287

I'm trying to develop a simple web scraper. I want to extract plain text without HTML markup. My code works on plain (static) HTML, but not when content is generated by JavaScript embedded in the page.

In particular, when I use urllib2.urlopen(request) to read the page content, it doesn't show anything that would be added by the JavaScript code, because that code isn't executed anywhere. Normally it would be run by the web browser, but that isn't a part of my program.

How can I access this dynamic content from within my Python code?


See also Can scrapy be used to scrape dynamic content from websites that are using AJAX? for answers specific to Scrapy.

3

17 Answers 17

248

EDIT Sept 2021: phantomjs isn't maintained any more, either

EDIT 30/Dec/2017: This answer appears in top results of Google searches, so I decided to update it. The old answer is still at the end.

dryscape isn't maintained anymore and the library dryscape developers recommend is Python 2 only. I have found using Selenium's python library with Phantom JS as a web driver fast enough and easy to get the work done.

Once you have installed Phantom JS, make sure the phantomjs binary is available in the current path:

phantomjs --version
# result:
2.1.1

#Example To give an example, I created a sample page with following HTML code. (link):

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
  <meta charset="utf-8">
  <title>Javascript scraping test</title>
</head>
<body>
  <p id='intro-text'>No javascript support</p>
  <script>
     document.getElementById('intro-text').innerHTML = 'Yay! Supports javascript';
  </script> 
</body>
</html>

without javascript it says: No javascript support and with javascript: Yay! Supports javascript

#Scraping without JS support:

import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
response = requests.get(my_url)
soup = BeautifulSoup(response.text)
soup.find(id="intro-text")
# Result:
<p id="intro-text">No javascript support</p>

#Scraping with JS support:

from selenium import webdriver
driver = webdriver.PhantomJS()
driver.get(my_url)
p_element = driver.find_element_by_id(id_='intro-text')
print(p_element.text)
# result:
'Yay! Supports javascript'

You can also use Python library dryscrape to scrape javascript driven websites.

#Scraping with JS support:

import dryscrape
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
session = dryscrape.Session()
session.visit(my_url)
response = session.body()
soup = BeautifulSoup(response)
soup.find(id="intro-text")
# Result:
<p id="intro-text">Yay! Supports javascript</p>
7
  • 17
    Sadly, no Windows support.
    – Expenzor
    Commented Apr 17, 2017 at 14:39
  • 2
    @Expenzor I am working on windows. PhantomJS works fine. Commented Jan 12, 2018 at 10:43
  • 33
    Worth noting PhantomJS has been discontinued and is no longer under active development in light of Chrome now supporting headless. Use of headless chrome/firefox is suggested.
    – sytech
    Commented Mar 23, 2018 at 20:42
  • 6
    I get the following warning: Selenium support for PhantomJS has been deprecated, please use headless versions of Chrome or Firefox instead. Maybe @sytech was talking about Selenium support for it?
    – jpmc26
    Commented Apr 30, 2018 at 4:37
  • 4
    It's both selenium support and PhantomJS itself. github.com/ariya/phantomjs/issues/15344
    – sytech
    Commented Apr 30, 2018 at 12:34
124
+25

We are not getting the correct results because any javascript generated content needs to be rendered on the DOM. When we fetch an HTML page, we fetch the initial, unmodified by javascript, DOM.

Therefore we need to render the javascript content before we crawl the page.

As selenium is already mentioned many times in this thread (and how slow it gets sometimes was mentioned also), I will list two other possible solutions.


Solution 1: This is a very nice tutorial on how to use Scrapy to crawl javascript generated content and we are going to follow just that.

What we will need:

  1. Docker installed in our machine. This is a plus over other solutions until this point, as it utilizes an OS-independent platform.

  2. Install Splash following the instruction listed for our corresponding OS.
    Quoting from splash documentation:

    Splash is a javascript rendering service. It’s a lightweight web browser with an HTTP API, implemented in Python 3 using Twisted and QT5.

    Essentially we are going to use Splash to render Javascript generated content.

