How to get image from dynamic url using urllib2? - python

I have generated a url from product code like,
code: 2555-525
url : www.example.com/2555-525.png
But when fetching a url, it might be a different name format on server,like
www.example.com/2555-525.png
www.example.com/2555-525_TEXT.png
www.example.com/2555-525_TEXT_TEXT.png
Sample code,
urllib2.urlopen(URL).read()
could we pass the url like www.example.com/2555-525*.png ?

Using wildcards in URLs is useless in most cases because
the interpretation of the part of the URL after http://www.example.com/ is totally up to the server - so http://www.example.com/2555-525*.png might have a meaning to the server but but propably has not
normally (exceptions like WebDAV exist) there is no way of listing ressources in a collection or existing URLs in general apart from trying them one-by-one (which is unpractical) or scraping a known site for URLs (which might be incomplete)
For finding and downloading URLs automatically you can use a Web Crawler or Spider.

Related

How to extract hidden html content with scrapy?

I'm using scrapy (on PyCharm v2020.1.3) to build a spider that crawls this webpage: "https://www.woolworths.com.au/shop/browse/drinks/cordials-juices-iced-teas/iced-teas", i want to extract the products names, and the breadcrumb in a list format, and save the results in a csv file.
I tried the following code but it returns empty brackets [] , after i've inspected the html code i discovred that the content is hidden in angularjs format.
If someone has a solution for that it would be great
Thank you
import scrapy
class ProductsSpider(scrapy.Spider):
name = 'products'
start_urls = ['https://www.woolworths.com.au/shop/browse/drinks/cordials-juices-iced-teas/iced-teas']
def parse(self, response):
product = response.css('a.shelfProductTile-descriptionLink::text').extract()
yield "productnames"
You won't be able to get the desired products through parsing the HTML. It is heavily javascript orientated and therefore scrapy wont parse this.
The simplest way to get the product names, I'm not sure what you mean by breadcrumbs is to re-engineer the HTTP requests. The woolworths website generates the product details via an API. If we can mimick the request the browser makes to obtain that product information we can get the information in a nice neat format.
First you have to set within settings.py ROBOTSTXT_OBEY = False. Becareful about protracted scrapes of this data because your IP will probably get banned at some point.
Code Example
import scrapy
class TestSpider(scrapy.Spider):
name = 'test'
allowed_domains = ['woolworths.com']
data = {
'excludeUnavailable': 'true',
'source': 'RR-Best Sellers'}
def start_requests(self):
url = 'https://www.woolworths.com.au/apis/ui/products/58520,341057,305224,70660,208073,69391,69418,65416,305227,305084,305223,427068,201688,427069,341058,305195,201689,317793,714860,57624'
yield scrapy.Request(url=url,meta=self.data,callback=self.parse)
def parse(self, response):
data = response.json()
for a in data:
yield {
'name': a['Name'],
}
Explanation
We start of with our defined url in start_requests. This URL is the specific URL of the API woolworth uses to obtain information for iced tea. For any other link on woolworths the part of the URL after /products/ will be specific to that part of the website.
The reason why we're using this, is because using browser activity is slow and prone to being brittle. This is fast and the information we can get is usually highly structured much better for scraping.
So how do we get the URL you may be asking ? You need to inspect the page, and find the correct request. If you click on network tools and then reload the website. You'll see a bunch of requests. Usually the largest sized request is the one with all the data. Clicking that and clicking preview gives you a box on the right hand side. This gives all the details of the products.
In this next image, you can see a preview of the product data
We can then get the request URL and anything else from this request.
I will often copy this request as a CURL (Bash Command) as seen here
And enter it into curl.trillworks.com. This can convert CURL to python. Giving you a nice formatted headers and any other data needed to mimick the request.
Now putting this into jupyter and playing about, you actually only need the params NOT the headers which is much better.
So back to the code. We do a request, using meta argument we can pass on the data, remember because it's outside the function we have to use self.data and then specifying the callback to parse.
We can use the response.json() method to convert the JSON object to a set of python dictionaries corresponding to each product. YOU MUST have scrapy V2.2 to use this method. Other you could use data = json.loads(response.text), but you'll have put to import json at the top of the script.
From the preview and playing about with the json in requests we can see these python dictionaries are actually within a list and so we can use a for loop to loop round each product, which is what we are doing here.
We then yield a dictionary to extract the data, a refers to each products which is it's own dictionary and a['Name'] refers to that specific python dictionary key 'Name' and giving us the correct value. To get a better feel for this, I always use requests package in jupyter to figure out the correct way to get the data I want.
The only thing left to do is to use scrapy crawl test -o products.csv to output this to a CSV file.
I can't really help you more than this until you specify any other data you want from this page. Please remember that you're going against what the site wants you to scrape, but also any other pages on that website you will need to find out the specific URL to the API to get those products. I have given you the way to do this, I suggest if you want to automate this it would be worth your while trying to struggle with this. We are hear to help but an attempt on your part is how you're going to learn coding.
Additional Information on the Approach of Dynamic Content
There is a wealth of information on this topic. Here are some guidelines to think about when looking at javascript orientated websites. The default is you should try re-engineer the requests the browser makes to load the pages information. This is what the javascript in this site and many other sites is doing, it's providing a dynamic way without reloading the page to display new information by making an HTTP request. If we can mimic that request, we can get the information we desire. This is the most efficent way to get dynamic content.
In order of preference
Re-engineering the HTTP requests
Scrapy-splash
Scrapy_selenium
importing selenium package into your scripts
Scrapy-splash is slightly better than the selenium package, as it pre-renders the page, giving you access to the selectors with the data. Selenium is slow, prone to errors but will allow you to mimic browser activity.
There are multiple ways to include selenium into your scripts see down below as an overview.
Recommended Reading/Research
Look at the scrapy documentation with regard to dynamic content here
This will give you an overview of the steps to handling dynamic content. I will say generally speaking selenium should be thought of as a last resort. It's pretty inefficient when doing larger scale scraping.
If you are consider adding in the selenium package into your script. This might be the lower barrier of entry to getting your script working but not necessarily that efficient. At the end of the day scrapy is a framework but there is a lot of flexibility in adding in 3rd party packages. The spider scripts are just a python class importing the scrapy architecture in the background. As long as you're mindful of the response and translating some of the selenium to work with scrapy, you should be able to input selenium into your scripts. I would this solution is probably the least efficient though.
Consider using scrapy-splash, splash pre-renders the page and allows for you to add in javascript execution. Docs are here and a good article from scrapinghub here
Scrapy-selenium is a package with a custom scrapy downloader middleware that allows you to do selenium actions and execute javascript. Docs here You'll need to have a play around to get the login in procedure from this, it doesn't have the same level of detail as the selenium package itself.

