Beautiful Soup Documentation¶
Beautiful Soup is a Python library for pulling data out of HTML and XML files. It works with your favorite parser to provide idiomatic ways of navigating, searching, and modifying the parse tree. It commonly saves programmers hours or days of work.
These instructions illustrate all major features of Beautiful Soup 4, with examples. I show you what the library is good for, how it works, how to use it, how to make it do what you want, and what to do when it violates your expectations.
This document covers Beautiful Soup version 4.12.2. The examples in this documentation were written for Python 3.8.
You might be looking for the documentation for Beautiful Soup 3. If so, you should know that Beautiful Soup 3 is no longer being developed and that all support for it was dropped on December 31, 2020. If you want to learn about the differences between Beautiful Soup 3 and Beautiful Soup 4, see Porting code to BS4.
This documentation has been translated into other languages by Beautiful Soup users:
このページは日本語で利用できます(外部リンク)
Este documento também está disponível em Português do Brasil.
Este documento también está disponible en una traducción al español.
Getting help¶
If you have questions about Beautiful Soup, or run into problems, send mail to the discussion group. If your problem involves parsing an HTML document, be sure to mention what the diagnose() function says about that document.
When reporting an error in this documentation, please mention which translation you’re reading.
Quick Start¶
Here’s an HTML document I’ll be using as an example throughout this document. It’s part of a story from Alice in Wonderland:
html_doc = """<html><head><title>The Dormouse's story</title></head>
<body>
<p class="title"><b>The Dormouse's story</b></p>
<p class="story">Once upon a time there were three little sisters; and their names were
<a href="http://example.com/elsie" class="sister" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
<a href="http://example.com/lacie" class="sister" id="link2">Lacie</a> and
<a href="http://example.com/tillie" class="sister" id="link3">Tillie</a>;
and they lived at the bottom of a well.</p>
<p class="story">...</p>
"""
Running the “three sisters” document through Beautiful Soup gives us a
BeautifulSoup
object, which represents the document as a nested
data structure:
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
soup = BeautifulSoup(html_doc, 'html.parser')
print(soup.prettify())
# <html>
# <head>
# <title>
# The Dormouse's story
# </title>
# </head>
# <body>
# <p class="title">
# <b>
# The Dormouse's story
# </b>
# </p>
# <p class="story">
# Once upon a time there were three little sisters; and their names were
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">
# Elsie
# </a>
# ,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">
# Lacie
# </a>
# and
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">
# Tillie
# </a>
# ; and they lived at the bottom of a well.
# </p>
# <p class="story">
# ...
# </p>
# </body>
# </html>
Here are some simple ways to navigate that data structure:
soup.title
# <title>The Dormouse's story</title>
soup.title.name
# u'title'
soup.title.string
# u'The Dormouse's story'
soup.title.parent.name
# u'head'
soup.p
# <p class="title"><b>The Dormouse's story</b></p>
soup.p['class']
# u'title'
soup.a
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>
soup.find_all('a')
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
soup.find(id="link3")
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>
One common task is extracting all the URLs found within a page’s <a> tags:
for link in soup.find_all('a'):
print(link.get('href'))
# http://example.com/elsie
# http://example.com/lacie
# http://example.com/tillie
Another common task is extracting all the text from a page:
print(soup.get_text())
# The Dormouse's story
#
# The Dormouse's story
#
# Once upon a time there were three little sisters; and their names were
# Elsie,
# Lacie and
# Tillie;
# and they lived at the bottom of a well.
#
# ...
Does this look like what you need? If so, read on.
Installing Beautiful Soup¶
If you’re using a recent version of Debian or Ubuntu Linux, you can install Beautiful Soup with the system package manager:
$ apt-get install python3-bs4
Beautiful Soup 4 is published through PyPi, so if you can’t install it
with the system packager, you can install it with easy_install
or
pip
. The package name is beautifulsoup4
. Make sure you use the
right version of pip
or easy_install
for your Python version
(these may be named pip3
and easy_install3
respectively).
$ easy_install beautifulsoup4
$ pip install beautifulsoup4
(The BeautifulSoup
package is not what you want. That’s
the previous major release, Beautiful Soup 3. Lots of software uses
BS3, so it’s still available, but if you’re writing new code you
should install beautifulsoup4
.)
If you don’t have easy_install
or pip
installed, you can
download the Beautiful Soup 4 source tarball and
install it with setup.py
.
$ python setup.py install
If all else fails, the license for Beautiful Soup allows you to
package the entire library with your application. You can download the
tarball, copy its bs4
directory into your application’s codebase,
and use Beautiful Soup without installing it at all.
I use Python 3.10 to develop Beautiful Soup, but it should work with other recent versions.
Installing a parser¶
Beautiful Soup supports the HTML parser included in Python’s standard library, but it also supports a number of third-party Python parsers. One is the lxml parser. Depending on your setup, you might install lxml with one of these commands:
$ apt-get install python-lxml
$ easy_install lxml
$ pip install lxml
Another alternative is the pure-Python html5lib parser, which parses HTML the way a web browser does. Depending on your setup, you might install html5lib with one of these commands:
$ apt-get install python3-html5lib
$ pip install html5lib
This table summarizes the advantages and disadvantages of each parser library:
Parser |
Typical usage |
Advantages |
Disadvantages |
Python’s html.parser |
|
|
|
lxml’s HTML parser |
|
|
|
lxml’s XML parser |
|
|
|
html5lib |
|
|
|
If you can, I recommend you install and use lxml for speed.
Note that if a document is invalid, different parsers will generate different Beautiful Soup trees for it. See Differences between parsers for details.
Making the soup¶
To parse a document, pass it into the BeautifulSoup
constructor. You can pass in a string or an open filehandle:
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
with open("index.html") as fp:
soup = BeautifulSoup(fp, 'html.parser')
soup = BeautifulSoup("<html>a web page</html>", 'html.parser')
First, the document is converted to Unicode, and HTML entities are converted to Unicode characters:
print(BeautifulSoup("<html><head></head><body>Sacré bleu!</body></html>", "html.parser"))
# <html><head></head><body>Sacré bleu!</body></html>
Beautiful Soup then parses the document using the best available parser. It will use an HTML parser unless you specifically tell it to use an XML parser. (See Parsing XML.)
Kinds of objects¶
Beautiful Soup transforms a complex HTML document into a complex tree
of Python objects. But you’ll only ever have to deal with about four
kinds of objects: Tag
, NavigableString
, BeautifulSoup
,
and Comment
. These objects represent the HTML elements
that comprise the page.
- class bs4.Tag¶
A
Tag
object corresponds to an XML or HTML tag in the original document.soup = BeautifulSoup('<b class="boldest">Extremely bold</b>', 'html.parser') tag = soup.b type(tag) # <class 'bs4.element.Tag'>
Tags have a lot of attributes and methods, and I’ll cover most of them in Navigating the tree and Searching the tree. For now, the most important methods of a tag are for accessing its name and attributes.
- name¶
Every tag has a name:
tag.name # 'b'
If you change a tag’s name, the change will be reflected in any markup generated by Beautiful Soup down the line:
tag.name = "blockquote" tag # <blockquote class="boldest">Extremely bold</blockquote>
- attrs¶
An HTML or XML tag may have any number of attributes. The tag
<b id="boldest">
has an attribute “id” whose value is “boldest”. You can access a tag’s attributes by treating the tag like a dictionary:tag = BeautifulSoup('<b id="boldest">bold</b>', 'html.parser').b tag['id'] # 'boldest'
You can access the dictionary of attributes directly as
.attrs
:tag.attrs # {'id': 'boldest'} tag.attrs.keys() # dict_keys(['id'])
You can add, remove, and modify a tag’s attributes. Again, this is done by treating the tag as a dictionary:
tag['id'] = 'verybold' tag['another-attribute'] = 1 tag # <b another-attribute="1" id="verybold"></b> del tag['id'] del tag['another-attribute'] tag # <b>bold</b> tag['id'] # KeyError: 'id' tag.get('id') # None
Multi-valued attributes¶
HTML 4 defines a few attributes that can have multiple values. HTML 5 removes a couple of them, but defines a few more. The most common multi-valued attribute is
class
(that is, a tag can have more than one CSS class). Others includerel
,rev
,accept-charset
,headers
, andaccesskey
. By default, Beautiful Soup stores the value(s) of a multi-valued attribute as a list:css_soup = BeautifulSoup('<p class="body"></p>', 'html.parser') css_soup.p['class'] # ['body'] css_soup = BeautifulSoup('<p class="body strikeout"></p>', 'html.parser') css_soup.p['class'] # ['body', 'strikeout']
When you turn a tag back into a string, the values of any multi-valued attributes are consolidated:
rel_soup = BeautifulSoup('<p>Back to the <a rel="index first">homepage</a></p>', 'html.parser') rel_soup.a['rel'] # ['index', 'first'] rel_soup.a['rel'] = ['index', 'contents'] print(rel_soup.p) # <p>Back to the <a rel="index contents">homepage</a></p>
If an attribute looks like it has more than one value, but it’s not a multi-valued attribute as defined by any version of the HTML standard, Beautiful Soup stores it as a simple string:
id_soup = BeautifulSoup('<p id="my id"></p>', 'html.parser') id_soup.p['id'] # 'my id'
You can force all attributes to be stored as strings by passing
multi_valued_attributes=None
as a keyword argument into theBeautifulSoup
constructor:no_list_soup = BeautifulSoup('<p class="body strikeout"></p>', 'html.parser', multi_valued_attributes=None) no_list_soup.p['class'] # 'body strikeout'
You can use
get_attribute_list
to always return the value in a list container, whether it’s a string or multi-valued attribute value:id_soup.p['id'] # 'my id' id_soup.p.get_attribute_list('id') # ["my id"]
If you parse a document as XML, there are no multi-valued attributes:
xml_soup = BeautifulSoup('<p class="body strikeout"></p>', 'xml') xml_soup.p['class'] # 'body strikeout'
Again, you can configure this using the
multi_valued_attributes
argument:class_is_multi= { '*' : 'class'} xml_soup = BeautifulSoup('<p class="body strikeout"></p>', 'xml', multi_valued_attributes=class_is_multi) xml_soup.p['class'] # ['body', 'strikeout']
You probably won’t need to do this, but if you do, use the defaults as a guide. They implement the rules described in the HTML specification:
from bs4.builder import builder_registry builder_registry.lookup('html').DEFAULT_CDATA_LIST_ATTRIBUTES
A tag can contain strings as pieces of text. Beautiful Soup
uses the NavigableString
class to contain these pieces of text:
soup = BeautifulSoup('<b class="boldest">Extremely bold</b>', 'html.parser')
tag = soup.b
tag.string
# 'Extremely bold'
type(tag.string)
# <class 'bs4.element.NavigableString'>
A NavigableString
is just like a Python Unicode string, except
that it also supports some of the features described in Navigating
the tree and Searching the tree. You can convert a
NavigableString
to a Unicode string with str
:
unicode_string = str(tag.string)
unicode_string
# 'Extremely bold'
type(unicode_string)
# <type 'str'>
You can’t edit a string in place, but you can replace one string with another, using replace_with():
tag.string.replace_with("No longer bold")
tag
# <b class="boldest">No longer bold</b>
NavigableString
supports most of the features described in
Navigating the tree and Searching the tree, but not all of
them. In particular, since a string can’t contain anything (the way a
tag may contain a string or another tag), strings don’t support the
.contents
or .string
attributes, or the find()
method.