  3. Run the splash server: sudo docker run -p 8050:8050 scrapinghub/splash.

  4. Install the scrapy-splash plugin: pip install scrapy-splash

  5. Assuming that we already have a Scrapy project created (if not, let's make one), we will follow the guide and update the settings.py:

    Then go to your scrapy project’s settings.py and set these middlewares:

    DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES = {
          'scrapy_splash.SplashCookiesMiddleware': 723,
          'scrapy_splash.SplashMiddleware': 725,
          'scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.httpcompression.HttpCompressionMiddleware': 810,
    }
    

    The URL of the Splash server(if you’re using Win or OSX this should be the URL of the docker machine: How to get a Docker container's IP address from the host?):

    SPLASH_URL = 'http://localhost:8050'
    

    And finally you need to set these values too:

    DUPEFILTER_CLASS = 'scrapy_splash.SplashAwareDupeFilter'
    HTTPCACHE_STORAGE = 'scrapy_splash.SplashAwareFSCacheStorage'
    
  6. Finally, we can use a SplashRequest:

    In a normal spider you have Request objects which you can use to open URLs. If the page you want to open contains JS generated data you have to use SplashRequest(or SplashFormRequest) to render the page. Here’s a simple example:

    class MySpider(scrapy.Spider):
        name = "jsscraper"
        start_urls = ["http://quotes.toscrape.com/js/"]
    
        def start_requests(self):
            for url in self.start_urls:
            yield SplashRequest(
                url=url, callback=self.parse, endpoint='render.html'
            )
    
        def parse(self, response):
            for q in response.css("div.quote"):
            quote = QuoteItem()
            quote["author"] = q.css(".author::text").extract_first()
            quote["quote"] = q.css(".text::text").extract_first()
            yield quote
    

    SplashRequest renders the URL as html and returns the response which you can use in the callback(parse) method.


Solution 2: Let's call this experimental at the moment (May 2018)...
This solution is for Python's version 3.6 only (at the moment).

Do you know the requests module (well who doesn't)?
Now it has a web crawling little sibling: requests-HTML:

This library intends to make parsing HTML (e.g. scraping the web) as simple and intuitive as possible.

  1. Install requests-html: pipenv install requests-html

  2. Make a request to the page's url:

    from requests_html import HTMLSession
    
    session = HTMLSession()
    r = session.get(a_page_url)
    
  3. Render the response to get the Javascript generated bits:

    r.html.render()
    

Finally, the module seems to offer scraping capabilities.
Alternatively, we can try the well-documented way of using BeautifulSoup with the r.html object we just rendered.

5
  • 1
    can you expand on how to get the full HTML content, with JS bits loaded, after calling .render()? I'm stuck after that point. I'm not seeing all the iframes that are injected into the page normally from JavaScript in the r.html.html object. Commented Dec 13, 2018 at 20:24
  • @anon58192932 Since at the moment this is an experimental solution and I don't know what exactly you are trying to achieve as a result, I cannot really suggest anything... You can create a new question here on SO if you haven't worked out a solution yet Commented Jan 2, 2019 at 13:57
  • 9
    I got this error: RuntimeError: Cannot use HTMLSession within an existing event loop. Use AsyncHTMLSession instead. Commented Apr 23, 2019 at 15:59
  • 2
    @HuckIt this seems to be a known issue: github.com/psf/requests-html/issues/140 Commented Oct 15, 2019 at 12:22
  • 1
    I have tried the first method, but I still can not see js rendered content? Can you please tell me what am I missing. Commented Jul 12, 2022 at 16:41
65

Maybe selenium can do it.

from selenium import webdriver
import time

driver = webdriver.Firefox()
driver.get(url)
time.sleep(5)
htmlSource = driver.page_source
3
  • 4
    Selenium is really heavy for this kind of thing, that'd be unnecessarily slow and requires a browser head if you don't use PhantomJS, but this would work. Commented Jul 28, 2017 at 16:27
  • @JoshuaHedges You can run other more standard browsers in headless mode. Commented Jan 9, 2020 at 0:55
  • 10
    options = webdriver.ChromeOptions() options.add_argument('--headless') driver = webdriver.Chrome(options=options) Commented Oct 15, 2020 at 14:50
42

If you have ever used the Requests module for python before, I recently found out that the developer created a new module called Requests-HTML which now also has the ability to render JavaScript.

