1

I have using beautifulsoup to extract datas.

I hava such a html file:

<div class=a>
<a href='google.com'>a</a>
</div>
<div class=b>
<a href='google.com'>c</a>
<a href='google.com'>d</a>
</div>

I want to extract data 'c,d' in ,I don't need data 'a' in

so I do:

google_list = soup.findAll('a',href='google.com')
for item in google_list:
    print item.strings

it will print a,c,d. so my problem is how to just print 'c','d' in without 'a' in

1
  • by the by, findAll is now deprecated-ish, the beautifulsoup devs changed method names to conform to the new Python style guidelines (findAll -> find_all, etc). Of course, they all still work. Jun 30, 2012 at 6:10

2 Answers 2

4

You could just select based upon the div whose class is b and then after that use your original query on that tag so that you look for its children:

div = soup.find_all('div', {"class":"b"})[0]
items = div.find_all('a', href="google.com")
0
1

I stopped using Beautiful soup a few years back and prefer the lxml library whose html parser is flexible and also allows xpath queries.

html = """<div class=a>
<a href='google.com'>a</a>
</div>
<div class=b>
<a href='google.com'>c</a>
<a href='google.com'>d</a>
</div>
"""
root = lxml.html.fromstring(html).getroottree()
root.xpath("//div[@class='b']/a[@href='google.com']/text()")
# ['c', 'd']

This finds all the text from all the anchors which refer to 'google.com' that are inside any div with a class 'b'.

0

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