If you want to use a NavigableString
outside of Beautiful Soup,
you should call unicode()
on it to turn it into a normal Python
Unicode string. If you don’t, your string will carry around a
reference to the entire Beautiful Soup parse tree, even when you’re
done using Beautiful Soup. This is a big waste of memory.
- class bs4.BeautifulSoup¶
The BeautifulSoup
object represents the parsed document as a
whole. For most purposes, you can treat it as a Tag
object. This means it supports most of the methods described in
Navigating the tree and Searching the tree.
You can also pass a BeautifulSoup
object into one of the methods
defined in Modifying the tree, just as you would a Tag
. This
lets you do things like combine two parsed documents:
doc = BeautifulSoup("<document><content/>INSERT FOOTER HERE</document", "xml")
footer = BeautifulSoup("<footer>Here's the footer</footer>", "xml")
doc.find(text="INSERT FOOTER HERE").replace_with(footer)
# 'INSERT FOOTER HERE'
print(doc)
# <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
# <document><content/><footer>Here's the footer</footer></document>
Since the BeautifulSoup
object doesn’t correspond to an actual
HTML or XML tag, it has no name and no attributes. But sometimes it’s
useful to reference its .name
(such as when writing code that works
with both Tag
and BeautifulSoup
objects),
so it’s been given the special .name
“[document]”:
soup.name
# '[document]'
Special strings¶
Tag
, NavigableString
, and
BeautifulSoup
cover almost everything you’ll see in an
HTML or XML file, but there are a few leftover bits. The main one
you’ll probably encounter is the Comment
.
- class bs4.Comment¶
markup = "<b><!--Hey, buddy. Want to buy a used parser?--></b>"
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
comment = soup.b.string
type(comment)
# <class 'bs4.element.Comment'>
The Comment
object is just a special type of NavigableString
:
comment
# 'Hey, buddy. Want to buy a used parser'
But when it appears as part of an HTML document, a Comment
is
displayed with special formatting:
print(soup.b.prettify())
# <b>
# <!--Hey, buddy. Want to buy a used parser?-->
# </b>
For HTML documents¶
Beautiful Soup defines a few NavigableString
subclasses to
contain strings found inside specific HTML tags. This makes it easier
to pick out the main body of the page, by ignoring strings that
probably represent programming directives found within the
page. (These classes are new in Beautiful Soup 4.9.0, and the
html5lib parser doesn’t use them.)
- class bs4.Stylesheet¶
A NavigableString
subclass that represents embedded CSS
stylesheets; that is, any strings found inside a <style>
tag
during document parsing.
- class bs4.Script¶
A NavigableString
subclass that represents embedded
Javascript; that is, any strings found inside a <script>
tag
during document parsing.
- class bs4.Template¶
A NavigableString
subclass that represents embedded HTML
templates; that is, any strings found inside a <template>
tag during
document parsing.
For XML documents¶
Beautiful Soup defines some NavigableString
classes for
holding special types of strings that can be found in XML
documents. Like Comment
, these classes are subclasses of
NavigableString
that add something extra to the string on
output.
- class bs4.Declaration¶
A NavigableString
subclass representing the declaration at the beginning of
an XML document.
- class bs4.Doctype¶
A NavigableString
subclass representing the document type
declaration which may
be found near the beginning of an XML document.
- class bs4.CData¶
A NavigableString
subclass that represents a CData section.
- class bs4.ProcessingInstruction¶
A NavigableString
subclass that represents the contents
of an XML processing instruction.
Searching the tree¶
Beautiful Soup defines a lot of methods for searching the parse tree,
but they’re all very similar. I’m going to spend a lot of time explaining
the two most popular methods: find()
and find_all()
. The other
methods take almost exactly the same arguments, so I’ll just cover
them briefly.
Once again, I’ll be using the “three sisters” document as an example:
html_doc = """
<html><head><title>The Dormouse's story</title></head>
<body>
<p class="title"><b>The Dormouse's story</b></p>
<p class="story">Once upon a time there were three little sisters; and their names were
<a href="http://example.com/elsie" class="sister" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
<a href="http://example.com/lacie" class="sister" id="link2">Lacie</a> and
<a href="http://example.com/tillie" class="sister" id="link3">Tillie</a>;
and they lived at the bottom of a well.</p>
<p class="story">...</p>
"""
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
soup = BeautifulSoup(html_doc, 'html.parser')
By passing in a filter to a method like find_all()
, you can
zoom in on the parts of the document you’re interested in.
Kinds of filters¶
Before talking in detail about find_all()
and similar methods, I
want to show examples of different filters you can pass into these
methods. These filters show up again and again, throughout the
search API. You can use them to filter based on a tag’s name,
on its attributes, on the text of a string, or on some combination of
these.
A string¶
The simplest filter is a string. Pass a string to a search method and Beautiful Soup will perform a tag-name match against that exact string. This code finds all the <b> tags in the document:
soup.find_all('b')
# [<b>The Dormouse's story</b>]
If you pass in a byte string, Beautiful Soup will assume the string is encoded as UTF-8. You can avoid this by passing in a Unicode string instead.
A regular expression¶
If you pass in a regular expression object, Beautiful Soup will filter
against that regular expression using its search()
method. This code
finds all the tags whose names start with the letter “b”; in this
case, the <body> tag and the <b> tag:
import re
for tag in soup.find_all(re.compile("^b")):
print(tag.name)
# body
# b
This code finds all the tags whose names contain the letter ‘t’:
for tag in soup.find_all(re.compile("t")):
print(tag.name)
# html
# title
True
¶
The value True
matches every tag it can. This code finds all
the tags in the document, but none of the text strings:
for tag in soup.find_all(True):
print(tag.name)
# html
# head
# title
# body
# p
# b
# p
# a
# a
# a
# p
A function¶
If none of the other matches work for you, define a function that
takes an element as its only argument. The function should return
True
if the argument matches, and False
otherwise.
Here’s a function that returns True
if a tag defines the “class”
attribute but doesn’t define the “id” attribute:
def has_class_but_no_id(tag):
return tag.has_attr('class') and not tag.has_attr('id')
Pass this function into find_all()
and you’ll pick up all the <p>
tags:
soup.find_all(has_class_but_no_id)
# [<p class="title"><b>The Dormouse's story</b></p>,
# <p class="story">Once upon a time there were…bottom of a well.</p>,
# <p class="story">...</p>]
This function picks up only the <p> tags. It doesn’t pick up the <a> tags, because those tags define both “class” and “id”. It doesn’t pick up tags like <html> and <title>, because those tags don’t define “class”.
The function can be as complicated as you need it to be. Here’s a
function that returns True
if a tag is surrounded by string
objects:
from bs4 import NavigableString
def surrounded_by_strings(tag):
return (isinstance(tag.next_element, NavigableString)
and isinstance(tag.previous_element, NavigableString))
for tag in soup.find_all(surrounded_by_strings):
print(tag.name)
# body
# p
# a
# a
# a
# p
A list¶
If you pass in a list, Beautiful Soup will look for a match against any string, regular expression, or function in that list. This code finds all the <a> tags and all the <b> tags:
soup.find_all(["a", "b"])
# [<b>The Dormouse's story</b>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
Now we’re ready to look at the search methods in detail.
find_all()
¶
Method signature: find_all(name, attrs, recursive, string, limit, **kwargs)
The find_all()
method looks through a tag’s descendants and
retrieves all descendants that match your filters. I gave several
examples in Kinds of filters, but here are a few more:
soup.find_all("title")
# [<title>The Dormouse's story</title>]
soup.find_all("p", "title")
# [<p class="title"><b>The Dormouse's story</b></p>]
soup.find_all("a")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
soup.find_all(id="link2")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>]
import re
soup.find(string=re.compile("sisters"))
# 'Once upon a time there were three little sisters; and their names were\n'
Some of these should look familiar, but others are new. What does it
mean to pass in a value for string
, or id
? Why does
find_all("p", "title")
find a <p> tag with the CSS class “title”?
Let’s look at the arguments to find_all()
.
The name
argument¶
Pass in a value for name
and you’ll tell Beautiful Soup to only
consider tags with certain names. Text strings will be ignored, as
will tags whose names that don’t match.
This is the simplest usage:
soup.find_all("title")
# [<title>The Dormouse's story</title>]
Recall from Kinds of filters that the value to name
can be a
string, a regular expression, a list, a function, or the value
True.
The keyword arguments¶
Any keyword argument that’s not recognized will be turned into a filter that matches tags by their attributes.
If you pass in a value for an argument called id
, Beautiful Soup will
filter against each tag’s ‘id’ attribute value:
soup.find_all(id='link2')
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>]
Just as with tags, you can filter an attribute based on a string, a regular expression, a list, a function, or the value True.
If you pass in a regular expression object for href
, Beautiful Soup will
pattern-match against each tag’s ‘href’ attribute value:
soup.find_all(href=re.compile("elsie"))
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>]
The value True
matches every tag that defines the attribute. This code
finds all tags with an id
attribute:
soup.find_all(id=True) # [<a class=”sister” href=”http://example.com/elsie” id=”link1”>Elsie</a>, # <a class=”sister” href=”http://example.com/lacie” id=”link2”>Lacie</a>, # <a class=”sister” href=”http://example.com/tillie” id=”link3”>Tillie</a>]
For more complex matches, you can define a function that takes an attribute
value as its only argument. The function should return True
if the value
matches, and False
otherwise.