You can also visit https://html.python-requests.org/ to learn more about this module, or if you're only interested in rendering JavaScript then you can visit https://html.python-requests.org/?#javascript-support to directly learn how to use the module to render JavaScript using Python.

Essentially, once you correctly install the Requests-HTML module, the following example, which is shown on the above link, shows how you can use this module to scrape a website and render JavaScript contained within the website:

from requests_html import HTMLSession
session = HTMLSession()

r = session.get('http://python-requests.org/')

r.html.render()

r.html.search('Python 2 will retire in only {months} months!')['months']

'<time>25</time>' #This is the result.

I recently learned about this from a YouTube video. Click Here! to watch the YouTube video, which demonstrates how the module works.

5
  • 4
    Should note that this module has support for Python 3.6 only.
    – nat5142
    Commented Oct 12, 2018 at 15:56
  • 2
    Seems to be using chromium under the hood. Works great for me though
    – Sid
    Commented Apr 27, 2020 at 11:46
  • 2
    works for 3.9 too that means it works with 3.6 and greater. Commented Nov 20, 2021 at 1:08
  • Works fine on a Raspberry Pi. Just link to the native Chromium browser. stackoverflow.com/questions/66588194/…
    – Li_W
    Commented Jan 22, 2022 at 11:11
  • 3
    The domain 'http://python-requests.org/' is down, it would be nice if you could update your answer to demonstrate what .search does exactly.
    – Shayan
    Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 14:51
17

It sounds like the data you're really looking for can be accessed via a secondary URL called by some JavaScript on the primary page.

While you could try running JavaScript on the server to handle this, a simpler approach might be to load up the page using Firefox and use a tool like Charles or Firebug to identify exactly what that secondary URL is. Then you can just query that URL directly for the data you are interested in.

0
15

This seems to be a good solution also, taken from a great blog post

import sys  
from PyQt4.QtGui import *  
from PyQt4.QtCore import *  
from PyQt4.QtWebKit import *  
from lxml import html 

#Take this class for granted.Just use result of rendering.
class Render(QWebPage):  
  def __init__(self, url):  
    self.app = QApplication(sys.argv)  
    QWebPage.__init__(self)  
    self.loadFinished.connect(self._loadFinished)  
    self.mainFrame().load(QUrl(url))  
    self.app.exec_()  

  def _loadFinished(self, result):  
    self.frame = self.mainFrame()  
    self.app.quit()  

url = 'http://pycoders.com/archive/'  
r = Render(url)  
result = r.frame.toHtml()
# This step is important.Converting QString to Ascii for lxml to process

# The following returns an lxml element tree
archive_links = html.fromstring(str(result.toAscii()))
print archive_links

# The following returns an array containing the URLs
raw_links = archive_links.xpath('//div[@class="campaign"]/a/@href')
print raw_links
2
  • 1
    just to note that qtwebkit is really running a browser, therefore using selenium/webdriver is with lower overhead and can get equal result
    – Limina102
    Commented Aug 21, 2021 at 16:09
  • from PyQt > 5 QtWebKit deprecate use QtWebEngineWidgets
    – cards
    Commented Oct 4, 2021 at 16:48
13

Selenium is the best for scraping JS and Ajax content.

Check this article for extracting data from the web using Python

$ pip install selenium

Then download Chrome webdriver.

from selenium import webdriver

browser = webdriver.Chrome()

browser.get("https://www.python.org/")

nav = browser.find_element_by_id("mainnav")

print(nav.text)

Easy, right?

