How can I use the python HTMLParser library to extract data from a specific div tag?

Question:

I am trying to get a value out of a HTML page using the python HTMLParser library. The value I want to get hold of is within this HTML element:

...
<div id="remository">20</div>
...

This is my HTMLParser class so far:

class LinksParser(HTMLParser.HTMLParser):
  def __init__(self):
    HTMLParser.HTMLParser.__init__(self)
    self.seen = {}

  def handle_starttag(self, tag, attributes):
    if tag != 'div': return
    for name, value in attributes:
    if name == 'id' and value == 'remository':
      #print value
      return

  def handle_data(self, data):
    print data

p = LinksParser()
f = urllib.urlopen("http://example.com/somepage.html")
html = f.read()
p.feed(html)
p.close()

I want the class functionality to get the value 20.

Asked By: Martin

||

Answers:

class LinksParser(HTMLParser.HTMLParser):
  def __init__(self):
    HTMLParser.HTMLParser.__init__(self)
    self.recording = 0
    self.data = []

  def handle_starttag(self, tag, attributes):
    if tag != 'div':
      return
    if self.recording:
      self.recording += 1
      return
    for name, value in attributes:
      if name == 'id' and value == 'remository':
        break
    else:
      return
    self.recording = 1

  def handle_endtag(self, tag):
    if tag == 'div' and self.recording:
      self.recording -= 1

  def handle_data(self, data):
    if self.recording:
      self.data.append(data)

self.recording counts the number of nested div tags starting from a “triggering” one. When we’re in the sub-tree rooted in a triggering tag, we accumulate the data in self.data.

The data at the end of the parse are left in self.data (a list of strings, possibly empty if no triggering tag was met). Your code from outside the class can access the list directly from the instance at the end of the parse, or you can add appropriate accessor methods for the purpose, depending on what exactly is your goal.

The class could be easily made a bit more general by using, in lieu of the constant literal strings seen in the code above, 'div', 'id', and 'remository', instance attributes self.tag, self.attname and self.attvalue, set by __init__ from arguments passed to it — I avoided that cheap generalization step in the code above to avoid obscuring the core points (keep track of a count of nested tags and accumulate data into a list when the recording state is active).

Answered By: Alex Martelli

Little correction at Line 3

HTMLParser.HTMLParser.__init__(self)

it should be

HTMLParser.__init__(self)

The following worked for me though

import urllib2

from HTMLParser import HTMLParser

class MyHTMLParser(HTMLParser):

  def __init__(self):
    HTMLParser.__init__(self)
    self.recording = 0
    self.data = []
  def handle_starttag(self, tag, attrs):
    if tag == 'required_tag':
      for name, value in attrs:
        if name == 'somename' and value == 'somevale':
          print name, value
          print "Encountered the beginning of a %s tag" % tag
          self.recording = 1

  def handle_endtag(self, tag):
    if tag == 'required_tag':
      self.recording -=1
      print "Encountered the end of a %s tag" % tag

  def handle_data(self, data):
    if self.recording:
      self.data.append(data)

 p = MyHTMLParser()
 f = urllib2.urlopen('http://www.example.com')
 html = f.read()
 p.feed(html)
 print(p.data)
 p.close()
Answered By: pshirishreddy

Have You tried BeautifulSoup ?

from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
soup = BeautifulSoup('<div id="remository">20</div>')
tag=soup.div
print(tag.string)

This gives You 20 on output.

Answered By: modzello86

This works perfectly:

print (soup.find('the tag').text)
Answered By: helu
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