Here’s a function that finds all a
tags whose href
attribute does not
match a regular expression:
import re
def not_lacie(href):
return href and not re.compile("lacie").search(href)
soup.find_all(href=not_lacie)
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
If you pass in a list for an argument, Beautiful Soup will look for an attribute-value match against any string, regular expression, or function in that list. This code finds the first and last link:
soup.find_all(id=[“link1”, re.compile(“3$”)]) # [<a class=”sister” href=”http://example.com/elsie” id=”link1”>Elsie</a>, # <a class=”sister” href=”http://example.com/tillie” id=”link3”>Tillie</a>]
You can filter against multiple attributes at once by passing multiple keyword arguments:
soup.find_all(href=re.compile("elsie"), id='link1')
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>]
Some attributes, like the data-* attributes in HTML 5, have names that can’t be used as the names of keyword arguments:
data_soup = BeautifulSoup('<div data-foo="value">foo!</div>', 'html.parser')
data_soup.find_all(data-foo="value")
# SyntaxError: keyword can't be an expression
You can use these attributes in searches by putting them into a
dictionary and passing the dictionary into find_all()
as the
attrs
argument:
data_soup.find_all(attrs={"data-foo": "value"})
# [<div data-foo="value">foo!</div>]
Similarly, you can’t use a keyword argument to search for HTML’s ‘name’ attribute,
because Beautiful Soup uses the name
argument to contain the name
of the tag itself. Instead, you can give a value to ‘name’ in the
attrs
argument:
name_soup = BeautifulSoup('<input name="email"/>', 'html.parser')
name_soup.find_all(name="email")
# []
name_soup.find_all(attrs={"name": "email"})
# [<input name="email"/>]
Searching by CSS class¶
It’s very useful to search for a tag that has a certain CSS class, but
the name of the CSS attribute, “class”, is a reserved word in
Python. Using class
as a keyword argument will give you a syntax
error. As of Beautiful Soup 4.1.2, you can search by CSS class using
the keyword argument class_
:
soup.find_all("a", class_="sister")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
As with any keyword argument, you can pass class_
a string, a regular
expression, a function, or True
:
soup.find_all(class_=re.compile("itl"))
# [<p class="title"><b>The Dormouse's story</b></p>]
def has_six_characters(css_class):
return css_class is not None and len(css_class) == 6
soup.find_all(class_=has_six_characters)
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
Remember that a single tag can have multiple values for its “class” attribute. When you search for a tag that matches a certain CSS class, you’re matching against any of its CSS classes:
css_soup = BeautifulSoup('<p class="body strikeout"></p>', 'html.parser')
css_soup.find_all("p", class_="strikeout")
# [<p class="body strikeout"></p>]
css_soup.find_all("p", class_="body")
# [<p class="body strikeout"></p>]
You can also search for the exact string value of the class
attribute:
css_soup.find_all("p", class_="body strikeout")
# [<p class="body strikeout"></p>]
But searching for variants of the string value won’t work:
css_soup.find_all("p", class_="strikeout body")
# []
In older versions of Beautiful Soup, which don’t have the class_
shortcut, you can use the attrs
argument trick mentioned above.
Create a dictionary whose value for “class” is the string (or regular
expression, or whatever) you want to search for:
soup.find_all("a", attrs={"class": "sister"})
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
To search for tags that match two or more CSS classes at once, use the select() CSS selector method described here:
css_soup.select("p.strikeout.body")
# [<p class="body strikeout"></p>]
The string
argument¶
With the string
argument, you can search for strings instead of tags. As
with name
and attribute keyword arguments, you can pass in a string, a
regular expression, a function, a list, or the value True.
Here are some examples:
soup.find_all(string="Elsie")
# ['Elsie']
soup.find_all(string=["Tillie", "Elsie", "Lacie"])
# ['Elsie', 'Lacie', 'Tillie']
soup.find_all(string=re.compile("Dormouse"))
# ["The Dormouse's story", "The Dormouse's story"]
def is_the_only_string_within_a_tag(s):
"""Return True if this string is the only child of its parent tag."""
return (s == s.parent.string)
soup.find_all(string=is_the_only_string_within_a_tag)
# ["The Dormouse's story", "The Dormouse's story", 'Elsie', 'Lacie', 'Tillie', '...']
If you use the string
argument in a tag search, Beautiful Soup will find
all tags whose .string
matches your value for string
. This code finds
the <a> tags whose .string
is “Elsie”:
soup.find_all("a", string="Elsie")
# [<a href="http://example.com/elsie" class="sister" id="link1">Elsie</a>]
The string
argument is new in Beautiful Soup 4.4.0. In earlier
versions it was called text
:
soup.find_all("a", text="Elsie")
# [<a href="http://example.com/elsie" class="sister" id="link1">Elsie</a>]
The limit
argument¶
find_all()
returns all the tags and strings that match your
filters. This can take a while if the document is large. If you don’t
need all the results, you can pass in a number for limit
. This
works just like the LIMIT keyword in SQL. It tells Beautiful Soup to
stop gathering results after it’s found a certain number.
There are three links in the “three sisters” document, but this code only finds the first two:
soup.find_all("a", limit=2)
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>]
The recursive
argument¶
By default, mytag.find_all()
will examine all the descendants of mytag
:
its children, its children’s children, and so on. To consider only direct
children, you can pass in recursive=False
. See the difference here:
soup.html.find_all("title")
# [<title>The Dormouse's story</title>]
soup.html.find_all("title", recursive=False)
# []
Here’s that part of the document:
<html>
<head>
<title>
The Dormouse's story
</title>
</head>
...
The <title> tag is beneath the <html> tag, but it’s not directly
beneath the <html> tag: the <head> tag is in the way. Beautiful Soup
finds the <title> tag when it’s allowed to look at all descendants of
the <html> tag, but when recursive=False
restricts it to the
<html> tag’s immediate children, it finds nothing.
Beautiful Soup offers a lot of tree-searching methods (covered below),
and they mostly take the same arguments as find_all()
: name
,
attrs
, string
, limit
, and attribute keyword arguments. But the
recursive
argument is specific to the find_all()
and find()
methods.
Passing recursive=False
into a method like find_parents()
wouldn’t be
very useful.
Calling a tag is like calling find_all()
¶
For convenience, calling a BeautifulSoup
object or
Tag
object as a function is equivalent to calling
find_all()
(if no built-in method has the name of the tag you’re
looking for). These two lines of code are equivalent:
soup.find_all("a")
soup("a")
These two lines are also equivalent:
soup.title.find_all(string=True)
soup.title(string=True)
find()
¶
Method signature: find(name, attrs, recursive, string, **kwargs)
The find_all()
method scans the entire document looking for
results, but sometimes you only want to find one result. If you know a
document has only one <body> tag, it’s a waste of time to scan the
entire document looking for more. Rather than passing in limit=1
every time you call find_all
, you can use the find()
method. These two lines of code are nearly equivalent:
soup.find_all('title', limit=1)
# [<title>The Dormouse's story</title>]
soup.find('title')
# <title>The Dormouse's story</title>
The only difference is that find_all()
returns a list containing
the single result, and find()
just returns the result.
If find_all()
can’t find anything, it returns an empty list. If
find()
can’t find anything, it returns None
:
print(soup.find("nosuchtag"))
# None
Remember the soup.head.title
trick from Navigating using tag
names? That trick works by repeatedly calling find()
:
soup.head.title
# <title>The Dormouse's story</title>
soup.find("head").find("title")
# <title>The Dormouse's story</title>
find_parents()
and find_parent()
¶
Method signature: find_parents(name, attrs, string, limit, **kwargs)
Method signature: find_parent(name, attrs, string, **kwargs)
I spent a lot of time above covering find_all()
and
find()
. The Beautiful Soup API defines ten other methods for
searching the tree, but don’t be afraid. Five of these methods are
basically the same as find_all()
, and the other five are basically
the same as find()
. The only differences are in how they move from
one part of the tree to another.
First let’s consider find_parents()
and
find_parent()
. Remember that find_all()
and find()
work
their way down the tree, looking at tag’s descendants. These methods
do the opposite: they work their way up the tree, looking at a tag’s
(or a string’s) parents. Let’s try them out, starting from a string
buried deep in the “three daughters” document:
a_string = soup.find(string="Lacie")
a_string
# 'Lacie'
a_string.find_parents("a")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>]
a_string.find_parent("p")
# <p class="story">Once upon a time there were three little sisters; and their names were
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a> and
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>;
# and they lived at the bottom of a well.</p>
a_string.find_parents("p", class_="title")
# []
One of the three <a> tags is the direct parent of the string in
question, so our search finds it. One of the three <p> tags is an
indirect parent (ancestor) of the string, and our search finds that as
well. There’s a <p> tag with the CSS class “title” somewhere in the
document, but it’s not one of this string’s parents, so we can’t find
it with find_parents()
.
You may have noticed a similarity between find_parent()
and
find_parents()
, and the .parent and .parents attributes
mentioned earlier. These search methods actually use the .parents
attribute to iterate through all parents (unfiltered), checking each one
against the provided filter to see if it matches.
find_next_siblings()
and find_next_sibling()
¶
Method signature: find_next_siblings(name, attrs, string, limit, **kwargs)
Method signature: find_next_sibling(name, attrs, string, **kwargs)
These methods use .next_siblings to
iterate over the rest of an element’s siblings in the tree. The
find_next_siblings()
method returns all the siblings that match,
and find_next_sibling()
returns only the first one:
first_link = soup.a
first_link
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>
first_link.find_next_siblings("a")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
first_story_paragraph = soup.find("p", "story")
first_story_paragraph.find_next_sibling("p")
# <p class="story">...</p>
find_previous_siblings()
and find_previous_sibling()
¶
Method signature: find_previous_siblings(name, attrs, string, limit, **kwargs)
Method signature: find_previous_sibling(name, attrs, string, **kwargs)
These methods use .previous_siblings to iterate over an element’s
siblings that precede it in the tree. The find_previous_siblings()
method returns all the siblings that match, and
find_previous_sibling()
returns only the first one:
last_link = soup.find("a", id="link3")
last_link
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>
last_link.find_previous_siblings("a")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>]
first_story_paragraph = soup.find("p", "story")
first_story_paragraph.find_previous_sibling("p")
# <p class="title"><b>The Dormouse's story</b></p>
find_all_next()
and find_next()
¶
Method signature: find_all_next(name, attrs, string, limit, **kwargs)
Method signature: find_next(name, attrs, string, **kwargs)
These methods use .next_elements to
iterate over whatever tags and strings that come after it in the
document. The find_all_next()
method returns all matches, and
find_next()
returns only the first match:
first_link = soup.a
first_link
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>
first_link.find_all_next(string=True)
# ['Elsie', ',\n', 'Lacie', ' and\n', 'Tillie',
# ';\nand they lived at the bottom of a well.', '\n', '...', '\n']
first_link.find_next("p")
# <p class="story">...</p>
In the first example, the string “Elsie” showed up, even though it was contained within the <a> tag we started from. In the second example, the last <p> tag in the document showed up, even though it’s not in the same part of the tree as the <a> tag we started from. For these methods, all that matters is that an element matches the filter and it shows up later in the document in document order.
find_all_previous()
and find_previous()
¶
Method signature: find_all_previous(name, attrs, string, limit, **kwargs)
Method signature: find_previous(name, attrs, string, **kwargs)
These methods use .previous_elements to
iterate over the tags and strings that came before it in the
document. The find_all_previous()
method returns all matches, and
find_previous()
only returns the first match:
first_link = soup.a
first_link
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>
first_link.find_all_previous("p")
# [<p class="story">Once upon a time there were three little sisters; ...</p>,
# <p class="title"><b>The Dormouse's story</b></p>]
first_link.find_previous("title")
# <title>The Dormouse's story</title>
The call to find_all_previous("p")
found the first paragraph in
the document (the one with class=”title”), but it also finds the
second paragraph, the <p> tag that contains the <a> tag we started
with. This shouldn’t be too surprising: we’re looking at all the tags
that show up earlier in the document in document order than the one we started with. A
<p> tag that contains an <a> tag must have shown up before the <a>
tag it contains.