2
  • 1
    selenium is best, but some sites seem to detect to selenium usage. Commented Aug 26, 2020 at 5:21
  • I think you will also need the chromedriver on your PATH for this to work.
    – wsams
    Commented Nov 1, 2022 at 16:08
10

You can also execute javascript using webdriver.

from selenium import webdriver

driver = webdriver.Firefox()
driver.get(url)
driver.execute_script('document.title')

or store the value in a variable

result = driver.execute_script('var text = document.title ; return text')
1
  • 1
    or you can just use the driver.title property Commented Jun 17, 2018 at 22:39
9

I personally prefer using scrapy and selenium and dockerizing both in separate containers. This way you can install both with minimal hassle and crawl modern websites that almost all contain javascript in one form or another. Here's an example:

Use the scrapy startproject to create your scraper and write your spider, the skeleton can be as simple as this:

import scrapy


class MySpider(scrapy.Spider):
    name = 'my_spider'
    start_urls = ['https://somewhere.com']

    def start_requests(self):
        yield scrapy.Request(url=self.start_urls[0])


    def parse(self, response):

        # do stuff with results, scrape items etc.
        # now were just checking everything worked

        print(response.body)

The real magic happens in the middlewares.py. Overwrite two methods in the downloader middleware, __init__ and process_request, in the following way:

# import some additional modules that we need
import os
from copy import deepcopy
from time import sleep

from scrapy import signals
from scrapy.http import HtmlResponse
from selenium import webdriver

class SampleProjectDownloaderMiddleware(object):

def __init__(self):
    SELENIUM_LOCATION = os.environ.get('SELENIUM_LOCATION', 'NOT_HERE')
    SELENIUM_URL = f'http://{SELENIUM_LOCATION}:4444/wd/hub'
    chrome_options = webdriver.ChromeOptions()

    # chrome_options.add_experimental_option("mobileEmulation", mobile_emulation)
    self.driver = webdriver.Remote(command_executor=SELENIUM_URL,
                                   desired_capabilities=chrome_options.to_capabilities())


def process_request(self, request, spider):

    self.driver.get(request.url)

    # sleep a bit so the page has time to load
    # or monitor items on page to continue as soon as page ready
    sleep(4)

    # if you need to manipulate the page content like clicking and scrolling, you do it here
    # self.driver.find_element_by_css_selector('.my-class').click()

    # you only need the now properly and completely rendered html from your page to get results
    body = deepcopy(self.driver.page_source)

    # copy the current url in case of redirects
    url = deepcopy(self.driver.current_url)

    return HtmlResponse(url, body=body, encoding='utf-8', request=request)

Dont forget to enable this middlware by uncommenting the next lines in the settings.py file:

DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES = {
'sample_project.middlewares.SampleProjectDownloaderMiddleware': 543,}

Next for dockerization. Create your Dockerfile from a lightweight image (I'm using python Alpine here), copy your project directory to it, install requirements:

# Use an official Python runtime as a parent image
FROM python:3.6-alpine

# install some packages necessary to scrapy and then curl because it's  handy for debugging
RUN apk --update add linux-headers libffi-dev openssl-dev build-base libxslt-dev libxml2-dev curl python-dev

WORKDIR /my_scraper

ADD requirements.txt /my_scraper/

RUN pip install -r requirements.txt

ADD . /scrapers

And finally bring it all together in docker-compose.yaml:

version: '2'
services:
  selenium:
    image: selenium/standalone-chrome
    ports:
      - "4444:4444"
    shm_size: 1G

  my_scraper:
    build: .
    depends_on:
      - "selenium"
    environment:
      - SELENIUM_LOCATION=samplecrawler_selenium_1
    volumes:
      - .:/my_scraper
    # use this command to keep the container running
    command: tail -f /dev/null

Run docker-compose up -d. If you're doing this the first time it will take a while for it to fetch the latest selenium/standalone-chrome and the build your scraper image as well.

Once it's done, you can check that your containers are running with docker ps and also check that the name of the selenium container matches that of the environment variable that we passed to our scraper container (here, it was SELENIUM_LOCATION=samplecrawler_selenium_1).

Enter your scraper container with docker exec -ti YOUR_CONTAINER_NAME sh , the command for me was docker exec -ti samplecrawler_my_scraper_1 sh, cd into the right directory and run your scraper with scrapy crawl my_spider.

