I'm thinking of trying Beautiful Soup, a python package for HTML scraping. Are there any other HTML scraping packages I should be looking at? Python is not a requirement, I'm actually interested in hearing about other languages as well.

The story so far:

Update: If you want to see a scraper app, check out Grant's SO user page monitor. Nifty!

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Corrected link: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/10261/… – Avi Nov 17 '09 at 16:13
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38 Answers

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up vote 26 down vote accepted

The Ruby world's equivalent to Beautiful Soup is why_the_lucky_stiff's Hpricot.

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This link is deprecated since why_the_lucky_stiff's disappearance from the internet. – Oliver N. Nov 20 '09 at 23:28
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here it is: wiki.github.com/hpricot/hpricot – Sney Mar 31 '10 at 0:50
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In the .NET world, I recommend the HTML Agility Pack. Not near as simple as some of the above options (like HTMLSQL), but it's very flexible. It lets you maniuplate poorly formed HTML as if it were well formed XML, so you can use XPATH or just itereate over nodes.

http://www.codeplex.com/htmlagilitypack

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combine linq with it and it seems more like HTMLSQL, no? – Bless Yahu Nov 22 '08 at 20:16
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BeautifulSoup is a great way to go for HTML scraping. My previous job had me doing a lot of scraping and I wish I knew about BeautifulSoup when I started. It's like the DOM with a lot more useful options and is a lot more pythonic. If you want to try Ruby they ported BeautifulSoup calling it RubyfulSoup but it hasn't been updated in a while.

Other useful tools are HTMLParser or sgmllib.SGMLParser which are part of the standard Python library. These work by calling methods every time you enter/exit a tag and encounter html text. They're like Expat if you're familiar with that. These libraries are especially useful if you are going to parse very large files and creating a DOM tree would be long and expensive.

Regular expressions aren't very necessary. BeautifulSoup handles regular expressions so if you need their power you can utilize it there. I say go with BeautifulSoup unless you need speed and a smaller memory footprint. If you find a better HTML parser on Python, let me know.

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I found HTMLSQL to be a ridiculously simple way to screenscrape. It takes literally minutes to get results with it.

The queries are super-intuitive - like:

SELECT title from img WHERE $class == 'userpic'

There are now some other alternatives that take the same approach.

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The Python lxml library acts as a Pythonic binding for the libxml2 and libxslt libraries. I like particularly its XPath support and pretty-printing of the in-memory XML structure. It also supports parsing broken HTML. And I don't think you can find other Python libraries/bindings that parse XML faster than lxml.

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For Perl, there's WWW::Mechanize.

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'Simple HTML DOM Parser' is a good option for PHP, if your familiar with jQuery or JavaScript selectors then you will find yourself at home.

Find it here

There is also a blog post about it here.

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I second this one. Dont need to install any mod_python, etc into the web server just to make it work – Brock Woolf Mar 21 '10 at 13:24
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I've had great success with the combination of HTML Agility Pack, regular expressions, and XDocument (LINQ -> XMLy stuff)

It's extremley powerful - LINQ and lambda (part 3) - HTML Agility Pack is a blog post by Vijay Santhanam that got me hooked on it.

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link not working :( – ariel Oct 5 '10 at 6:07
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The templatemaker utility from Adrian Holovaty (of Django fame) uses a very interesting approach: You feed it variations of the same page and it "learns" where the "holes" for variable data are. It's not HTML specific, so it would be good for scraping any other plaintext content as well. I've used it also for PDFs and HTML converted to plaintext (with pdftotext and lynx, respectively).

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Python has several options for HTML scraping in addition to Beatiful Soup. Here are some others:

  • mechanize: similar to perl WWW:Mechanize. Gives you a browser like object to ineract with web pages
  • lxml: Python binding to libwww. Supports various options to traverse and select elements (e.g. XPath and CSS selection)
  • scrapemark: high level library using templates to extract informations from HTML.
  • pyquery: allows you to make jQuery like queries on XML documents.
  • scrapy: an high level scraping and web crawling framework. It can be used to write spiders, for data mining and for monitoring and automated testing
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I would first find out if the site(s) in question provide an API server or RSS Feeds for access the data you require.

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Scraping Stack Overflow is especially easy with Shoes and Hpricot.

require 'hpricot'

Shoes.app :title => "Ask Stack Overflow", :width => 370 do
  SO_URL = "http://stackoverflow.com"
  stack do
    stack do
      caption "What is your question?"
      flow do
        @lookup = edit_line "stackoverflow", :width => "-115px"
        button "Ask", :width => "90px" do
          download SO_URL + "/search?s=" + @lookup.text do |s|
            doc = Hpricot(s.response.body)
            @rez.clear()
            (doc/:a).each do |l|
              href = l["href"]
              if href.to_s =~ /\/questions\/[0-9]+/ then
                @rez.append do
                  para(link(l.inner_text) { visit(SO_URL + href) })
                end
              end
            end
            @rez.show()
          end
        end
      end
    end
    stack :margin => 25 do
      background white, :radius => 20
      @rez = stack do
      end
    end
    @rez.hide()
  end
end
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Another option for perl would be Web::Scraper which is based on Ruby's Scrapi. In a nutshell, with nice and concise syntax you can get robust scraper directly into datastructures.

