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I'm trying to get the town and state for a given zip code using the following site:

http://www.zip-info.com/cgi-local/zipsrch.exe?zip=10023&Go=Go

Using the following code I get all the tr tags:

import sys
import os
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
import requests

r = requests.get("http://www.zip-info.com/cgi-local/zipsrch.exe?zip=10023&Go=Go")
data = r.text
soup = BeautifulSoup(data)
print soup.find_all('tr')

how do I find a particular tr tag? in exmaples like this: How to find tag with particular text with Beautiful Soup? you already know the text you are looking for. what do I use if I don't know the text ahead of time?

EDIT

i've now added the following and get nowhere:

for tag in soup.find_all(re.compile("^td align=")):
    print (tag.name)
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  • well, which tr tag do you want to find?
    – tckmn
    Dec 1, 2013 at 18:03
  • I don't see any names so I don't know now to identify a particular tr tag. Dec 1, 2013 at 18:05

2 Answers 2

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After I took a look at the HTML code of the website you provided, I will say the best way to locate will be "text based location" instead of class, id based ..etc.

First you can easily identify the header row based on the text using the key word "Mail", and then you can easily get the row that contains the content you want.

Here is my code:

import urllib2, re, bs4
soup = bs4.BeautifulSoup(urllib2.urlopen("http://www.zip-info.com/cgi-local/zipsrch.exe?zip=10023&Go=Go"))
# find the header, then find the next tr, which contains your data
tr = soup.find(text=re.compile("Mailing")).find_next("tr")
name, code, zip = [ td.text.strip() for td in tr.find_all("td")]
print name
print code
print zip

After you print them out they look like this:

New York
NY
10023
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I would navigate until that point in the html source with a mix of find() and find_all() calls, because I cannot diferenciate from other <td> elements based in poistion, attributes or something else:

import sys 
import os
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
import requests

l = list()


r = requests.get("http://www.zip-info.com/cgi-local/zipsrch.exe?zip=10023&Go=Go")
data = r.text
soup = BeautifulSoup(data)

for table in soup.find('table'):
    center = table.find_all('center')[3]
    for tr in center.find_all('tr')[-1]:
        l.append(tr.string)

print(l[0:-1])

Run it like:

python script.py

That yields:

[u'New York', u'NY']
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  • Thanks! But, I can't get that to work. I'm trying to break your code out into snippets to figure it out. What is elem[1]? Dec 1, 2013 at 18:56
  • @dwstein: enumerate() returns a tuple, which first position is the index and second position is the value. I do this to avoid to print the third value of the table.
    – Birei
    Dec 1, 2013 at 18:58
  • if there's any way you could break out that long line a little more, it would be very helpful. I don't understand what all the bracketed numbers are. Dec 2, 2013 at 2:54
  • @dwstein: I've changed the approach to use different for loops and save all data in a list.
    – Birei
    Dec 2, 2013 at 13:59

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