Scraping Biography.com using urllib2

So I've scraped websites before, but this time I am stumped. I am attempting to search for a person on Biography.com and retrieve his/her biography. But whenever I search the site using urllib2 and query the URL: http://www.biography.com/search/ I get a blank page with no data in it.
When I look into the source generated in the browser by clicking View Source, I still do not see any data. When I use Chrome's developer tools, I find some data but still no links leading to the biography.
I have tried changing the User Agent, adding referrers, using cookies in Python but to no avail. If someone could help me out with this task it would be really helpful.
I am planning to use this text for my NLP project and worst case, I'll have to manually copy-paste the text. But I hope it doesn't come to that.
Chrome/Chromium's Developer Tools (or Firebug) is definitely your friend here. I can see that the initial search on Biography's site is made via a call to a Google API, e.g.
https://www.googleapis.com/customsearch/v1?q=Barack%20Obama&key=AIzaSyCMGfdDaSfjqv5zYoS0mTJnOT3e9MURWkU&cx=011223861749738482324%3Aijiqp2ioyxw&num=8&callback=angular.callbacks._0
The search term I used is in the q= part of the query string: q=Barack%20Obama.
This returns JSON inside of which there is a key link with the value of the article of interest's URL.
"link": "http://www.biography.com/people/barack-obama-12782369"
Visiting that page shows me that this is generated by a request to:
http://api.saymedia-content.com/:apiproxy-anon/content-sites/cs01a33b78d5c5860e/content-customs/#published/#by-custom-type/ContentPerson/#by-slug/barack-obama-12782369
which returns JSON containing HTML.
So, replacing the last part of the link barack-obama-12782369 with the relevant info for the person of interest in the saymedia-content link may well pull out what you want.
To implement:
You'll need to use urllib2 (or requests) to do the search via their Google API call, using urllib2.urlopen(url) or requests.get(url). Replace the Barack%20Obama with a URL escaped search string, e.g. Bill%20Clinton.
Parse the JSON using Python's json module to extract the string that gives you the http://www.biography.com/people link. From this, extract the part of this link of interest (as barack-obama-12782369 above).
Use urllib2 or requests to do a saymedia-content API request replacing barack-obama-12782369 after #by-slug/ with whatever you extract from 2; i.e. do another urllib2.urlopen on this URL.
Parse the JSON from the response of this second request to extract the content you want.
(Caveat: This is provided that there are no session-based strings in those two API calls that might expire.)
Alternatively, you can use Selenium to visit the website, do the search and then extract the content.
You will most likely need to manually copy and paste, as biography.com is a completely javascript-based site, so it can't be scraped with traditional methods.
You can discover an api url with httpfox (firefox addon). f.e. http://www.biography.com/.api/item/search?config=published&query=marx
brings you a json you can process searching for /people/ to retrive biography links.
Or you can use an screen crawler like selenium

Does BeautifulSoup understand relative URLs?