CSS selectors through the .css
property¶
BeautifulSoup
and Tag
objects support CSS selectors through
their .css
property. The actual selector implementation is handled
by the Soup Sieve
package, available on PyPI as soupsieve
. If you installed
Beautiful Soup through pip
, Soup Sieve was installed at the same
time, so you don’t have to do anything extra.
The Soup Sieve documentation lists all the currently supported CSS selectors, but here are some of the basics. You can find tags by name:
soup.css.select("title")
# [<title>The Dormouse's story</title>]
soup.css.select("p:nth-of-type(3)")
# [<p class="story">...</p>]
Find tags by ID:
soup.css.select("#link1")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>]
soup.css.select("a#link2")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>]
Find tags contained anywhere within other tags:
soup.css.select("body a")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
soup.css.select("html head title")
# [<title>The Dormouse's story</title>]
Find tags directly within other tags:
soup.css.select("head > title")
# [<title>The Dormouse's story</title>]
soup.css.select("p > a")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
soup.css.select("p > a:nth-of-type(2)")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>]
soup.css.select("body > a")
# []
Find all matching next siblings of tags:
soup.css.select("#link1 ~ .sister")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
Find the next sibling tag (but only if it matches):
soup.css.select("#link1 + .sister")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>]
Find tags by CSS class:
soup.css.select(".sister")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
soup.css.select("[class~=sister]")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
Find tags that match any selector from a list of selectors:
soup.css.select("#link1,#link2")
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>]
Test for the existence of an attribute:
soup.css.select('a[href]')
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
Find tags by attribute value:
soup.css.select('a[href="http://example.com/elsie"]')
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>]
soup.css.select('a[href^="http://example.com/"]')
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
soup.css.select('a[href$="tillie"]')
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
soup.css.select('a[href*=".com/el"]')
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>]
There’s also a method called select_one()
, which finds only the
first tag that matches a selector:
soup.css.select_one(".sister")
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>
As a convenience, you can call select()
and select_one()
can
directly on the BeautifulSoup
or Tag
object, omitting the
.css
property:
soup.select('a[href$="tillie"]')
# [<a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>]
soup.select_one(".sister")
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>
CSS selector support is a convenience for people who already know the
CSS selector syntax. You can do all of this with the Beautiful Soup
API. If CSS selectors are all you need, you should skip Beautiful Soup
altogether and parse the document with lxml
: it’s a lot
faster. But Soup Sieve lets you combine CSS selectors with the
Beautiful Soup API.
Advanced Soup Sieve features¶
Soup Sieve offers a substantial API beyond the select()
and
select_one()
methods, and you can access most of that API through
the .css
attribute of Tag
or BeautifulSoup
. What follows
is just a list of the supported methods; see the Soup Sieve
documentation for full
documentation.
The iselect()
method works the same as select()
, but it
returns a generator instead of a list:
[tag['id'] for tag in soup.css.iselect(".sister")]
# ['link1', 'link2', 'link3']
The closest()
method returns the nearest parent of a given Tag
that matches a CSS selector, similar to Beautiful Soup’s
find_parent()
method:
elsie = soup.css.select_one(".sister")
elsie.css.closest("p.story")
# <p class="story">Once upon a time there were three little sisters; and their names were
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">Lacie</a> and
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">Tillie</a>;
# and they lived at the bottom of a well.</p>
The match()
method returns a Boolean depending on whether or not a
specific Tag
matches a selector:
# elsie.css.match("#link1")
True
# elsie.css.match("#link2")
False
The filter()
method returns the subset of a tag’s direct children
that match a selector:
[tag.string for tag in soup.find('p', 'story').css.filter('a')]
# ['Elsie', 'Lacie', 'Tillie']
The escape()
method escapes CSS identifiers that would otherwise
be invalid:
soup.css.escape("1-strange-identifier")
# '\\31 -strange-identifier'
Namespaces in CSS selectors¶
If you’ve parsed XML that defines namespaces, you can use them in CSS selectors.:
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
xml = """<tag xmlns:ns1="http://namespace1/" xmlns:ns2="http://namespace2/">
<ns1:child>I'm in namespace 1</ns1:child>
<ns2:child>I'm in namespace 2</ns2:child>
</tag> """
namespace_soup = BeautifulSoup(xml, "xml")
namespace_soup.css.select("child")
# [<ns1:child>I'm in namespace 1</ns1:child>, <ns2:child>I'm in namespace 2</ns2:child>]
namespace_soup.css.select("ns1|child")
# [<ns1:child>I'm in namespace 1</ns1:child>]
Beautiful Soup tries to use namespace prefixes that make sense based on what it saw while parsing the document, but you can always provide your own dictionary of abbreviations:
namespaces = dict(first="http://namespace1/", second="http://namespace2/")
namespace_soup.css.select("second|child", namespaces=namespaces)
# [<ns1:child>I'm in namespace 2</ns1:child>]
History of CSS selector support¶
The .css
property was added in Beautiful Soup 4.12.0. Prior to this,
only the .select()
and .select_one()
convenience methods were
supported.
The Soup Sieve integration was added in Beautiful Soup 4.7.0. Earlier
versions had the .select()
method, but only the most commonly-used
CSS selectors were supported.
Modifying the tree¶
Beautiful Soup’s main strength is in searching the parse tree, but you can also modify the tree and write your changes as a new HTML or XML document.
Changing tag names and attributes¶
I covered this earlier, in Tag.attrs
, but it bears repeating. You
can rename a tag, change the values of its attributes, add new
attributes, and delete attributes:
soup = BeautifulSoup('<b class="boldest">Extremely bold</b>', 'html.parser')
tag = soup.b
tag.name = "blockquote"
tag['class'] = 'verybold'
tag['id'] = 1
tag
# <blockquote class="verybold" id="1">Extremely bold</blockquote>
del tag['class']
del tag['id']
tag
# <blockquote>Extremely bold</blockquote>
Modifying .string
¶
If you set a tag’s .string
attribute to a new string, the tag’s contents are
replaced with that string:
markup = '<a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <i>example.com</i></a>'
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
tag = soup.a
tag.string = "New link text."
tag
# <a href="http://example.com/">New link text.</a>
Be careful: if the tag contained other tags, they and all their contents will be destroyed.
append()
¶
You can add to a tag’s contents with Tag.append()
. It works just
like calling .append()
on a Python list:
soup = BeautifulSoup("<a>Foo</a>", 'html.parser')
soup.a.append("Bar")
soup
# <a>FooBar</a>
soup.a.contents
# ['Foo', 'Bar']
extend()
¶
Starting in Beautiful Soup 4.7.0, Tag
also supports a method
called .extend()
, which adds every element of a list to a Tag
,
in order:
soup = BeautifulSoup("<a>Soup</a>", 'html.parser')
soup.a.extend(["'s", " ", "on"])
soup
# <a>Soup's on</a>
soup.a.contents
# ['Soup', ''s', ' ', 'on']
insert()
¶
Tag.insert()
is just like Tag.append()
, except the new element
doesn’t necessarily go at the end of its parent’s
.contents
. It’ll be inserted at whatever numeric position you
say. It works just like .insert()
on a Python list:
markup = '<a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <i>example.com</i></a>'
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
tag = soup.a
tag.insert(1, "but did not endorse ")
tag
# <a href="http://example.com/">I linked to but did not endorse <i>example.com</i></a>
tag.contents
# ['I linked to ', 'but did not endorse ', <i>example.com</i>]
insert_before()
and insert_after()
¶
The insert_before()
method inserts tags or strings immediately
before something else in the parse tree:
soup = BeautifulSoup("<b>leave</b>", 'html.parser')
tag = soup.new_tag("i")
tag.string = "Don't"
soup.b.string.insert_before(tag)
soup.b
# <b><i>Don't</i>leave</b>
The insert_after()
method inserts tags or strings immediately
following something else in the parse tree:
div = soup.new_tag('div')
div.string = 'ever'
soup.b.i.insert_after(" you ", div)
soup.b
# <b><i>Don't</i> you <div>ever</div> leave</b>
soup.b.contents
# [<i>Don't</i>, ' you', <div>ever</div>, 'leave']
clear()
¶
Tag.clear()
removes the contents of a tag:
markup = '<a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <i>example.com</i></a>'
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
tag = soup.a
tag.clear()
tag
# <a href="http://example.com/"></a>
extract()
¶
PageElement.extract()
removes a tag or string from the tree. It
returns the tag or string that was extracted:
markup = '<a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <i>example.com</i></a>'
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
a_tag = soup.a
i_tag = soup.i.extract()
a_tag
# <a href="http://example.com/">I linked to</a>
i_tag
# <i>example.com</i>
print(i_tag.parent)
# None
At this point you effectively have two parse trees: one rooted at the
BeautifulSoup
object you used to parse the document, and one rooted
at the tag that was extracted. You can go on to call extract()
on
a child of the element you extracted:
my_string = i_tag.string.extract()
my_string
# 'example.com'
print(my_string.parent)
# None
i_tag
# <i></i>
decompose()
¶
Tag.decompose()
removes a tag from the tree, then completely
destroys it and its contents:
markup = '<a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <i>example.com</i></a>'
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
a_tag = soup.a
i_tag = soup.i
i_tag.decompose()
a_tag
# <a href="http://example.com/">I linked to</a>
The behavior of a decomposed Tag
or NavigableString
is not
defined and you should not use it for anything. If you’re not sure
whether something has been decomposed, you can check its
.decomposed
property (new in Beautiful Soup 4.9.0):
i_tag.decomposed
# True
a_tag.decomposed
# False
replace_with()
¶
PageElement.replace_with()
extracts a tag or string from the tree,
then replaces it with one or more tags or strings of your choice:
markup = '<a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <i>example.com</i></a>'
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
a_tag = soup.a
new_tag = soup.new_tag("b")
new_tag.string = "example.com"
a_tag.i.replace_with(new_tag)
a_tag
# <a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <b>example.com</b></a>
bold_tag = soup.new_tag("b")
bold_tag.string = "example"
i_tag = soup.new_tag("i")
i_tag.string = "net"
a_tag.b.replace_with(bold_tag, ".", i_tag)
a_tag
# <a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <b>example</b>.<i>net</i></a>
replace_with()
returns the tag or string that got replaced, so
that you can examine it or add it back to another part of the tree.