The entire thing is on my github page and you can get it from here

0
8

A mix of BeautifulSoup and Selenium works very well for me.

from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.common.by import By
from selenium.webdriver.support.ui import WebDriverWait
from selenium.webdriver.support import expected_conditions as EC
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup as bs

driver = webdriver.Firefox()
driver.get("http://somedomain/url_that_delays_loading")
    try:
        element = WebDriverWait(driver, 10).until(
        EC.presence_of_element_located((By.ID, "myDynamicElement"))) #waits 10 seconds until element is located. Can have other wait conditions  such as visibility_of_element_located or text_to_be_present_in_element

        html = driver.page_source
        soup = bs(html, "lxml")
        dynamic_text = soup.find_all("p", {"class":"class_name"}) #or other attributes, optional
    else:
        print("Couldnt locate element")

P.S. You can find more wait conditions here

3
  • What's BeautifulSoup for? Selenium already has selectors and works on the live page.
    – ggorlen
    Commented Aug 27, 2021 at 23:27
  • @ggorlen to extract the text or other data. Selenium selectors are there to navigate elements on the page. This was the case when I used it.
    – Biarys
    Commented Aug 29, 2021 at 0:39
  • Selenium can extract data too after the element has been selected. See many answers on this page, such as this.
    – ggorlen
    Commented Aug 29, 2021 at 1:14
7

Using PyQt5

from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication
from PyQt5.QtCore import QUrl
from PyQt5.QtWebEngineWidgets import QWebEnginePage
import sys
import bs4 as bs
import urllib.request


class Client(QWebEnginePage):
    def __init__(self,url):
        global app
        self.app = QApplication(sys.argv)
        QWebEnginePage.__init__(self)
        self.html = ""
        self.loadFinished.connect(self.on_load_finished)
        self.load(QUrl(url))
        self.app.exec_()

    def on_load_finished(self):
        self.html = self.toHtml(self.Callable)
        print("Load Finished")

    def Callable(self,data):
        self.html = data
        self.app.quit()

# url = ""
# client_response = Client(url)
# print(client_response.html)
4
  • 1
    +1, Thanks! This was the solution that worked for me, since selenium is a bit overkill for such a simple task and requests-html is only for python 3.6. I would recommend this solution over any other.
    – WhiteWood
    Commented Jun 1, 2021 at 17:17
  • 1
    The above code worked for me, but only after installing QtWebEngineWidgets separately. Install in this order: pip install PyQt5 and afterwards: pip install QtWebEngineWidgets Commented Jul 20, 2022 at 8:55
  • Is it possible to execute JS on a website with this?
    – MaxFrost
    Commented Oct 1, 2022 at 8:22
  • Yes stackoverflow.com/a/52100343 runJavaScript function should work post page load
    – Ash Ishh
    Commented Oct 2, 2022 at 17:26
5

Playwright-Python

Yet another option is playwright-python, a port of Microsoft's Playwright (itself a Puppeteer-influenced browser automation library) to Python.

Here's the minimal example of selecting an element and grabbing its text:

from playwright.sync_api import sync_playwright

with sync_playwright() as p:
    browser = p.chromium.launch()
    page = browser.new_page()
    page.goto("http://whatsmyuseragent.org/")
    ua = page.query_selector(".user-agent");
    print(ua.text_content())
    browser.close()
2
  • Hey, thanks for the report. I hope you're happy to learn that I'm deleting my account (just waiting for deletion approval), my edits should not bother you or anyone else any more, you can preserve your perfect historical record of all old versions of various libraries and whatever. Feel free to check out this blog post though: joelonsoftware.com/2008/12/28/stack-overflow-is-a-wiki
    – user3064538
    Commented Sep 27, 2023 at 16:54
  • @user14 I'm not against editing, nor do I want you to delete your account. I appreciate your philosophy and I'm not against editing to improve answers, wiki-style, as Joel suggests. There's a problem in this thread for sure--old, long-deprecated libraries dominate the rankings, and it'll take a long time for Playwright, probably the best answer for the forseeable future, to rise up. But we have a trending answer sort now, unpinned OP choice, and comments, voting and the ability to edit in disclaimers and caveats. Radically altering old posts that may be valuable to someone is going too far.
    – ggorlen
    Commented Sep 27, 2023 at 17:05
5
+250