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I've had some success with HtmlUnit, in Java. It's a simple framework for writing unit tests on web UI's, but equally useful for HTML scraping.

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I know and love Screen-Scraper.

screen-scraper is a tool for extracting data from websites. screen-scraper automates:

* Clicking links on websites
* Entering data into forms and submitting
* Iterating through search result pages
* Downloading files (PDF, MS Word, images, etc.)

Common uses:

* Download all products, records from a website
* Build a shopping comparison site
* Perform market research
* Integrate or migrate data

Technical:

* Graphical interface--easy automation
* Cross platform (Linux, Mac, Windows, etc.)
* Integrates with most programming languages (Java, PHP, .NET, ASP, Ruby, etc.)
* Runs on workstations or servers

Three editions of screen-scraper:

* Enterprise: The most feature-rich edition of screen-scraper. All capabilities are enabled.
* Professional: Designed to be capable of handling most common scraping projects.
* Basic: Works great for simple projects, but not nearly as many features as its two older brothers.
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I use hpricot on ruby. As an example this is a snippet of code that I use to retrieve all book titles from the 6 pages of my HireThings account (as they don't seem to provide a single page with this info)

pagerange = 1..6
proxy = Net::HTTP::Proxy(proxy, port, user, pwd)
proxy.start('www.hirethings.co.nz') do |http|
  pagerange.each do |page|
    resp, data = http.get "/perth_dotnet?page=#{page}" 
    if resp.class == Net::HTTPOK
      (Hpricot(data)/"h3 a").each { |a| puts a.innerText }
    end
  end
end 

It's pretty much complete. All that comes before this are library imports and the settings for my proxy.

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I have used LWP and TreeBuilder with perl, and found them very useful.

LWP (short for libwww-perl) lets you connect to websites and scrape the html, you can get the module here and the O'Reilly book seems to be online here.

TreeBuilder allows you to construct a tree from the HTML, and documentation and source are here.

There might be two much heavy-lifting still to do with something like this approach though, I have not looked at the Mechanize module suggested by another answer, so I may well do that.

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Another tool for .NET is MhtBuilder

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You would be a fool not to use Perl.. Here come the flames..

Bone up on the following modules and ginsu any scrape around.

use LWP
use HTML::TableExtract
use HTML::TreeBuilder
use HTML::Form
use Data::Dumper
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I've used BeautifulSoup a lot with Python. It is much better than regexp checking because it works like using the DOM, even if the HTML is poorly formatted. You can quickly find HTML tags and text with simpler syntax than regexp. Once you find an element you can iterate over it an its children, which is more useful for understanding the contents in code than it is with regexp. I wish BeautifulSoup existed years ago when I had to do a lot of screenscraping -- It would have saved me a lot of time and headache since HTML structure was so poor before people started validating it.

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Although it was designed for .Net web-testing, I've been using the WatiN framework for this purpose. Since it is DOM-based, it is pretty easy to capture HTML, text, or images. Recentely, I used it to dump a list of links from a MediaWiki All Pages namespace query into an Excel spreadsheet. The following VB.net code fragement is pretty crude, but it works


Sub GetLinks(ByVal PagesIE As IE, ByVal MyWorkSheet As Excel.Worksheet)

    Dim PagesLink As Link

    For Each PagesLink In PagesIE.TableBodies(2).Links

        With MyWorkSheet
            .Cells(XLRowCounterInt, 1) = PagesLink.Text
            .Cells(XLRowCounterInt, 2) = PagesLink.Url
        End With

        XLRowCounterInt = XLRowCounterInt + 1

    Next

End Sub

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I've had mixed results in .NET using SgmlReader which was originally started by Chris Lovett and appears to have been updated by MindTouch.

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Implementations of the HTML5 parsing algorithm: html5lib (Python, Ruby), Validator.nu HTML Parser (Java, JavaScript; C++ in development), Hubbub (C), Twintsam (C#; upcoming).

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I've also had great success utilizing Aptana's Jaxer + jQuery to parse pages. Its not as fast or 'script like' in nature, but jQuery selectors + real js/DOM is a lifesavor on more complicated (or malformed) pages.

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Regular expressions work pretty well for HTML scraping as well ;-) Though after looking at Beautiful Soup, I can see why this would be a valuable tool.

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You probably have as much already, but I think this is what you are trying to do:

from __future__ import with_statement
import re, os

profile = ""

os.system('wget --no-cookies --header "Cookie: soba=(SeCreTCODe)" http://stackoverflow.com/users/30/myProfile.html')
with open("myProfile.html") as f:
for line in f:
profile = profile + line
f.close()
p = re.compile('summarycount">(\d+)</div>') #Rep is found here
print p
m = p.search(profile)
print m
print m.group(1)
os.system("espeak \"Rep is at " + m.group(1) + " points\""
os.remove("myProfile.html")
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In Java, you can use TagSoup.

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http://scrubyt.org/ uses Ruby and Hpricot to do nice easy web scraping. I wrote a scraper for my uni's library service using this in about 30mins.

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There is this solution too: netty HttpClient

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