20

Does anyone know of an xPath to JSoup convertor? I get the following xPath from Chrome:

 //*[@id="docs"]/div[1]/h4/a

and would like to change it into a Jsoup query. The path contains an href I'm trying to reference.

7 Answers 7

19

This is very easy to convert manually.

Something like this (not tested)

document.select("#docs > div:eq(1) > h4 > a").attr("href");

Documentation:

http://jsoup.org/cookbook/extracting-data/selector-syntax


Related question from comment

Trying to get the href for the first result here: cbssports.com/info/search#q=fantasy%20tom%20brady

Code

Elements select = Jsoup.connect("http://solr.cbssports.com/solr/select/?q=fantasy%20tom%20brady")
        .get()
        .select("response > result > doc > str[name=url]");

for (Element element : select) {
    System.out.println(element.html());
}

Result

http://fantasynews.cbssports.com/fantasyfootball/players/playerpage/187741/tom-brady
http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/players/playerpage/187741/tom-brady
http://fantasynews.cbssports.com/fantasycollegefootball/players/playerpage/1825265/brady-lisoski
http://fantasynews.cbssports.com/fantasycollegefootball/players/playerpage/1766777/blake-brady
http://fantasynews.cbssports.com/fantasycollegefootball/players/playerpage/1851211/brady-foltz
http://fantasynews.cbssports.com/fantasycollegefootball/players/playerpage/1860955/brady-earnhardt
http://fantasynews.cbssports.com/fantasycollegefootball/players/playerpage/1673397/brady-amack

Screenshot from Developer Console - grabbing urls

enter image description here

9
18

I am using Google Chrome Version 47.0.2526.73 m (64-bit) and I can now directly copy the Selector path which is compatible with JSoup

Chrome with Selector option



Copied Selector of the element in the screenshot span.com is
#question > table > tbody > tr:nth-child(1) > td.postcell > div > div.post-text > pre > code > span.com

4
  • I did selector path on a table, all it returned was the #id tag on the element. Can you please check ? Aug 19, 2020 at 14:29
  • Is there any way to achieve the same using Firefox?
    – AhmedRana
    Oct 19, 2021 at 21:11
  • @AhmedRana I have not tried it on Firefox, but this option should be there in Dev Tools of Firefox. Oct 25, 2021 at 8:30
  • does not really work with a syntax like \@
    – mhstnsc
    Mar 4, 2022 at 14:36
4

You don't necessarily need to convert Xpath to JSoup specific selectors.

Instead you can use XSoup which is based on JSoup and supports Xpath.

https://github.com/code4craft/xsoup

Here is an example using XSoup from the docs.

@Test
public void testSelect() {

    String html = "<html><div><a href='https://github.com'>github.com</a></div>" +
            "<table><tr><td>a</td><td>b</td></tr></table></html>";

    Document document = Jsoup.parse(html);

    String result = Xsoup.compile("//a/@href").evaluate(document).get();
    Assert.assertEquals("https://github.com", result);

    List<String> list = Xsoup.compile("//tr/td/text()").evaluate(document).list();
    Assert.assertEquals("a", list.get(0));
    Assert.assertEquals("b", list.get(1));
}
1
  • Great this improved the performance to a certain extent.
    – sandeep P
    Mar 19, 2021 at 7:10
2

I have tested the following XPath and Jsoup, it works.

example 1:

[XPath]

//*[@id="docs"]/div[1]/h4/a

[JSoup]

document.select("#docs > div > h4 > a").attr("href");

example 2:

[XPath]

//*[@id="action-bar-container"]/div/div[2]/a[2]

[JSoup]

document.select("#action-bar-container > div > div:eq(1) > a:eq(1)").attr("href"); 
2

Here is the working standalone snippet using Xsoup with Jsoup:

import java.util.List;

import org.jsoup.Jsoup;
import org.jsoup.nodes.Document;

import us.codecraft.xsoup.Xsoup;

public class TestXsoup {
    public static void main(String[] args){

            String html = "<html><div><a href='https://github.com'>github.com</a></div>" +
                    "<table><tr><td>a</td><td>b</td></tr></table></html>";

            Document document = Jsoup.parse(html);

            List<String> filasFiltradas = Xsoup.compile("//tr/td/text()").evaluate(document).list();
            System.out.println(filasFiltradas);

    }
}

Output:

[a, b]

Libraries included:

xsoup-0.3.1.jar jsoup-1.103.jar

1

Although this question is pretty old, I just want to mention that latest Jsoup release has some Beta features like the one requested in this question.

Release 1.14.3 added a native XPath selector. See it for yourselves: https://jsoup.org/news/release-1.14.3

Now you can use Jsoup native methods:

    File downloadedPage = new File("/path/to/your/page.html");
    String xPathSelector = "//*[@id="docs"]/div[1]/h4/a";
    Document document = Jsoup.parse(downloadedPage, "UTF-8");
    Elements elements = document.selectXpath(xPathSelector);

You can iterate over the elements returned!

0

Depends what you want.

Document doc = JSoup.parse(googleURL);
doc.select("cite") //to get all the cite elements in the page

doc.select("li > cite") //to get all the <cites>'s that only exist under the <li>'s

doc.select("li.g cite") //to only get the <cite> tags under <li class=g> tags


public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
    String html = getHTML();
    Document doc = Jsoup.parse(html);
    Elements elems = doc.select("li.g > cite");
    for(Element elem: elems){
        System.out.println(elem.toString());
    }
}

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