Try accessing the API directly

A common scenario you'll see in scraping is that the data is being requested asynchronously from an API endpoint by the webpage. A minimal example of this would be the following site:

<body>
<script>
fetch("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1")
  .then(res => {
    if (!res.ok) throw Error(res.status);
    
    return res.json();
  })
  .then(data => {
    // inject data dynamically via JS after page load
    document.body.innerText = data.title;
  })
  .catch(err => console.error(err))
;
</script>
</body>

In many cases, the API will be protected by CORS or an access token or prohibitively rate limited, but in other cases it's publicly-accessible and you can bypass the website entirely. For CORS issues, you might try cors-anywhere.

The general procedure is to use your browser's developer tools' network tab to search the requests made by the page for keywords/substrings of the data you want to scrape. Often, you'll see an unprotected API request endpoint with a JSON payload that you can access directly with urllib or requests modules. That's the case with the above runnable snippet which you can use to practice. After clicking "run snippet", here's how I found the endpoint in my network tab:

example network tab showing remote URL endpoint found with a search

This example is contrived; the endpoint URL will likely be non-obvious from looking at the static markup because it could be dynamically assembled, minified and buried under dozens of other requests and endpoints. The network request will also show any relevant request payload details like access token you may need.

After obtaining the endpoint URL and relevant details, build a request in Python using a standard HTTP library and request the data:

>>> import requests
>>> res = requests.get("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1")
>>> data = res.json()
>>> data["title"]
'sunt aut facere repellat provident occaecati excepturi optio reprehenderit'

When you can get away with it, this tends to be much easier, faster and more reliable than scraping the page with Selenium, Playwright-Python, Scrapy or whatever the popular scraping libraries are at the time you're reading this post.

If you're unlucky and the data hasn't arrived via an API request that returns the data in a nice format, it could be part of the original browser's payload in a <script> tag, either as a JSON string or (more likely) a JS object. For example:

<body>
<script>
  var someHardcodedData = {
    userId: 1,
    id: 1,
    title: 'sunt aut facere repellat provident occaecati excepturi optio reprehenderit', 
    body: 'quia et suscipit\nsuscipit recusandae con sequuntur expedita et cum\nreprehenderit molestiae ut ut quas totam\nnostrum rerum est autem sunt rem eveniet architecto'
  };
  document.body.textContent = someHardcodedData.title;
</script>
</body>

There's no one-size-fits-all way to obtain this data. The basic technique is to use BeautifulSoup to access the <script> tag text, then apply a regex or a parse to extract the object structure, JSON string, or whatever format the data might be in. Here's a proof-of-concept on the sample structure shown above:

import json
import re
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup

# pretend we've already used requests to retrieve the data, 
# so we hardcode it for the purposes of this example
text = """
<body>
<script>
  var someHardcodedData = {
    userId: 1,
    id: 1,
    title: 'sunt aut facere repellat provident occaecati excepturi optio reprehenderit', 
    body: 'quia et suscipit\nsuscipit recusandae con sequuntur expedita et cum\nreprehenderit molestiae ut ut quas totam\nnostrum rerum est autem sunt rem eveniet architecto'
  };
  document.body.textContent = someHardcodedData.title;
</script>
</body>
"""
soup = BeautifulSoup(text, "lxml")
script_text = str(soup.select_one("script"))
pattern = r"title: '(.*?)'"
print(re.search(pattern, script_text, re.S).group(1))

Check out these resources for parsing JS objects that aren't quite valid JSON:

Here are some additional case studies/proofs-of-concept where scraping was bypassed using an API:

If all else fails, try one of the many dynamic scraping libraries listed in this thread.

