0

As shown bellow, I am pushing the object link_to_json returns into an array allShirts declared in html_to_json.

However, the console.dir on the third last line and the return value of html_to_json logs an array of undefined references. Which I presume is because console.dir and return is executed before link_to_json functions finished.

How do I ensure the return value of html_to_json is a filled up allShirts array?

//Go to individual links and scrape relevant info
const link_to_json = (link) => {
    request(link, (err, res, body) => {
        if (!error_handler(err, res, link)) {
            const $ = cheerio.load(body);
            const shirt_detail = $('.shirt-details').find('h1').text();

            const Title = shirt_detail.substr(shirt_detail.indexOf(' ') + 1);
            const Price = shirt_detail.substr(0, shirt_detail.indexOf(' '));
            const ImageURL = $('.shirt-picture').find('img').attr('src');
            const URL = link;

            return new Shirt(Title, Price, ImageURL, URL);
        } else return {};
    });
}

//Crawl through all individual links listed in Root
const html_to_json = body => {
    const allShirts = [];
    const $ = cheerio.load(body);

    $('.products').find('a').each((index, val) => {
        allShirts.push(link_to_json(rootURL + $(val).attr('href')));
    });

    console.dir(allShirts); // <--- HERE
    return allShirts;
}
3
  • Is request the asynchronous method? I would say to use promise all.
    – Apidcloud
    Jun 13, 2017 at 2:34
  • I don't think Promise.all() prevents html_to_json from returning, it ensures html_to_json returns everything or nothing.
    – user7811169
    Jun 13, 2017 at 2:40
  • Yeah, but you could use .then
    – Apidcloud
    Jun 13, 2017 at 2:44

2 Answers 2

1

There's a few ways to go after this, but I like the Async library for this sort of thing.

How I'd handle your problem is to actually get all the URLs first, so changing your body scrape to something like this instead:

const shirtLinks = [];
$('.products').find('a').each((index, val) => {
    shirtLinks.push(rootURL + $(val).attr('href'));
});

You need your conversion function to be asynchronous as well:

const linkToJSON = (link, cb) => {
    request(link, (err, res, body) => {
        if (!error_handler(err, res, link)) {
            const $ = cheerio.load(body);
            const shirt_detail = $('.shirt-details').find('h1').text();

            const Title = shirt_detail.substr(shirt_detail.indexOf(' ') + 1);
            const Price = shirt_detail.substr(0, shirt_detail.indexOf(' '));
            const ImageURL = $('.shirt-picture').find('img').attr('src');
            const URL = link;

            return cb(null, new Shirt(Title, Price, ImageURL, URL));
        }
        return cb();
    });
}

Then use async to map them across the async function that fetches the data:

async.map(shirtLinks, linkToJSON, (err, results) => {
    console.dir(results);
});
0
1

This is how I would do it. I find it easier to debug this way.

let getShirtDetailsBody = (link) => {
  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    request(link, (err, res, body) => {
      if (err) {
        reject(err)
      } else {
        resolve(body)
      }
    })
  })
}

let getShirt = (body) => {
  const $ = cheerio.load(body);
  const shirt_detail = $('.shirt-details').find('h1').text();

  const Title = shirt_detail.substr(shirt_detail.indexOf(' ') + 1)
  const Price = shirt_detail.substr(0, shirt_detail.indexOf(' '))
  const ImageURL = $('.shirt-picture').find('img').attr('src')
  const URL = link

  return new Shirt(Title, Price, ImageURL, URL)
}

let getAllProductsShirtsBody = (body) => {
  const $ = cheerio.load(body)
  
  return Promise.all($('.products').find('a').map((index, val) => {
    return getShirtDetailsBody(`rootURL${$(val).attr('href')}`)
  }))
}

getAllProductsShirtsBody(yourbody).then(allShirtsBody => {
  const allShirts = allShirtsBody.map(shirtBody => { return getShirt(shirtBody) })
  console.log(allShirts)
}).catch(err => { console.log(err) })

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.