Web Scraper in Go, similar to BeautifulSoup
soup is a small web scraper package for Go, with its interface highly similar to that of BeautifulSoup.
Exported variables and functions implemented till now :
var Headers map[string]string // Set headers as a map of key-value pairs, an alternative to calling Header() individually
var Cookies map[string]string // Set cookies as a map of key-value pairs, an alternative to calling Cookie() individually
func Get(string) (string,error) {} // Takes the url as an argument, returns HTML string
func GetWithClient(string, *http.Client) {} // Takes the url and a custom HTTP client as arguments, returns HTML string
func Post(string, string, interface{}) (string, error) {} // Takes the url, bodyType, and payload as an argument, returns HTML string
func PostForm(string, url.Values) {} // Takes the url and body. bodyType is set to "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
func Header(string, string) {} // Takes key,value pair to set as headers for the HTTP request made in Get()
func Cookie(string, string) {} // Takes key, value pair to set as cookies to be sent with the HTTP request in Get()
func HTMLParse(string) Root {} // Takes the HTML string as an argument, returns a pointer to the DOM constructed
func Find([]string) Root {} // Element tag,(attribute key-value pair) as argument, pointer to first occurence returned
func FindAll([]string) []Root {} // Same as Find(), but pointers to all occurrences returned
func FindStrict([]string) Root {} // Element tag,(attribute key-value pair) as argument, pointer to first occurence returned with exact matching values
func FindAllStrict([]string) []Root {} // Same as FindStrict(), but pointers to all occurrences returned
func FindNextSibling() Root {} // Pointer to the next sibling of the Element in the DOM returned
func FindNextElementSibling() Root {} // Pointer to the next element sibling of the Element in the DOM returned
func FindPrevSibling() Root {} // Pointer to the previous sibling of the Element in the DOM returned
func FindPrevElementSibling() Root {} // Pointer to the previous element sibling of the Element in the DOM returned
func Children() []Root {} // Find all direct children of this DOM element
func Attrs() map[string]string {} // Map returned with all the attributes of the Element as lookup to their respective values
func Text() string {} // Full text inside a non-nested tag returned, first half returned in a nested one
func FullText() string {} // Full text inside a nested/non-nested tag returned
func SetDebug(bool) {} // Sets the debug mode to true or false; false by default
func HTML() {} // HTML returns the HTML code for the specific element
Root
is a struct, containing three fields :
Pointer
containing the pointer to the current html nodeNodeValue
containing the current html node's value, i.e. the tag name for an ElementNode, or the text in case of a TextNodeError
containing an error in a struct if one occurrs, else nil
is returned.
A detailed text explaination of the error can be accessed using the Error()
function. A field Type
in this struct of type ErrorType
will denote the kind of error that took place, which will consist of either of the following
ErrUnableToParse
ErrElementNotFound
ErrNoNextSibling
ErrNoPreviousSibling
ErrNoNextElementSibling
ErrNoPreviousElementSibling
ErrCreatingGetRequest
ErrInGetRequest
ErrReadingResponse
Install the package using the command
go get github.com/anaskhan96/soup
An example code is given below to scrape the "Comics I Enjoy" part (text and its links) from xkcd.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/anaskhan96/soup"
"os"
)
func main() {
resp, err := soup.Get("https://xkcd.com")
if err != nil {
os.Exit(1)
}
doc := soup.HTMLParse(resp)
links := doc.Find("div", "id", "comicLinks").FindAll("a")
for _, link := range links {
fmt.Println(link.Text(), "| Link :", link.Attrs()["href"])
}
}
This package was developed in my free time. However, contributions from everybody in the community are welcome, to make it a better web scraper. If you think there should be a particular feature or function included in the package, feel free to open up a new issue or pull request.