The ability to pass multiple arguments into replace_with() is new in Beautiful Soup 4.10.0.
wrap()
¶
PageElement.wrap()
wraps an element in the Tag
object you specify. It
returns the new wrapper:
soup = BeautifulSoup("<p>I wish I was bold.</p>", 'html.parser')
soup.p.string.wrap(soup.new_tag("b"))
# <b>I wish I was bold.</b>
soup.p.wrap(soup.new_tag("div"))
# <div><p><b>I wish I was bold.</b></p></div>
This method is new in Beautiful Soup 4.0.5.
unwrap()
¶
Tag.unwrap()
is the opposite of wrap()
. It replaces a tag with
whatever’s inside that tag. It’s good for stripping out markup:
markup = '<a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <i>example.com</i></a>'
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
a_tag = soup.a
a_tag.i.unwrap()
a_tag
# <a href="http://example.com/">I linked to example.com</a>
Like replace_with()
, unwrap()
returns the tag
that was replaced.
smooth()
¶
After calling a bunch of methods that modify the parse tree, you may end up
with two or more NavigableString
objects next to each other.
Beautiful Soup doesn’t have any problems with this, but since it can’t happen
in a freshly parsed document, you might not expect behavior like the
following:
soup = BeautifulSoup("<p>A one</p>", 'html.parser')
soup.p.append(", a two")
soup.p.contents
# ['A one', ', a two']
print(soup.p.encode())
# b'<p>A one, a two</p>'
print(soup.p.prettify())
# <p>
# A one
# , a two
# </p>
You can call Tag.smooth()
to clean up the parse tree by consolidating adjacent strings:
soup.smooth()
soup.p.contents
# ['A one, a two']
print(soup.p.prettify())
# <p>
# A one, a two
# </p>
This method is new in Beautiful Soup 4.8.0.
Output¶
Pretty-printing¶
The prettify()
method will turn a Beautiful Soup parse tree into a
nicely formatted Unicode string, with a separate line for each
tag and each string:
markup = '<html><head><body><a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <i>example.com</i></a>'
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
soup.prettify()
# '<html>\n <head>\n </head>\n <body>\n <a href="http://example.com/">\n...'
print(soup.prettify())
# <html>
# <head>
# </head>
# <body>
# <a href="http://example.com/">
# I linked to
# <i>
# example.com
# </i>
# </a>
# </body>
# </html>
You can call prettify()
on the top-level BeautifulSoup
object,
or on any of its Tag
objects:
print(soup.a.prettify())
# <a href="http://example.com/">
# I linked to
# <i>
# example.com
# </i>
# </a>
Since it adds whitespace (in the form of newlines), prettify()
changes the meaning of an HTML document and should not be used to
reformat one. The goal of prettify()
is to help you visually
understand the structure of the documents you work with.
Non-pretty printing¶
If you just want a string, with no fancy formatting, you can call
str()
on a BeautifulSoup
object, or on a Tag
within it:
str(soup)
# '<html><head></head><body><a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <i>example.com</i></a></body></html>'
str(soup.a)
# '<a href="http://example.com/">I linked to <i>example.com</i></a>'
The str()
function returns a string encoded in UTF-8. See
Encodings for other options.
You can also call encode()
to get a bytestring, and decode()
to get Unicode.
Output formatters¶
If you give Beautiful Soup a document that contains HTML entities like “&lquot;”, they’ll be converted to Unicode characters:
soup = BeautifulSoup("“Dammit!” he said.", 'html.parser')
str(soup)
# '“Dammit!” he said.'
If you then convert the document to a bytestring, the Unicode characters will be encoded as UTF-8. You won’t get the HTML entities back:
soup.encode("utf8")
# b'\xe2\x80\x9cDammit!\xe2\x80\x9d he said.'
By default, the only characters that are escaped upon output are bare ampersands and angle brackets. These get turned into “&”, “<”, and “>”, so that Beautiful Soup doesn’t inadvertently generate invalid HTML or XML:
soup = BeautifulSoup("<p>The law firm of Dewey, Cheatem, & Howe</p>", 'html.parser')
soup.p
# <p>The law firm of Dewey, Cheatem, & Howe</p>
soup = BeautifulSoup('<a href="http://example.com/?foo=val1&bar=val2">A link</a>', 'html.parser')
soup.a
# <a href="http://example.com/?foo=val1&bar=val2">A link</a>
You can change this behavior by providing a value for the
formatter
argument to prettify()
, encode()
, or
decode()
. Beautiful Soup recognizes five possible values for
formatter
.
The default is formatter="minimal"
. Strings will only be processed
enough to ensure that Beautiful Soup generates valid HTML/XML:
french = "<p>Il a dit <<Sacré bleu!>></p>"
soup = BeautifulSoup(french, 'html.parser')
print(soup.prettify(formatter="minimal"))
# <p>
# Il a dit <<Sacré bleu!>>
# </p>
If you pass in formatter="html"
, Beautiful Soup will convert
Unicode characters to HTML entities whenever possible:
print(soup.prettify(formatter="html"))
# <p>
# Il a dit <<Sacré bleu!>>
# </p>
If you pass in formatter="html5"
, it’s similar to
formatter="html"
, but Beautiful Soup will
omit the closing slash in HTML void tags like “br”:
br = BeautifulSoup("<br>", 'html.parser').br
print(br.encode(formatter="html"))
# b'<br/>'
print(br.encode(formatter="html5"))
# b'<br>'
In addition, any attributes whose values are the empty string will become HTML-style Boolean attributes:
option = BeautifulSoup('<option selected=""></option>').option
print(option.encode(formatter="html"))
# b'<option selected=""></option>'
print(option.encode(formatter="html5"))
# b'<option selected></option>'
(This behavior is new as of Beautiful Soup 4.10.0.)
If you pass in formatter=None
, Beautiful Soup will not modify
strings at all on output. This is the fastest option, but it may lead
to Beautiful Soup generating invalid HTML/XML, as in these examples:
print(soup.prettify(formatter=None))
# <p>
# Il a dit <<Sacré bleu!>>
# </p>
link_soup = BeautifulSoup('<a href="http://example.com/?foo=val1&bar=val2">A link</a>', 'html.parser')
print(link_soup.a.encode(formatter=None))
# b'<a href="http://example.com/?foo=val1&bar=val2">A link</a>'
Formatter objects¶
If you need more sophisticated control over your output, you can
instantiate one of Beautiful Soup’s formatter classes and pass that
object in as formatter
.
- class bs4.HTMLFormatter¶
Used to customize the formatting rules for HTML documents.
Here’s a formatter that converts strings to uppercase, whether they occur in a string object or an attribute value:
from bs4.formatter import HTMLFormatter
def uppercase(str):
return str.upper()
formatter = HTMLFormatter(uppercase)
print(soup.prettify(formatter=formatter))
# <p>
# IL A DIT <<SACRÉ BLEU!>>
# </p>
print(link_soup.a.prettify(formatter=formatter))
# <a href="HTTP://EXAMPLE.COM/?FOO=VAL1&BAR=VAL2">
# A LINK
# </a>
Here’s a formatter that increases the indentation width when pretty-printing:
formatter = HTMLFormatter(indent=8)
print(link_soup.a.prettify(formatter=formatter))
# <a href="http://example.com/?foo=val1&bar=val2">
# A link
# </a>
- class bs4.XMLFormatter¶
Used to customize the formatting rules for XML documents.
Writing your own formatter¶
Subclassing HTMLFormatter
or XMLFormatter
will
give you even more control over the output. For example, Beautiful
Soup sorts the attributes in every tag by default:
attr_soup = BeautifulSoup(b'<p z="1" m="2" a="3"></p>', 'html.parser')
print(attr_soup.p.encode())
# <p a="3" m="2" z="1"></p>
To turn this off, you can subclass the Formatter.attributes()
method, which controls which attributes are output and in what
order. This implementation also filters out the attribute called “m”
whenever it appears:
class UnsortedAttributes(HTMLFormatter):
def attributes(self, tag):
for k, v in tag.attrs.items():
if k == 'm':
continue
yield k, v
print(attr_soup.p.encode(formatter=UnsortedAttributes()))
# <p z="1" a="3"></p>
One last caveat: if you create a CData
object, the text inside
that object is always presented exactly as it appears, with no
formatting. Beautiful Soup will call your entity substitution
function, just in case you’ve written a custom function that counts
all the strings in the document or something, but it will ignore the
return value:
from bs4.element import CData
soup = BeautifulSoup("<a></a>", 'html.parser')
soup.a.string = CData("one < three")
print(soup.a.prettify(formatter="html"))
# <a>
# <![CDATA[one < three]]>
# </a>
get_text()
¶
If you only want the human-readable text inside a document or tag, you can use the
get_text()
method. It returns all the text in a document or
beneath a tag, as a single Unicode string:
markup = '<a href="http://example.com/">\nI linked to <i>example.com</i>\n</a>'
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
soup.get_text()
'\nI linked to example.com\n'
soup.i.get_text()
'example.com'
You can specify a string to be used to join the bits of text together:
# soup.get_text("|")
'\nI linked to |example.com|\n'
You can tell Beautiful Soup to strip whitespace from the beginning and end of each bit of text:
# soup.get_text("|", strip=True)
'I linked to|example.com'
But at that point you might want to use the .stripped_strings generator instead, and process the text yourself:
[text for text in soup.stripped_strings]
# ['I linked to', 'example.com']
As of Beautiful Soup version 4.9.0, when lxml or html.parser are in use, the contents of <script>, <style>, and <template> tags are generally not considered to be ‘text’, since those tags are not part of the human-visible content of the page.
As of Beautiful Soup version 4.10.0, you can call get_text(), .strings, or .stripped_strings on a NavigableString object. It will either return the object itself, or nothing, so the only reason to do this is when you’re iterating over a mixed list.
Specifying the parser to use¶
If you just need to parse some HTML, you can dump the markup into the
BeautifulSoup
constructor, and it’ll probably be fine. Beautiful
Soup will pick a parser for you and parse the data. But there are a
few additional arguments you can pass in to the constructor to change
which parser is used.
The first argument to the BeautifulSoup
constructor is a string or
an open filehandle—the source of the markup you want parsed. The second
argument is how you’d like the markup parsed.
If you don’t specify anything, you’ll get the best HTML parser that’s installed. Beautiful Soup ranks lxml’s parser as being the best, then html5lib’s, then Python’s built-in parser. You can override this by specifying one of the following:
What type of markup you want to parse. Currently supported values are “html”, “xml”, and “html5”.
The name of the parser library you want to use. Currently supported options are “lxml”, “html5lib”, and “html.parser” (Python’s built-in HTML parser).
The section Installing a parser contrasts the supported parsers.
If you don’t have an appropriate parser installed, Beautiful Soup will ignore your request and pick a different parser. Right now, the only supported XML parser is lxml. If you don’t have lxml installed, asking for an XML parser won’t give you one, and asking for “lxml” won’t work either.
