage: https://uk-air.defra.gov.uk/latest/currentlevels
I want to use soup.find() to get values for "Hourly mean Nitrogen dioxide" and "Last updated" from the table row where the "Monitoring site" is "Edinburgh St Leonards".
As I am new to web scraping I am having a bit of trouble so would be grateful for any help on this.
Scrap all the html tables in a list of tables.
The table index may change, then you should not rely on a row/column index.
A part of the folowing script look up for the index of the searched data. Moreover, it prints the header name: so you know want are the data you get.
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
import urllib.request
import re
with urllib.request.urlopen('https://uk-air.defra.gov.uk/latest/currentlevels?view=region') as response:
htmlData = response.read()
soup = BeautifulSoup(htmlData, 'html5lib')
tables = soup.find_all('table', attrs={'class':'current_levels_table'})
#what you want to check:
Iwant = ['nitrogen', 'update']
about = 'Edinburgh'
for table in tables:
#get header to have the data (we're looking for) column number and table real names
table_head = table.find('thead')
headrows = table_head.find_all('tr')
measures = headrows[1].find_all('th')
for colnum, measure in enumerate(measures):
index.update({colnum: measure.text.strip() for wanted in Iwant if re.search(wanted+'(?iu)', measure.text)})
#get table content and look for Edinburgh
table_body = table.find('tbody')
rows = table_body.find_all('tr')
for row in rows:
cels = row.find_all('td')
rowContent = [cel.text.strip().replace(u'\xa0', u' ').replace(u'\n Timeseries Graph', u'') for cel in cels if cel]
if re.search(about+'(?iu)', rowContent[0]):
for indexwanted, measurewanted in index.items():
print(measurewanted, ':', rowContent[indexwanted])
Making use of the suggestion from d2718nis, you can do it in this way. Of course, many other ways would work too.
First, find the link that has the 'Edinburgh St Leonards' text in it. Then find the grandparent of that link element, which is a tr element. Now identify the td elements in the tr. When you examine the table you see that the columns you want are the 4th and 7th. Get those from all of the td elements as the (0-relative) 3rd and 6th. Finally, display the crude texts of these elements.
You will need to do something clever to extract properly readable strings from these results.
>>> import requests
>>> import bs4
>>> page = requests.get('https://uk-air.defra.gov.uk/latest/currentlevels', headers={'User-Agent': 'Not blank'}).content
>>> soup = bs4.BeautifulSoup(page, 'lxml')
>>> Edinburgh_link = soup.find_all('a',string='Edinburgh St Leonards')[0]
>>> Edinburgh_link
Edinburgh St Leonards
>>> Edinburgh_row = Edinburgh_link.findParent('td').findParent('tr')
>>> Edinburgh_columns = Edinburgh_row.findAll('td')
>>> Edinburgh_columns[3]
<td class="center"><span class="bg_low1 bold">20 (1 Low)</span></td>
>>> Edinburgh_columns[6]
<td>05/08/2017<br/>14:00:00</td>
>>> Edinburgh_columns[3].text
'20\xa0(1\xa0Low)'
>>> Edinburgh_columns[6].text
'05/08/201714:00:00'
you can start with this:
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
# Request the page, set headers to prevent 403 Forbidden
page = requests.get(
url='https://uk-air.defra.gov.uk/latest/currentlevels',
headers={'User-Agent': 'Not blank'})
# Get html from page
html = page.text
# BeautifulSoup object
soup = BeautifulSoup(html, 'html5lib')
for table in soup.find_all('table'):
# Print all tables on the page
print(table)
I was trying to crawl the link : "http://codeforces.com/contest/554/standings" .
I used the given two lines to read all contestant names :
table1 = soup.find("table", {'class':'standings'})
table2 = table1.find_all("tr")
However table2 doesn't print all the table rows.
I found " <--suppress HtmlUnknownAttribute --> " written before all the rows I wasn't able to crawl.
Is there any particular reason for it.
I am just a beginner to web crawling
You may need to share the code in entirety. I get the expected 100 contestant names based on your initial "tr" find_all:
import urllib2
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
response = urllib2.urlopen('http://codeforces.com/contest/554/standings')
html = response.read()
soup = BeautifulSoup(html, 'html.parser')
table = soup.find('table', {'class': 'standings'})
rows = table.find_all('tr')
for row in rows:
contestant = row.find_all('td', {'class': 'contestant-cell'})
if len(contestant) > 0:
# Quick'n dirty dig. Makes un-safe assumptions about the HTML structure.
print contestant[0].a.string
You'll note that some additional digging is required after you get the table rows since not every row contains contestant info.