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Groups > comp.lang.python > #39852

Re: using urllib on a more complex site

Newsgroups comp.lang.python
Date 2013-02-24 17:32 -0800
References <e3e061a0-493b-4b8b-992b-a175dbecd4ac@googlegroups.com> <mailman.2463.1361752083.2939.python-list@python.org>
Subject Re: using urllib on a more complex site
From "Adam W." <AWasilenko@gmail.com>
Message-ID <mailman.2474.1361755952.2939.python-list@python.org> (permalink)

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On Sunday, February 24, 2013 7:27:54 PM UTC-5, Chris Rebert wrote:
> On Sunday, February 24, 2013, Adam W.  wrote:
> I'm trying to write a simple script to scrape http://www.vudu.com/movies/#tag/99centOfTheDay/99c%20Rental%20of%20the%20day
> 
> 
> 
> 
> in order to send myself an email every day of the 99c movie of the day.
> 
> 
> 
> However, using a simple command like (in Python 3.0):
> 
> urllib.request.urlopen('http://www.vudu.com/movies/#tag/99centOfTheDay/99c%20Rental%20of%20the%20day').read()
> 
> 
> 
> 
> I don't get the all the source I need, its just the navigation buttons.  Now I assume they are using some CSS/javascript witchcraft to load all the useful data later, so my question is how do I make urllib "wait" and grab that data as well?
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> urllib isn't a web browser. It just requests the single (in this case, HTML) file from the given URL. It does not parse the HTML (indeed, it doesn't care what kind of file you're dealing with); therefore, it obviously does not retrieve the other resources linked within the document (CSS, JS, images, etc.) nor does it run any JavaScript. So, there's nothing to "wait" for; urllib is already doing everything it was designed to do.
> 
> 
> 
> Your best bet is to open the page in a web browser yourself and use the developer tools/inspectors to watch what XHR requests the page's scripts are making, find the one(s) that have the data you care about, and then make those requests instead via urllib (or the `requests` 3rd-party lib, or whatever). If the URL(s) vary, reverse-engineering the scheme used to generate them will also be required.
> 
> 
> 
> Alternatively, you could use something like Selenium, which let's you drive an actual full web browser (e.g. Firefox) from Python.
> 
> 
> Cheers,
> Chris
> 
> 
> -- 
> Cheers,
> Chris
> --
> http://rebertia.com

Huzzah! Found it: http://apicache.vudu.com/api2/claimedAppId/myvudu/format/application*2Fjson/callback/DirectorSequentialCallback/_type/contentSearch/count/30/dimensionality/any/followup/ratingsSummaries/followup/totalCount/offset/0/tag/99centOfTheDay/type/program/type/season/type/episode/type/bundle

Thanks for the tip about XHR's

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Thread

using urllib on a more complex site "Adam W." <AWasilenko@gmail.com> - 2013-02-24 16:02 -0800
  Re: using urllib on a more complex site Chris Rebert <clp2@rebertia.com> - 2013-02-24 16:27 -0800
    Re: using urllib on a more complex site "Adam W." <AWasilenko@gmail.com> - 2013-02-24 17:32 -0800
    Re: using urllib on a more complex site "Adam W." <AWasilenko@gmail.com> - 2013-02-24 17:32 -0800
  Re: using urllib on a more complex site Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> - 2013-02-24 19:30 -0500
    Re: using urllib on a more complex site "Adam W." <AWasilenko@gmail.com> - 2013-02-24 17:28 -0800
    Re: using urllib on a more complex site "Adam W." <AWasilenko@gmail.com> - 2013-02-24 17:28 -0800

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