vote up 5 vote down star
2

Hi.

I am working with a huge list of URL's, you guys have already helped me :)

Just a quick question I have trying to slice a part of the URL out, see below:

http://www.domainname.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234&param2&param3

How could I slice out:

http://www.domainname.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234

Sometimes there is more than two parameters after the CONTENT_ITEM_ID and the ID is different each time, I am thinking it can be done by finding the first & and then slicing off the chars before that &, not quite sure how to do this tho.

Cheers

flag

8 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

Use the urlparse module. Check this function:

import urlparse

def process_url(url, keep_params=('CONTENT_ITEM_ID=',)):
    parsed= urlparse.urlsplit(url)
    filtered_query= '&'.join(
        qry_item
        for qry_item in parsed.query.split('&')
        if qry_item.startswith(keep_params))
    return urlparse.urlunsplit(parsed[:3] + (filtered_query,) + parsed[4:])

In your example:

>>> process_url(a)
'http://www.domainname.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234'

This function has the added bonus that it's easier to use if you decide that you also want some more query parameters, or if the order of the parameters is not fixed, as in:

>>> url='http://www.domainname.com/page?other_value=xx&param3&CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234&param1'
>>> process_url(url, ('CONTENT_ITEM_ID', 'other_value'))
'http://www.domainname.com/page?other_value=xx&CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234'
link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Hi,

I figured it out below is what I needed to do:

url = "http://www.domainname.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234&param2&param3"
url = url[: url.find("&")]
print url
'http://www.domainname.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234'
link|flag
Careful with this - if there are no parameters (no "&"), it will just drop the last character from the url. – Rafał Dowgird Nov 3 '08 at 14:38
See stackoverflow.com/questions/229352/… for a better solution. – S.Lott Nov 3 '08 at 14:42
Ah I see how that could be a problem and thanks for the warning. The list I am using always has a parameter after it but I will keep that in mind for the future. :) – Eef Nov 3 '08 at 14:45
Be careful with url parsing, this most of the time not as easy as it seems. You'd better use the urlparse module, even if it looks like it's easy. – e-satis Nov 3 '08 at 15:37
@Eef: Always means "mostly". Never means "Rarely". As soon as you say "Always", you know it will break because 2 of 14,000 violate your "always" rule. – S.Lott Nov 3 '08 at 15:45
show 2 more comments
vote up 0 vote down
import re
url = 'http://www.domainname.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234&param2&param3'
m = re.search('(.*?)&', url)
print m.group(1)
link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

The quick and dirty solution is this:

>>> "http://something.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234&param3".split("&")[0]
'http://something.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234'
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Another option would be to use the split function, with & as a parameter. That way, you'd extract both the base url and both parameters.

   url.split("&")

returns a list with

  ['http://www.domainname.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234', 'param2', 'param3']
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Look at the urllib2 file name question for some discussion of this topic.

Also see the "Python Find Question" question.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

This method isn't dependent on the position of the parameter within the url string. This could be refined, I'm sure, but it gets the point across.

url = 'http://www.domainname.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234&param2&param3'
parts = url.split('?')
id = dict(i.split('=') for i in parts[1].split('&'))['CONTENT_ITEM_ID']
new_url = parts[0] + '?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=' + id
link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Parsin URL is never as simple I it seems to be, that's why there are the urlparse and urllib modules.

E.G :

import urllib
url ="http://www.domainname.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234&param2&param3"
query = urllib.splitquery(url)
result = "?".join((query[0], query[1].split("&")[0]))
print result
'http://www.domainname.com/page?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=1234'

This is still not 100 % reliable, but much more than splitting it yourself because there are a lot of valid url format that you and me don't know and discover one day in error logs.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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