I'm trying to scrape a site that uses a ton of relative URLs. One archive page has links to many individual entries, but the URL is given like "../2011/category/example.html"
For each entry, I want to open the page and scrape it, but I'm not sure what the most efficient way to handle that is. I'm thinking of splitting the starting URL by "/", pop off the last item and re-joining them, to get the base URL.
That seems like such a cludge, though. Is there a cleaner way?
To construct an absolute URL from a relative URL, use urlparse.urljoin (docs here).
If you are using a browsing system like mechanize for crawling, however, you can simply fetch an absolute url initially and then feed the browser relative urls after that. The browser will keep track of state and fetch the URL from the same domain as the previous request automatically.

urllib2 not retrieving url with hashes on it

I'm trying to get some data from a webpage, but I found a problem. Whenever I want to go to the next page (i.e. page 2) to keep retrieving the data on it, I keep receiving the data from page 1. Apparently something goes wrong trying to switch to the next page.
The thing is, I haven't had problems with urls like this:
'http://www.webpage.com/index.php?page=' + str(pageno)
I can just start a while statement and I'll just jump to page 2 by adding 1 to "pageno"
My problem comes in when I try to open an url with this format:
'http://www.webpage.com/search/?show_all=1#sort_order=ASC&page=' + str(pageno)
As
urllib2.urlopen('http://www.webpage.com/search/?show_all=1#sort_order=ASC&page=4').read()
will retrieve the source code from http://www.webpage.com/search/?show_all=1
There is no other way to retrieve other pages without using the hash, as far as I'm concerned.
I guess it's just urllib2 ignoring the hash, as it is normally used to specify a starting point for a browser.
The fragment of the url after the hash (#) symbol is for client-side handling and isn't actually sent to the webserver. My guess is there is some javascript on the page that requests the correct data from the server using AJAX, and you need to figure out what URL is used for that.
If you use chrome you can watch the Network tab of the developer tools and see what URLs are requested when you click the link to go to page two in your browser.
that's because hash are not part of the url that is sent to the server, it's a fragment identifier that is used to identify elements inside the page. Some websites misused the hash fragment for JavaScript hook for identifying pages though. You'll either need to be able to execute the JavaScript on the page or you'll need to reverse engineer the JavaScript and emulate the true search request that is being made, presumably through ajax. Firebug's Net tab will be really useful for this.

Scrapy, hash tag on URLs

I'm on the middle of a scrapping project using Scrapy.
I realized that Scrapy strips the URL from a hash tag to the end.
Here's the output from the shell:
[s] request <GET http://www.domain.com/b?ie=UTF8&node=3006339011&ref_=pe_112320_20310580%5C#/ref=sr_nr_p_8_0?rh=n%3A165796011%2Cn%3A%212334086011%2Cn%3A%212334148011%2Cn%3A3006339011%2Cp_8%3A2229010011&bbn=3006339011&ie=UTF8&qid=1309631658&rnid=598357011>
[s] response <200 http://www.domain.com/b?ie=UTF8&node=3006339011&ref_=pe_112320_20310580%5C>
This really affects my scrapping because after a couple of hours trying to find out why some item was not being selected, I realized that the HTML provided by the long URL differs from the one provided by the short one. Besides, after some observation, the content changes in some critical parts.
Is there a way to modify this behavior so Scrapy keeps the whole URL?
Thanks for your feedback and suggestions.
This isn't something scrapy itself can change--the portion following the hash in the url is the fragment identifier which is used by the client (scrapy here, usually a browser) instead of the server.
What probably happens when you fetch the page in a browser is that the page includes some JavaScript that looks at the fragment identifier and loads some additional data via AJAX and updates the page. You'll need to look at what the browser does and see if you can emulate it--developer tools like Firebug or the Chrome or Safari inspector make this easy.
For example, if you navigate to http://twitter.com/also, you are redirected to http://twitter.com/#!/also. The actual URL loaded by the browser here is just http://twitter.com/, but that page then loads data (http://twitter.com/users/show_for_profile.json?screen_name=also) which is used to generate the page, and is, in this case, just JSON data you could parse yourself. You can see this happen using the Network Inspector in Chrome.
Looks like it's not possible. The problem is not the response, it's in the request, which chops the url.
It is retrievable from Javascript - as
window.location.hash. From there you
could send it to the server with Ajax
for example, or encode it and put it
into URLs which can then be passed
through to the server-side.
Can I read the hash portion of the URL on my server-side application (PHP, Ruby, Python, etc.)?
Why do you need this part which is stripped if the server doesn't receive it from browser?
If you are working with Amazon - i haven't seen any problems with such urls.
Actually, when entering that URL in a web browser, it will also only send the part before the hash tag to the web server. If the content is different, it's probably because there are some javascript on the page that - based on the content of the hash tag part - changes the content of the page after it has been loaded (most likely an XmlHttpRequest is made that loads additional content).

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