1
  • 1
    This approach is far too often overlooked even if it doesn't technically answer the question - because it's very often an XY problem. It's also very nice to see a detailed examination of how to do the investigative work. (Although, of course, one should first check the website for a documented API.) Commented May 13 at 2:42
4

As of late 2022, Pyppeteer is no longer maintained; consider playwright-python as an alternative.


Pyppeteer

You might consider Pyppeteer, a Python port of the Chrome/Chromium driver front-end Puppeteer.

Here's a simple example to show how you can use Pyppeteer to access data that was injected into the page dynamically:

import asyncio
from pyppeteer import launch


async def main():
    browser = await launch({"headless": True})
    [page] = await browser.pages()

    # normally, you go to a live site...
    #await page.goto("http://www.example.com")
    # but for this example, just set the HTML directly:
    await page.setContent("""
    <body>
    <script>
    // inject content dynamically with JS, not part of the static HTML!
    document.body.innerHTML = `<p>hello world</p>`; 
    </script>
    </body>
    """)
    print(await page.content()) # shows that the `<p>` was inserted

    # evaluate a JS expression in browser context and scrape the data
    expr = "document.querySelector('p').textContent"
    print(await page.evaluate(expr, force_expr=True)) # => hello world

    await browser.close()


asyncio.run(main())

See Pyppeteer's reference docs.

2

You'll want to use urllib, requests, beautifulSoup and selenium web driver in your script for different parts of the page, (to name a few).
Sometimes you'll get what you need with just one of these modules.
Sometimes you'll need two, three, or all of these modules.
Sometimes you'll need to switch off the js on your browser.
Sometimes you'll need header info in your script.
No websites can be scraped the same way and no website can be scraped in the same way forever without having to modify your crawler, usually after a few months. But they can all be scraped! Where there's a will there's a way for sure.
If you need scraped data continuously into the future just scrape everything you need and store it in .dat files with pickle.
Just keep searching how to try what with these modules and copying and pasting your errors into the Google.

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As mentioned, Selenium is a good choice for rendering the results of the JavaScript:

from selenium.webdriver import Firefox
from selenium.webdriver.firefox.options import Options

options = Options()
options.headless = True
browser = Firefox(executable_path="/usr/local/bin/geckodriver", options=options)

url = "https://www.example.com"
browser.get(url)

And gazpacho is a really easy library to parse over the rendered html:

from gazpacho import Soup

soup = Soup(browser.page_source)
soup.find("a").attrs['href']
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0

I recently used requests_html library to solve this problem.

Their expanded documentation at readthedocs.io is pretty good (skip the annotated version at pypi.org). If your use case is basic, you are likely to have some success.

from requests_html import HTMLSession
session = HTMLSession()
response = session.request(method="get",url="www.google.com/")
response.html.render()

If you are having trouble rendering the data you need with response.html.render(), you can pass some javascript to the render function to render the particular js object you need. This is copied from their docs, but it might be just what you need:

If script is specified, it will execute the provided JavaScript at runtime. Example:

script = """
    () => {
        return {
            width: document.documentElement.clientWidth,
            height: document.documentElement.clientHeight,
            deviceScaleFactor: window.devicePixelRatio,
        }
    } 
"""

Returns the return value of the executed script, if any is provided:

>>> response.html.render(script=script)
{'width': 800, 'height': 600, 'deviceScaleFactor': 1}

In my case, the data I wanted were the arrays that populated a javascript plot but the data wasn't getting rendered as text anywhere in the html. Sometimes its not clear at all what the object names are of the data you want if the data is populated dynamically. If you can't track down the js objects directly from view source or inspect, you can type in "window" followed by ENTER in the debugger console in the browser (Chrome) to pull up a full list of objects rendered by the browser. If you make a few educated guesses about where the data is stored, you might have some luck finding it there. My graph data was under window.view.data in the console, so in the "script" variable passed to the .render() method quoted above, I used:

return {
    data: window.view.data
}
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  • 1
    It seems requests_html is no longer actively maintained (last update May 2020). It uses pyppeteer for rendering, which does seem to be actively maintained; it uses Chromium for rendering underneath. Commented Jul 5, 2021 at 17:30

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