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I was having trouble parsing some dodgy HTML with BeautifulSoup. Turns out that the HTMLParser used in newer versions is less tolerant than the SGMLParser used previously.


Does BeautifulSoup have some kind of debug mode? I'm trying to figure out how to stop it borking on some nasty HTML I'm loading from a crabby website:

<HTML>
    <HEAD>
        <TITLE>Title</TITLE>
        <HTTP-EQUIV="PRAGMA" CONTENT="NO-CACHE">
    </HEAD>
    <BODY>
        ...
        ...
    </BODY>
</HTML>

BeautifulSoup gives up after the <HTTP-EQUIV...> tag

In [1]: print BeautifulSoup(c).prettify()
<html>
 <head>
  <title>
   Title
  </title>
 </head>
</html>

The problem is clearly the HTTP-EQUIV tag, which is really a very malformed <META HTTP-EQUIV="PRAGMA" CONTENT="NO-CACHE"> tag. Evidently, I need to specify this as self-closing, but no matter what I specify I can't fix it:

In [2]: print BeautifulSoup(c,selfClosingTags=['http-equiv',
                            'http-equiv="pragma"']).prettify()
<html>
 <head>
  <title>
   Title
  </title>
 </head>
</html>

Is there a verbose debug mode in which BeautifulSoup will tell me what it is doing, so I can figure out what it is treating as the tag name in this case?

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3 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

Your problem must be something else; it works fine for me:

In [1]: import BeautifulSoup

In [2]: c = """<HTML>
   ...:     <HEAD>
   ...:         <TITLE>Title</TITLE>
   ...:         <HTTP-EQUIV="PRAGMA" CONTENT="NO-CACHE">
   ...:     </HEAD>
   ...:     <BODY>
   ...:         ...
   ...:         ...
   ...:     </BODY>
   ...: </HTML>
   ...: """

In [3]: print BeautifulSoup.BeautifulSoup(c).prettify()
<html>
 <head>
  <title>
   Title
  </title>
  <http-equiv>
  </http-equiv>
 </head>
 <body>
  ...
        ...
 </body>
</html>


In [4]:

This is Python 2.5.2 with BeautifulSoup 3.0.7a — maybe it's different in older/newer versions? This is exactly the kind of soup BeautifulSoup handles so beautifully, so I doubt it's been changed at some point… Is there something else to the structure that you haven't mentioned in the problem?

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I've got Python 2.5.1 and BeautifulSoup 3.1.0.1. The original broken structure was different, but the problem also occurs with the simplified structure in the question. I have just run the code in your example and have the same problem as before, nothing after </title>. Now I'm really confused! – Mat Jan 19 at 23:49
One possibility is that BeautifulSoup broke something when updating... did you try with the text copied exactly from your question here? – ShreevatsaR Jan 19 at 23:51
crummy.com/software/BeautifulSoup/… BeautifulSoup 3.1 is based on HTMLParser rather than SGMLParser (as the latter is gone in Python 3.0), which might be the problem here. That's sad... – ShreevatsaR Jan 19 at 23:54
Yes I tried with the exact text in the question, and I've just copied-and-pasted again to be sure. Sounds like a pain that the parser has changed. Perhaps I should drop a quick regular expression in to zap the borked HTML. It's not like I'm going to come across anything similar elsewhere. – Mat Jan 20 at 0:11
Confirming ShreevatsaR's results with BeautifulSoup 3.0.7a... – John Fouhy Jan 20 at 1:23
vote up 4 vote down

Having problems with Beautiful Soup 3.1.0? recommends to use html5lib's parser as one of workarounds.

#!/usr/bin/env python
from html5lib import HTMLParser, treebuilders

parser = HTMLParser(tree=treebuilders.getTreeBuilder("beautifulsoup"))

c = """<HTML>
    <HEAD>
        <TITLE>Title</TITLE>
        <HTTP-EQUIV="PRAGMA" CONTENT="NO-CACHE">
    </HEAD>
    <BODY>
        ...
        ...
    </BODY>
</HTML>"""

soup = parser.parse(c)
print soup.prettify()

Output:

<html>
 <head>
  <title>
   Title
  </title>
 </head>
 <body>
  <http-equiv="pragma" content="NO-CACHE">
   ...
        ...
  </http-equiv="pragma">
 </body>
</html>

The output shows that html5lib hasn't fixed the problem in this case though.

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vote up 2 vote down

Try lxml (and its html module). Despite its name, it is also for parsing and scraping HTML. It's much, much faster than BeautifulSoup, and it even handles "broken" HTML better than BeautifulSoup. It has a compatibility API for BeautifulSoup too if you don't want to learn the lxml API.

Ian Blicking agrees.

There's no reason to use BeautifulSoup anymore, unless you're on Google App Engine or something where anything not purely Python isn't allowed.

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