0

I wrote a script that generates an array of URLs. I want to open that URLs and extract the lowest price. I tried it with:

curl http://www.orbitz.com/shop/home?type=air&ar.rt.numAdult=1&ar.rt.numChild=0&_ar.rt.narrowSel=0&search=Search+Flights&ar.rt.child[2]=&ar.rt.leaveSlice.orig.key=las&strm=true&ar.rt.child[6]=&ar.rt.numSenior=0&ar.rt.narrow=airlines&ar.rt.carriers[2]=&ar.rt.cabin=C&_ar.rt.nonStop=0&ar.rt.child[3]=&ar.rt.child[7]=&_ar.rt.leaveSlice.originRadius=0&ar.rt.carriers[1]=&ar.rt.returnSlice.time=Anytime&ar.rt.child[4]=&ar.rt.child[0]=&_ar.rt.leaveSlice.destinationRadius=0&ar.rt.leaveSlice.time=Anytime&ar.rt.carriers[0]=&ar.rt.returnSlice.date=09%2F24%2F14&ar.rt.leaveSlice.date=09%2F23%2F14&ar.rt.leaveSlice.dest.key=lax&_ar.rt.flexAirSearch=0&ar.type=roundTrip&ar.rt.child[5]=&ar.rt.child[1]=|grep \"div class='basePrice '\"

but always get the whole content. I also tried it with various sed combinations and that didn't work, too. How can I just get the lowest price or at least a list of all prices?

2 Answers 2

0

As a start you need to quote it properly:

curl 'http://www.orbitz.com/shop/home?type=air&ar.rt.numAdult=1&ar.rt.numChild=0&_ar.rt.narrowSel=0&search=Search+Flights&ar.rt.child[2]=&ar.rt.leaveSlice.orig.key=las&strm=true&ar.rt.child[6]=&ar.rt.numSenior=0&ar.rt.narrow=airlines&ar.rt.carriers[2]=&ar.rt.cabin=C&_ar.rt.nonStop=0&ar.rt.child[3]=&ar.rt.child[7]=&_ar.rt.leaveSlice.originRadius=0&ar.rt.carriers[1]=&ar.rt.returnSlice.time=Anytime&ar.rt.child[4]=&ar.rt.child[0]=&_ar.rt.leaveSlice.destinationRadius=0&ar.rt.leaveSlice.time=Anytime&ar.rt.carriers[0]=&ar.rt.returnSlice.date=09%2F24%2F14&ar.rt.leaveSlice.date=09%2F23%2F14&ar.rt.leaveSlice.dest.key=lax&_ar.rt.flexAirSearch=0&ar.type=roundTrip&ar.rt.child[5]=&ar.rt.child[1]=' | \
    grep "div class='basePrice '"

And perhaps your grep command is really meant to be:

grep 'div class="basePrice'
3
  • Is it working for you the curl command? it's giving me curl: (3) [globbing] error: bad range specification after pos 129.
    – rpax
    Jun 10, 2014 at 17:30
  • It works with curl -g '...'. Unfortunately I don't get the prices as they are loaded about 20 seconds after calling the URL. Is there a way to let curl wait for a few seconds? Jun 11, 2014 at 20:24
  • I'm not sure but perhaps curl can't do that. Or maybe you can try this one.
    – konsolebox
    Jun 11, 2014 at 20:33
0

You should probably use an html parser over sed and grep for this.

http://blog.codinghorror.com/parsing-html-the-cthulhu-way/

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.