6

So this is how my HTML looks that I'm parsing. It is all within a table and gets repeated multiple times and I just want the href attribute value that is inside the div with the attribute class="Special_Div_Name". All these divs are then inside table rows and there are lots of rows.

<tr>
   <div class="Special_Div_Name">
      <a href="something.mp3">text</a>
   </div>
</tr>

What I want is only the href attribute values that end in ".mp3" that are inside the div with the attribute class="Special_Div_Name".

So far I was able to come up with this code:

download = soup.find_all('a', href = re.compile('.mp3'))
for text in download:
    hrefText = (text['href'])
    print hrefText

This code currently prints off every href attribute value on the page that ends in ".mp3" and it's very close to doing exactly what I want. Its just I only want the ".mp3"s that are inside that div class.

2 Answers 2

11

This minor adjustment should get you what you want:

special_divs = soup.find_all('div',{'class':'Special_Div_Name'})
for text in special_divs:
    download = text.find_all('a', href = re.compile('\.mp3$'))
    for text in download:
        hrefText = (text['href'])
        print hrefText
5
  • 1
    This worked perfectly and logically it makes sense so I kind of understand how this works! Only problem is I had a hard time figuring out how to implement it in my code because you used just "d" as a variable and I missed this with d.find_all() so maybe name that something better so future people don't miss it as well.
    – ddschmitz
    Feb 18, 2016 at 2:17
  • Good call! I'll switch it back. Happy to help :)
    – rofls
    Feb 18, 2016 at 2:18
  • 1
    re.compile('.mp3') would match <a href="textmp3">text</a>; you want re.compile('\.mp3$') as stated in my answer since . has special meaning in a regular expression; the anchor $ denotes that it should match the end of the string. Feb 18, 2016 at 2:20
  • Thank you, I thought that something was wrong there but OP said that was working for his example :)
    – rofls
    Feb 18, 2016 at 2:21
  • 1
    @JoshCrozier yes that is a better re to use in this case! I'll switch my code to use this as well thanks!
    – ddschmitz
    Feb 18, 2016 at 2:39
7

Since Beautiful Soup accepts most CSS selectors with the .select() method, I'd suggest using the attribute selector [href$=".mp3"] in order to select a elements with an href attribute ending with .mp3.

Then you can just prepend the selector .Special_Div_Name in order to only select anchor elements that are descendants:

for a in soup.select('div.Special_Div_Name a[href$=".mp3"]'):
    print (a['href'])

In a more general case, if you would just like to select a elements with an [href] attribute that are a descendant of a div element, then you would use the selector div a[href]:

for a in soup.select('div a[href]'):
    print (a)

If you don't use the code above, then based on the original code that you provided, you would need to select all the elements with a class of Special_Div_Name, then you would need to iterate over those elements and select the descendant anchor elements:

for div in soup.select('.Special_Div_Name'):
    for a in div.find_all('a', href = re.compile('\.mp3$')):
        print (a['href'])

As a side note, re.compile('.mp3') should be re.compile('\.mp3$') since . has special meaning in a regular expression. In addition, you will also want the anchor $ in order to match at the end of the sting (rather than anywhere in the string).

3
  • The selector should be optimal, right? I think the loop is clear, but the selectors should in theory loop through things less.
    – rofls
    Feb 18, 2016 at 2:16
  • This is more or less what I did but I followed the other guys solution first before I saw yours. I think yours would work as well. Thanks for the help!
    – ddschmitz
    Feb 18, 2016 at 2:18
  • @ddschmitz See the note I added at the bottom; re.compile('.mp3') should actually be re.compile('\.mp3$') since . is a special character in regex. You also want the $ anchor since you want to match the end of the string. Feb 18, 2016 at 2:19

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