Differences between parsers¶
Beautiful Soup presents the same interface to a number of different parsers, but each parser is different. Different parsers will create different parse trees from the same document. The biggest differences are between the HTML parsers and the XML parsers. Here’s a short document, parsed as HTML using the parser that comes with Python:
BeautifulSoup("<a><b/></a>", "html.parser")
# <a><b></b></a>
Since a standalone <b/> tag is not valid HTML, html.parser turns it into a <b></b> tag pair.
Here’s the same document parsed as XML (running this requires that you have lxml installed). Note that the standalone <b/> tag is left alone, and that the document is given an XML declaration instead of being put into an <html> tag.:
print(BeautifulSoup("<a><b/></a>", "xml"))
# <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
# <a><b/></a>
There are also differences between HTML parsers. If you give Beautiful Soup a perfectly-formed HTML document, these differences won’t matter. One parser will be faster than another, but they’ll all give you a data structure that looks exactly like the original HTML document.
But if the document is not perfectly-formed, different parsers will give different results. Here’s a short, invalid document parsed using lxml’s HTML parser. Note that the <a> tag gets wrapped in <body> and <html> tags, and the dangling </p> tag is simply ignored:
BeautifulSoup("<a></p>", "lxml")
# <html><body><a></a></body></html>
Here’s the same document parsed using html5lib:
BeautifulSoup("<a></p>", "html5lib")
# <html><head></head><body><a><p></p></a></body></html>
Instead of ignoring the dangling </p> tag, html5lib pairs it with an opening <p> tag. html5lib also adds an empty <head> tag; lxml didn’t bother.
Here’s the same document parsed with Python’s built-in HTML parser:
BeautifulSoup("<a></p>", "html.parser")
# <a></a>
Like lxml, this parser ignores the closing </p> tag. Unlike html5lib or lxml, this parser makes no attempt to create a well-formed HTML document by adding <html> or <body> tags.
Since the document “<a></p>” is invalid, none of these techniques is the ‘correct’ way to handle it. The html5lib parser uses techniques that are part of the HTML5 standard, so it has the best claim on being the ‘correct’ way, but all three techniques are legitimate.
Differences between parsers can affect your script. If you’re planning
on distributing your script to other people, or running it on multiple
machines, you should specify a parser in the BeautifulSoup
constructor. That will reduce the chances that your users parse a
document differently from the way you parse it.
Encodings¶
Any HTML or XML document is written in a specific encoding like ASCII or UTF-8. But when you load that document into Beautiful Soup, you’ll discover it’s been converted to Unicode:
markup = "<h1>Sacr\xc3\xa9 bleu!</h1>"
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
soup.h1
# <h1>Sacré bleu!</h1>
soup.h1.string
# 'Sacr\xe9 bleu!'
It’s not magic. (That sure would be nice.) Beautiful Soup uses a
sub-library called Unicode, Dammit to detect a document’s encoding
and convert it to Unicode. The autodetected encoding is available as
the .original_encoding
attribute of the BeautifulSoup
object:
soup.original_encoding
'utf-8'
Unicode, Dammit guesses correctly most of the time, but sometimes it
makes mistakes. Sometimes it guesses correctly, but only after a
byte-by-byte search of the document that takes a very long time. If
you happen to know a document’s encoding ahead of time, you can avoid
mistakes and delays by passing it to the BeautifulSoup
constructor
as from_encoding
.
Here’s a document written in ISO-8859-8. The document is so short that Unicode, Dammit can’t get a lock on it, and misidentifies it as ISO-8859-7:
markup = b"<h1>\xed\xe5\xec\xf9</h1>"
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
print(soup.h1)
# <h1>νεμω</h1>
print(soup.original_encoding)
# iso-8859-7
We can fix this by passing in the correct from_encoding
:
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser', from_encoding="iso-8859-8")
print(soup.h1)
# <h1>םולש</h1>
print(soup.original_encoding)
# iso8859-8
If you don’t know what the correct encoding is, but you know that
Unicode, Dammit is guessing wrong, you can pass the wrong guesses in
as exclude_encodings
:
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser', exclude_encodings=["iso-8859-7"])
print(soup.h1)
# <h1>םולש</h1>
print(soup.original_encoding)
# WINDOWS-1255
Windows-1255 isn’t 100% correct, but that encoding is a compatible
superset of ISO-8859-8, so it’s close enough. (exclude_encodings
is a new feature in Beautiful Soup 4.4.0.)
In rare cases (usually when a UTF-8 document contains text written in
a completely different encoding), the only way to get Unicode may be
to replace some characters with the special Unicode character
“REPLACEMENT CHARACTER” (U+FFFD, �). If Unicode, Dammit needs to do
this, it will set the .contains_replacement_characters
attribute
to True
on the UnicodeDammit
or BeautifulSoup
object. This
lets you know that the Unicode representation is not an exact
representation of the original–some data was lost. If a document
contains �, but .contains_replacement_characters
is False
,
you’ll know that the � was there originally (as it is in this
paragraph) and doesn’t stand in for missing data.
Output encoding¶
When you write out an output document from Beautiful Soup, you get a UTF-8 document, even if the input document wasn’t in UTF-8 to begin with. Here’s a document written in the Latin-1 encoding:
markup = b'''
<html>
<head>
<meta content="text/html; charset=ISO-Latin-1" http-equiv="Content-type" />
</head>
<body>
<p>Sacr\xe9 bleu!</p>
</body>
</html>
'''
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
print(soup.prettify())
# <html>
# <head>
# <meta content="text/html; charset=utf-8" http-equiv="Content-type" />
# </head>
# <body>
# <p>
# Sacré bleu!
# </p>
# </body>
# </html>
Note that the <meta> tag has been rewritten to reflect the fact that the document is now in UTF-8.
If you don’t want UTF-8, you can pass an encoding into prettify()
:
print(soup.prettify("latin-1"))
# <html>
# <head>
# <meta content="text/html; charset=latin-1" http-equiv="Content-type" />
# ...
You can also call encode() on the BeautifulSoup
object, or any
element in the soup, just as if it were a Python string:
soup.p.encode("latin-1")
# b'<p>Sacr\xe9 bleu!</p>'
soup.p.encode("utf-8")
# b'<p>Sacr\xc3\xa9 bleu!</p>'
Any characters that can’t be represented in your chosen encoding will be converted into numeric XML entity references. Here’s a document that includes the Unicode character SNOWMAN:
markup = u"<b>\N{SNOWMAN}</b>"
snowman_soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
tag = snowman_soup.b
The SNOWMAN character can be part of a UTF-8 document (it looks like ☃), but there’s no representation for that character in ISO-Latin-1 or ASCII, so it’s converted into “☃” for those encodings:
print(tag.encode("utf-8"))
# b'<b>\xe2\x98\x83</b>'
print(tag.encode("latin-1"))
# b'<b>☃</b>'
print(tag.encode("ascii"))
# b'<b>☃</b>'
Unicode, Dammit¶
You can use Unicode, Dammit without using Beautiful Soup. It’s useful whenever you have data in an unknown encoding and you just want it to become Unicode:
from bs4 import UnicodeDammit
dammit = UnicodeDammit(b"\xc2\xabSacr\xc3\xa9 bleu!\xc2\xbb")
print(dammit.unicode_markup)
# «Sacré bleu!»
dammit.original_encoding
# 'utf-8'
Unicode, Dammit’s guesses will get a lot more accurate if you install
one of these Python libraries: charset-normalizer
, chardet
, or
cchardet
. The more data you give Unicode, Dammit, the more
accurately it will guess. If you have your own suspicions as to what
the encoding might be, you can pass them in as a list:
dammit = UnicodeDammit("Sacr\xe9 bleu!", ["latin-1", "iso-8859-1"])
print(dammit.unicode_markup)
# Sacré bleu!
dammit.original_encoding
# 'latin-1'
Unicode, Dammit has two special features that Beautiful Soup doesn’t use.
Smart quotes¶
You can use Unicode, Dammit to convert Microsoft smart quotes to HTML or XML entities:
markup = b"<p>I just \x93love\x94 Microsoft Word\x92s smart quotes</p>"
UnicodeDammit(markup, ["windows-1252"], smart_quotes_to="html").unicode_markup
# '<p>I just “love” Microsoft Word’s smart quotes</p>'
UnicodeDammit(markup, ["windows-1252"], smart_quotes_to="xml").unicode_markup
# '<p>I just “love” Microsoft Word’s smart quotes</p>'
You can also convert Microsoft smart quotes to ASCII quotes:
UnicodeDammit(markup, ["windows-1252"], smart_quotes_to="ascii").unicode_markup
# '<p>I just "love" Microsoft Word\'s smart quotes</p>'
Hopefully you’ll find this feature useful, but Beautiful Soup doesn’t use it. Beautiful Soup prefers the default behavior, which is to convert Microsoft smart quotes to Unicode characters along with everything else:
UnicodeDammit(markup, ["windows-1252"]).unicode_markup
# '<p>I just “love” Microsoft Word’s smart quotes</p>'
Inconsistent encodings¶
Sometimes a document is mostly in UTF-8, but contains Windows-1252
characters such as (again) Microsoft smart quotes. This can happen
when a website includes data from multiple sources. You can use
UnicodeDammit.detwingle()
to turn such a document into pure
UTF-8. Here’s a simple example:
snowmen = (u"\N{SNOWMAN}" * 3)
quote = (u"\N{LEFT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK}I like snowmen!\N{RIGHT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK}")
doc = snowmen.encode("utf8") + quote.encode("windows_1252")
This document is a mess. The snowmen are in UTF-8 and the quotes are in Windows-1252. You can display the snowmen or the quotes, but not both:
print(doc)
# ☃☃☃�I like snowmen!�
print(doc.decode("windows-1252"))
# ☃☃☃“I like snowmen!”
Decoding the document as UTF-8 raises a UnicodeDecodeError
, and
decoding it as Windows-1252 gives you gibberish. Fortunately,
UnicodeDammit.detwingle()
will convert the string to pure UTF-8,
allowing you to decode it to Unicode and display the snowmen and quote
marks simultaneously:
new_doc = UnicodeDammit.detwingle(doc)
print(new_doc.decode("utf8"))
# ☃☃☃“I like snowmen!”
UnicodeDammit.detwingle()
only knows how to handle Windows-1252
embedded in UTF-8 (or vice versa, I suppose), but this is the most
common case.
Note that you must know to call UnicodeDammit.detwingle()
on your
data before passing it into BeautifulSoup
or the UnicodeDammit
constructor. Beautiful Soup assumes that a document has a single
encoding, whatever it might be. If you pass it a document that
contains both UTF-8 and Windows-1252, it’s likely to think the whole
document is Windows-1252, and the document will come out looking like
☃☃☃“I like snowmen!”
.
UnicodeDammit.detwingle()
is new in Beautiful Soup 4.1.0.
