I'm using Python 3 and I'm trying to retrieve data from a website. However, this data is dynamically loaded and the code I have right now doesn't work:
url = eveCentralBaseURL + str(mineral)
print("URL : %s" % url);
response = request.urlopen(url)
data = str(response.read(10000))
data = data.replace("\\n", "\n")
print(data)
Where I'm trying to find a particular value, I'm finding a template instead e.g."{{formatPrice median}}" instead of "4.48".
How can I make it so that I can retrieve the value instead of the placeholder text?
Edit: This is the specific page I'm trying to extract information from. I'm trying to get the "median" value, which uses the template {{formatPrice median}}
Edit 2: I've installed and set up my program to use Selenium and BeautifulSoup.
The code I have now is:
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
from selenium import webdriver
#...
driver = webdriver.Firefox()
driver.get(url)
html = driver.page_source
soup = BeautifulSoup(html)
print "Finding..."
for tag in soup.find_all('formatPrice median'):
print tag.text
Here is a screenshot of the program as it's executing. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem to be finding anything with "formatPrice median" specified.
Assuming you are trying to get values from a page that is rendered using javascript templates (for instance something like handlebars), then this is what you will get with any of the standard solutions (i.e.
beautifulsoup
orrequests
).This is because the browser uses javascript to alter what it received and create new DOM elements.
urllib
will do the requesting part like a browser but not the template rendering part. A good description of the issues can be found here. This article discusses three main solutions:This answer provides a few more suggestions for option 3, such as selenium or watir. I've used selenium for automated web testing and its pretty handy.
EDIT
From your comments it looks like it is a handlebars driven site. I'd recommend selenium and beautiful soup. This answer gives a good code example which may be useful:
Basically selenium gets the rendered HTML from your browser and then you can parse it using BeautifulSoup from the
page_source
property. Good luck :)