I'm trying to find a way to test whether a URL is absolute or relative in Python. In the href attribute of an HTML tag, is the lack of a scheme (e.g. http, ftp, etc.) sufficient to mark a URL as relative, or is it possible to have an absolute URL as a href attribute without explicitly specifying the scheme (e.g. 'www.google.com')? I'm getting the scheme by using urlparse.urlparse('some url').scheme
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2 Answers
If you don't include the URI scheme (http://
, https://
, //
, etc) then the browser will assume it to be a relative URL.
You should be aware of scheme-relative URLs like //www.google.com
for your script. In short your should look for a double forward slash //
to figure out whether or not a URL will be treated as relative or not.
As per RFC 3986:
<a href="//example.com/page.html">Link</a>
Source, and more info: https://stackoverflow.com/a/550073/2454476
And in python:
$ python
Python 2.7.3 (default, Mar 18 2014, 05:13:23)
>>> from urlparse import urlparse;
>>> urlparse('//example.com/page.html');
ParseResult(scheme='', netloc='example.com', path='/page.html', params='', query='', fragment='')