Line numbers¶
The html.parser
and html5lib
parsers can keep track of where in
the original document each Tag
was found. You can access this
information as Tag.sourceline
(line number) and Tag.sourcepos
(position of the start tag within a line):
markup = "<p\n>Paragraph 1</p>\n <p>Paragraph 2</p>"
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
for tag in soup.find_all('p'):
print(repr((tag.sourceline, tag.sourcepos, tag.string)))
# (1, 0, 'Paragraph 1')
# (3, 4, 'Paragraph 2')
Note that the two parsers mean slightly different things by
sourceline
and sourcepos
. For html.parser, these numbers
represent the position of the initial less-than sign. For html5lib,
these numbers represent the position of the final greater-than sign:
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html5lib')
for tag in soup.find_all('p'):
print(repr((tag.sourceline, tag.sourcepos, tag.string)))
# (2, 0, 'Paragraph 1')
# (3, 6, 'Paragraph 2')
You can shut off this feature by passing store_line_numbers=False
into the BeautifulSoup
constructor:
markup = "<p\n>Paragraph 1</p>\n <p>Paragraph 2</p>"
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser', store_line_numbers=False)
print(soup.p.sourceline)
# None
This feature is new in 4.8.1, and the parsers based on lxml don’t support it.
Comparing objects for equality¶
Beautiful Soup says that two NavigableString
or Tag
objects
are equal when they represent the same HTML or XML markup, even if their
attributes are in a different order or they live in different parts of the
object tree. In this example, the two <b> tags are treated as equal, because
they both look like “<b>pizza</b>”:
markup = "<p>I want <b>pizza</b> and more <b>pizza</b>!</p>"
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
first_b, second_b = soup.find_all('b')
print(first_b == second_b)
# True
print(first_b.previous_element == second_b.previous_element)
# False
If you want to see whether two variables refer to exactly the same object, use is:
print(first_b is second_b)
# False
Copying Beautiful Soup objects¶
You can use copy.copy()
to create a copy of any Tag
or
NavigableString
:
import copy
p_copy = copy.copy(soup.p)
print(p_copy)
# <p>I want <b>pizza</b> and more <b>pizza</b>!</p>
The copy is considered equal to the original, since it represents the same markup as the original, but it’s not the same object:
print(soup.p == p_copy)
# True
print(soup.p is p_copy)
# False
The only real difference is that the copy is completely detached from
the original Beautiful Soup object tree, just as if extract()
had
been called on it:
print(p_copy.parent)
# None
This is because two different Tag
objects can’t occupy the same
space at the same time.
Advanced parser customization¶
Beautiful Soup offers a number of ways to customize how the parser treats incoming HTML and XML. This section covers the most commonly used customization techniques.
Parsing only part of a document¶
Let’s say you want to use Beautiful Soup to look at a document’s <a>
tags. It’s a waste of time and memory to parse the entire document and
then go over it again looking for <a> tags. It would be much faster to
ignore everything that wasn’t an <a> tag in the first place. The
SoupStrainer
class allows you to choose which parts of an incoming
document are parsed. You just create a SoupStrainer
and pass it in
to the BeautifulSoup
constructor as the parse_only
argument.
(Note that this feature won’t work if you’re using the html5lib parser. If you use html5lib, the whole document will be parsed, no matter what. This is because html5lib constantly rearranges the parse tree as it works, and if some part of the document didn’t actually make it into the parse tree, it’ll crash. To avoid confusion, in the examples below I’ll be forcing Beautiful Soup to use Python’s built-in parser.)
- class bs4.SoupStrainer¶
The SoupStrainer
class takes the same arguments as a typical
method from Searching the tree: name, attrs, string, and **kwargs. Here are
three SoupStrainer
objects:
from bs4 import SoupStrainer
only_a_tags = SoupStrainer("a")
only_tags_with_id_link2 = SoupStrainer(id="link2")
def is_short_string(string):
return string is not None and len(string) < 10
only_short_strings = SoupStrainer(string=is_short_string)
I’m going to bring back the “three sisters” document one more time,
and we’ll see what the document looks like when it’s parsed with these
three SoupStrainer
objects:
html_doc = """<html><head><title>The Dormouse's story</title></head>
<body>
<p class="title"><b>The Dormouse's story</b></p>
<p class="story">Once upon a time there were three little sisters; and their names were
<a href="http://example.com/elsie" class="sister" id="link1">Elsie</a>,
<a href="http://example.com/lacie" class="sister" id="link2">Lacie</a> and
<a href="http://example.com/tillie" class="sister" id="link3">Tillie</a>;
and they lived at the bottom of a well.</p>
<p class="story">...</p>
"""
print(BeautifulSoup(html_doc, "html.parser", parse_only=only_a_tags).prettify())
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/elsie" id="link1">
# Elsie
# </a>
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">
# Lacie
# </a>
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/tillie" id="link3">
# Tillie
# </a>
print(BeautifulSoup(html_doc, "html.parser", parse_only=only_tags_with_id_link2).prettify())
# <a class="sister" href="http://example.com/lacie" id="link2">
# Lacie
# </a>
print(BeautifulSoup(html_doc, "html.parser", parse_only=only_short_strings).prettify())
# Elsie
# ,
# Lacie
# and
# Tillie
# ...
#
The SoupStrainer
behavior is as follows:
When a tag matches, it is kept (including all its contents, whether they also match or not).
When a tag does not match, the tag itself is not kept, but parsing continues into its contents to look for other tags that do match.
You can also pass a SoupStrainer
into any of the methods covered
in Searching the tree. This probably isn’t terribly useful, but I
thought I’d mention it:
soup = BeautifulSoup(html_doc, 'html.parser')
soup.find_all(only_short_strings)
# ['\n\n', '\n\n', 'Elsie', ',\n', 'Lacie', ' and\n', 'Tillie',
# '\n\n', '...', '\n']
Customizing multi-valued attributes¶
In an HTML document, an attribute like class
is given a list of
values, and an attribute like id
is given a single value, because
the HTML specification treats those attributes differently:
markup = '<a class="cls1 cls2" id="id1 id2">'
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
soup.a['class']
# ['cls1', 'cls2']
soup.a['id']
# 'id1 id2'
You can turn this off by passing in
multi_valued_attributes=None
. Than all attributes will be given a
single value:
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser', multi_valued_attributes=None)
soup.a['class']
# 'cls1 cls2'
soup.a['id']
# 'id1 id2'
You can customize this behavior quite a bit by passing in a
dictionary for multi_valued_attributes
. If you need this, look at
HTMLTreeBuilder.DEFAULT_CDATA_LIST_ATTRIBUTES
to see the
configuration Beautiful Soup uses by default, which is based on the
HTML specification.
(This is a new feature in Beautiful Soup 4.8.0.)
Handling duplicate attributes¶
When using the html.parser
parser, you can use the
on_duplicate_attribute
constructor argument to customize what
Beautiful Soup does when it encounters a tag that defines the same
attribute more than once:
markup = '<a href="http://url1/" href="http://url2/">'
The default behavior is to use the last value found for the tag:
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
soup.a['href']
# http://url2/
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser', on_duplicate_attribute='replace')
soup.a['href']
# http://url2/
With on_duplicate_attribute='ignore'
you can tell Beautiful Soup
to use the first value found and ignore the rest:
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser', on_duplicate_attribute='ignore')
soup.a['href']
# http://url1/
(lxml and html5lib always do it this way; their behavior can’t be configured from within Beautiful Soup.)
If you need more control, you can pass in a function that’s called on each duplicate value:
def accumulate(attributes_so_far, key, value):
if not isinstance(attributes_so_far[key], list):
attributes_so_far[key] = [attributes_so_far[key]]
attributes_so_far[key].append(value)
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser', on_duplicate_attribute=accumulate)
soup.a['href']
# ["http://url1/", "http://url2/"]
(This is a new feature in Beautiful Soup 4.9.1.)
Instantiating custom subclasses¶
When a parser tells Beautiful Soup about a tag or a string, Beautiful
Soup will instantiate a Tag
or NavigableString
object to
contain that information. Instead of that default behavior, you can
tell Beautiful Soup to instantiate subclasses of Tag
or
NavigableString
, subclasses you define with custom behavior:
from bs4 import Tag, NavigableString
class MyTag(Tag):
pass
class MyString(NavigableString):
pass
markup = "<div>some text</div>"
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser')
isinstance(soup.div, MyTag)
# False
isinstance(soup.div.string, MyString)
# False
my_classes = { Tag: MyTag, NavigableString: MyString }
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, 'html.parser', element_classes=my_classes)
isinstance(soup.div, MyTag)
# True
isinstance(soup.div.string, MyString)
# True
This can be useful when incorporating Beautiful Soup into a test framework.
(This is a new feature in Beautiful Soup 4.8.1.)
Troubleshooting¶
diagnose()
¶
If you’re having trouble understanding what Beautiful Soup does to a
document, pass the document into the diagnose()
function. (This function is new in
Beautiful Soup 4.2.0.) Beautiful Soup will print out a report showing
you how different parsers handle the document, and tell you if you’re
missing a parser that Beautiful Soup could be using:
from bs4.diagnose import diagnose
with open("bad.html") as fp:
data = fp.read()
diagnose(data)
# Diagnostic running on Beautiful Soup 4.2.0
# Python version 2.7.3 (default, Aug 1 2012, 05:16:07)
# I noticed that html5lib is not installed. Installing it may help.
# Found lxml version 2.3.2.0
#
# Trying to parse your data with html.parser
# Here's what html.parser did with the document:
# ...
Just looking at the output of diagnose() might show you how to solve the
problem. Even if not, you can paste the output of diagnose()
when
asking for help.
Errors when parsing a document¶
There are two different kinds of parse errors. There are crashes,
where you feed a document to Beautiful Soup and it raises an
exception (usually an HTMLParser.HTMLParseError
). And there is
unexpected behavior, where a Beautiful Soup parse tree looks a lot
different than the document used to create it.
These problems are almost never problems with Beautiful Soup itself.
This is not because Beautiful Soup is an amazingly well-written piece
of software. It’s because Beautiful Soup doesn’t include any parsing
code. Instead, it relies on external parsers. If one parser isn’t
working on a certain document, the best solution is to try a different
parser. See Installing a parser for details and a parser
comparison. If this doesn’t help, you might need to inspect the
document tree found inside the BeautifulSoup
object, to see where
the markup you’re looking for actually ended up.
Version mismatch problems¶
SyntaxError: Invalid syntax
(on the lineROOT_TAG_NAME = '[document]'
): Caused by running an old Python 2 version of Beautiful Soup under Python 3, without converting the code.ImportError: No module named HTMLParser
- Caused by running an old Python 2 version of Beautiful Soup under Python 3.ImportError: No module named html.parser
- Caused by running the Python 3 version of Beautiful Soup under Python 2.ImportError: No module named BeautifulSoup
- Caused by running Beautiful Soup 3 code in an environment that doesn’t have BS3 installed. Or, by writing Beautiful Soup 4 code without knowing that the package name has changed tobs4
.ImportError: No module named bs4
- Caused by running Beautiful Soup 4 code in an environment that doesn’t have BS4 installed.
Parsing XML¶
By default, Beautiful Soup parses documents as HTML. To parse a
document as XML, pass in “xml” as the second argument to the
BeautifulSoup
constructor:
soup = BeautifulSoup(markup, "xml")
You’ll need to have lxml installed.
Other parser problems¶
If your script works on one computer but not another, or in one virtual environment but not another, or outside the virtual environment but not inside, it’s probably because the two environments have different parser libraries available. For example, you may have developed the script on a computer that has lxml installed, and then tried to run it on a computer that only has html5lib installed. See Differences between parsers for why this matters, and fix the problem by mentioning a specific parser library in the
BeautifulSoup
constructor.Because HTML tags and attributes are case-insensitive, all three HTML parsers convert tag and attribute names to lowercase. That is, the markup <TAG></TAG> is converted to <tag></tag>. If you want to preserve mixed-case or uppercase tags and attributes, you’ll need to parse the document as XML.
Miscellaneous¶
UnicodeEncodeError: 'charmap' codec can't encode character '\xfoo' in position bar
(or just about any otherUnicodeEncodeError
) - This problem shows up in two main situations. First, when you try to print a Unicode character that your console doesn’t know how to display. (See this page on the Python wiki for help.) Second, when you’re writing to a file and you pass in a Unicode character that’s not supported by your default encoding. In this case, the simplest solution is to explicitly encode the Unicode string into UTF-8 withu.encode("utf8")
.KeyError: [attr]
- Caused by accessingtag['attr']
when the tag in question doesn’t define theattr
attribute. The most common errors areKeyError: 'href'
andKeyError: 'class'
. Usetag.get('attr')
if you’re not sureattr
is defined, just as you would with a Python dictionary.AttributeError: 'ResultSet' object has no attribute 'foo'
- This usually happens because you expectedfind_all()
to return a single tag or string. Butfind_all()
returns a list of tags and strings–aResultSet
object. You need to iterate over the list and look at the.foo
of each one. Or, if you really only want one result, you need to usefind()
instead offind_all()
.AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'foo'
- This usually happens because you calledfind()
and then tried to access the .foo` attribute of the result. But in your case,find()
didn’t find anything, so it returnedNone
, instead of returning a tag or a string. You need to figure out why yourfind()
call isn’t returning anything.AttributeError: 'NavigableString' object has no attribute 'foo'
- This usually happens because you’re treating a string as though it were a tag. You may be iterating over a list, expecting that it contains nothing but tags, when it actually contains both tags and strings.
Improving Performance¶
Beautiful Soup will never be as fast as the parsers it sits on top of. If response time is critical, if you’re paying for computer time by the hour, or if there’s any other reason why computer time is more valuable than programmer time, you should forget about Beautiful Soup and work directly atop lxml.
That said, there are things you can do to speed up Beautiful Soup. If you’re not using lxml as the underlying parser, my advice is to start. Beautiful Soup parses documents significantly faster using lxml than using html.parser or html5lib.
You can speed up encoding detection significantly by installing the cchardet library.
Parsing only part of a document won’t save you much time parsing the document, but it can save a lot of memory, and it’ll make searching the document much faster.
Translating this documentation¶
New translations of the Beautiful Soup documentation are greatly appreciated. Translations should be licensed under the MIT license, just like Beautiful Soup and its English documentation are.
There are two ways of getting your translation into the main code base and onto the Beautiful Soup website:
Create a branch of the Beautiful Soup repository, add your translation, and propose a merge with the main branch, the same as you would do with a proposed change to the source code.
Send a message to the Beautiful Soup discussion group with a link to your translation, or attach your translation to the message.
Use the Chinese or Brazilian Portuguese translations as your model. In
particular, please translate the source file doc/source/index.rst
,
rather than the HTML version of the documentation. This makes it
possible to publish the documentation in a variety of formats, not
just HTML.
Beautiful Soup 3¶
Beautiful Soup 3 is the previous release series, and is no longer
supported. Development of Beautiful Soup 3 stopped in 2012, and the
package was completely discontinued in 2021. There’s no reason to
install it unless you’re trying to get very old software to work, but
it’s published through PyPi as BeautifulSoup
:
$ pip install BeautifulSoup
You can also download a tarball of the final release, 3.2.2.
If you ran pip install beautifulsoup
or pip install
BeautifulSoup
, but your code doesn’t work, you installed Beautiful
Soup 3 by mistake. You need to run pip install beautifulsoup4
.
The documentation for Beautiful Soup 3 is archived online.
Porting code to BS4¶
Most code written against Beautiful Soup 3 will work against Beautiful
Soup 4 with one simple change. All you should have to do is change the
package name from BeautifulSoup
to bs4
. So this:
from BeautifulSoup import BeautifulSoup
becomes this:
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
If you get the
ImportError
“No module named BeautifulSoup”, your problem is that you’re trying to run Beautiful Soup 3 code, but you only have Beautiful Soup 4 installed.If you get the
ImportError
“No module named bs4”, your problem is that you’re trying to run Beautiful Soup 4 code, but you only have Beautiful Soup 3 installed.
Although BS4 is mostly backward-compatible with BS3, most of its methods have been deprecated and given new names for PEP 8 compliance. There are numerous other renames and changes, and a few of them break backward compatibility.
Here’s what you’ll need to know to convert your BS3 code and habits to BS4:
You need a parser¶
Beautiful Soup 3 used Python’s SGMLParser
, a module that was
deprecated and removed in Python 3.0. Beautiful Soup 4 uses
html.parser
by default, but you can plug in lxml or html5lib and
use that instead. See Installing a parser for a comparison.
Since html.parser
is not the same parser as SGMLParser
, you
may find that Beautiful Soup 4 gives you a different parse tree than
Beautiful Soup 3 for the same markup. If you swap out html.parser
for lxml or html5lib, you may find that the parse tree changes yet
again. If this happens, you’ll need to update your scraping code to
process the new tree.
Method names¶
renderContents
->encode_contents
replaceWith
->replace_with
replaceWithChildren
->unwrap
findAll
->find_all
findAllNext
->find_all_next
findAllPrevious
->find_all_previous
findNext
->find_next
findNextSibling
->find_next_sibling
findNextSiblings
->find_next_siblings
findParent
->find_parent
findParents
->find_parents
findPrevious
->find_previous
findPreviousSibling
->find_previous_sibling
findPreviousSiblings
->find_previous_siblings
getText
->get_text
nextSibling
->next_sibling
previousSibling
->previous_sibling
Some arguments to the Beautiful Soup constructor were renamed for the same reasons:
BeautifulSoup(parseOnlyThese=...)
->BeautifulSoup(parse_only=...)
BeautifulSoup(fromEncoding=...)
->BeautifulSoup(from_encoding=...)
I renamed one method for compatibility with Python 3:
Tag.has_key()
->Tag.has_attr()
I renamed one attribute to use more accurate terminology:
Tag.isSelfClosing
->Tag.is_empty_element
I renamed three attributes to avoid using words that have special meaning to Python. Unlike the others, these changes are not backwards compatible. If you used these attributes in BS3, your code will break in BS4 until you change them.
UnicodeDammit.unicode
->UnicodeDammit.unicode_markup
Tag.next
->Tag.next_element
Tag.previous
->Tag.previous_element
These methods are left over from the Beautiful Soup 2 API. They’ve been deprecated since 2006 and should not be used at all:
Tag.fetchNextSiblings
Tag.fetchPreviousSiblings
Tag.fetchPrevious
Tag.fetchPreviousSiblings
Tag.fetchParents
Tag.findChild
Tag.findChildren
Generators¶
I gave the generators PEP 8-compliant names, and transformed them into properties:
childGenerator()
->children
nextGenerator()
->next_elements
nextSiblingGenerator()
->next_siblings
previousGenerator()
->previous_elements
previousSiblingGenerator()
->previous_siblings
recursiveChildGenerator()
->descendants
parentGenerator()
->parents
So instead of this:
for parent in tag.parentGenerator():
...
You can write this:
for parent in tag.parents:
...
(But the old code will still work.)
Some of the generators used to yield None
after they were done, and
then stop. That was a bug. Now the generators just stop.
There are two new generators, .strings and
.stripped_strings. .strings
yields
NavigableString objects, and .stripped_strings
yields Python
strings that have had whitespace stripped.
XML¶
There is no longer a BeautifulStoneSoup
class for parsing XML. To
parse XML you pass in “xml” as the second argument to the
BeautifulSoup
constructor. For the same reason, the
BeautifulSoup
constructor no longer recognizes the isHTML
argument.
Beautiful Soup’s handling of empty-element XML tags has been
improved. Previously when you parsed XML you had to explicitly say
which tags were considered empty-element tags. The selfClosingTags
argument to the constructor is no longer recognized. Instead,
Beautiful Soup considers any empty tag to be an empty-element tag. If
you add a child to an empty-element tag, it stops being an
empty-element tag.
Entities¶
An incoming HTML or XML entity is always converted into the
corresponding Unicode character. Beautiful Soup 3 had a number of
overlapping ways of dealing with entities, which have been
removed. The BeautifulSoup
constructor no longer recognizes the
smartQuotesTo
or convertEntities
arguments. (Unicode,
Dammit still has smart_quotes_to
, but its default is now to turn
smart quotes into Unicode.) The constants HTML_ENTITIES
,
XML_ENTITIES
, and XHTML_ENTITIES
have been removed, since they
configure a feature (transforming some but not all entities into
Unicode characters) that no longer exists.
If you want to turn Unicode characters back into HTML entities on output, rather than turning them into UTF-8 characters, you need to use an output formatter.
Miscellaneous¶
Tag.string now operates recursively. If tag A contains a single tag B and nothing else, then A.string is the same as B.string. (Previously, it was None.)
Multi-valued attributes like class
have lists of strings as
their values, not simple strings. This may affect the way you search by CSS
class.
Tag
objects now implement the __hash__
method, such that two
Tag
objects are considered equal if they generate the same
markup. This may change your script’s behavior if you put Tag
objects into a dictionary or set.
If you pass one of the find*
methods both string and
a tag-specific argument like name, Beautiful Soup will
search for tags that match your tag-specific criteria and whose
Tag.string matches your string
value. It will not find the strings themselves. Previously,
Beautiful Soup ignored the tag-specific arguments and looked for
strings.
The BeautifulSoup
constructor no longer recognizes the
markupMassage argument. It’s now the parser’s responsibility to
handle markup correctly.
The rarely-used alternate parser classes like
ICantBelieveItsBeautifulSoup
and BeautifulSOAP
have been
removed. It’s now the parser’s decision how to handle ambiguous
markup.
The prettify()
method now returns a Unicode string, not a bytestring.