- How To Learn Web Scraping
- Is Web Scraping Difficult
- Web Scraping For Dummies 5th
- Web Scraping For Beginners
- Expression Web For Dummies
In this article, we will see how to extract structured information from web-page leveraging BeautifulSoup and CSS selectors.
WebScraping with BeautifulSoup
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Pulling the HTML out
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BeautifulSoup is not a web scraping library per se. It is a library that allows you to efficiently and easily pull out information from HTML. In the real world, it is often used for web scraping projects.
So, to begin, we'll need HTML. We will pull out HTML from the HackerNews landing page using the requests
python package.
Parsing the HTML with BeautifulSoup
Now that the HTML is accessible we will use BeautifulSoup to parse it. If you haven't already, you can install the package by doing a simple pip install beautifullsoup4
. In the rest of this article, we will refer to BeautifulSoup4
as BS4
.
We now need to parse the HTML and load it into a BS4
structure.
This soup
object is very handy and allows us to easily access many useful pieces of information such as:
Targeting DOM elements
You might begin to see a pattern in how to use this library. It allows you to quickly and elegantly target the DOM elements you need.
If you need to select DOM elements from its tag (<p>
, <a>
, <span>
, ….) you can simply do soup.<tag>
to select it. The caveat is that it will only select the first HTML element with that tag.
For example if I want the first link I just have to do
This element will also have many useful methods to quickly extract information:
This is a simple example. If you want to select the first element based on its id
or class
it is not much more difficult:
And if you don't want the first matching element but instead all matching elements, just replace find
with find_all
.
This simple and elegant interface allows you to quickly write short and powerful Python snippets.
For example, let's say that I want to extract all links in this page and find the top three links that appear the most on the page. All I have to do is this:
Advanced usage
BeautifulSoup is a great example of a library that is both easy to use and powerful.
You can do much more to select elements using BeautifulSoup. Although we won't cover those cases in this article, here are few examples of advanced things you can do:
- Select elements with regexp
- Select elements with a custom function (links that have Google in them for example)
- Iterating over siblings elements
How To Learn Web Scraping
We also only covered how to target elements but there is also a whole section about updating and writing HTML. Again, we won't cover this in this article.
Let's now talk about CSS selectors.
CSS selectors
Why learn about CSS selectors if BeautifulSoup can select all elements with its pre-made method?
Well, you'll soon understand.
Hard dom
Sometimes, the HTML document won't have a useful class and id. Selecting elements with BS4 without relying on that information can be quite verbose.
For example, let's say that you want to extract the score of a post on the HN homepage, but you can't use class
name or id
in your code. Here is how you could do it:
Not that great right?
If you rely on CSS selectors, it becomes easier.
This is much clearer and simpler, right? Of course, this example artificially highlights the usefulness of the CSS selector. But, you will quickly see that the DOM structure of a page is more reliable than the class name.
Easily debuggable
Another thing that makes CSS selectors great for web scraping is that they are easily debuggable. I'll show you how. Open Chrome, then open your developers’ tools, (left-click -> “Inspect”), click on the document panel, and use “Ctrl-F or CMD-F” to be in search mode.
In the search bar, you'll be able to write any CSS expression you want, and Chrome will instantly find all elements matching it.
Iterate over the results by pressing Enter
to check that you are correctly getting everything you need.
What is great with Chrome is that it works the other way around too. You can also left-click on an element, click “Copy -> Copy Selector”, and your selector will be pasted in your clipboard.
Powerful
CSS selectors, and particularly pseudo-classes, allow you to select any elements you want with one simple string.
Child and descendants
You can select direct child and descendant with:
And you can mix them together:
This will totally work.
Siblings
This one is one of my favorites because it allows you to select elements based on the elements on the same level in the DOM hierarchy, hence the sibling expression.
To select all p
coming after an h2
you can use the h2 ~ p
selector (it will match two p
). You can also use h2 + p
if you only want to select p
coming directly after an h2
(it will match only one p
)
Attribute selectors
Attribute selectors allow you to select elements with particular attributes values. So, p[data-test='foo']
will match
Position pseudo classes
If you want to select the last p
inside a section, you can also do it in “pure” CSS by leveraging position pseudo-classes. For this particular example, you just need this selector: section p:last-child()
. If you want to learn more about this, I suggest you take a look at this article
Maintainable code
Is Web Scraping Difficult
I also think that CSS expressions are easier to maintain. For example, at ScrapingBee, when we do custom web scraping tasks all of our scripts begins like this:
This makes it easy and quick to fix scripts when DOM changes appear. The laziest way to do it is to simply copy/paste what Chrome gives you when you left-click on an element. If you do this, be careful, Chrome tends to add a lot of useless selectors when you use this trick. So do not hesitate to clean them up a bit before using them in your script.
Conclusion
In the end, everything you do with pure CSS selectors you can do it with BeautifulSoup4. But, I think choosing the former is the best way to go.
I hoped you liked this article about web scraping in Python and that it will make your life easier.
If you'd like to read more about web scraping in Python do not hesitate to check out our extensive Python web scraping guide.
You might also be interested by our XPath tutorial
Happy Scraping,
Pierre de Wulf
Part one of this series focuses on requesting and wrangling HTML using two of the most popular Python libraries for web scraping: requests and BeautifulSoup
After the 2016 election I became much more interested in media bias and the manipulation of individuals through advertising. This series will be a walkthrough of a web scraping project that monitors political news from both left and right wing media outlets and performs an analysis on the rhetoric being used, the ads being displayed, and the sentiment of certain topics.
The first part of the series will we be getting media bias data and focus on only working locally on your computer, but if you wish to learn how to deploy something like this into production, feel free to leave a comment and let me know.
You should already know:
- Python fundamentals - lists, dicts, functions, loops - learn on Coursera
- Basic HTML
You will have learned:
- Requesting web pages
- Parsing HTML
- Saving and loading scraped data
- Scraping multiple pages in a row
Every time you load a web page you're making a request to a server, and when you're just a human with a browser there's not a lot of damage you can do. With a Python script that can execute thousands of requests a second if coded incorrectly, you could end up costing the website owner a lot of money and possibly bring down their site (see Denial-of-service attack (DoS)).
With this in mind, we want to be very careful with how we program scrapers to avoid crashing sites and causing damage. Every time we scrape a website we want to attempt to make only one request per page. We don't want to be making a request every time our parsing or other logic doesn't work out, so we need to parse only after we've saved the page locally.
If I'm just doing some quick tests, I'll usually start out in a Jupyter notebook because you can request a web page in one cell and have that web page available to every cell below it without making a new request. Since this article is available as a Jupyter notebook, you will see how it works if you choose that format.
After we make a request and retrieve a web page's content, we can store that content locally with Python's open()
function. To do so we need to use the argument wb
, which stands for 'write bytes'. This let's us avoid any encoding issues when saving.
Below is a function that wraps the open()
function to reduce a lot of repetitive coding later on:
Assume we have captured the HTML from google.com in html
, which you'll see later how to do. After running this function we will now have a file in the same directory as this notebook called google_com
that contains the HTML.
To retrieve our saved file we'll make another function to wrap reading the HTML back into html
. We need to use rb
for 'read bytes' in this case.
The open function is doing just the opposite: read the HTML from google_com
. If our script fails, notebook closes, computer shuts down, etc., we no longer need to request Google again, lessening our impact on their servers. While it doesn't matter much with Google since they have a lot of resources, smaller sites with smaller servers will benefit from this.
I save almost every page and parse later when web scraping as a safety precaution.
Each site usually has a robots.txt on the root of their domain. This is where the website owner explicitly states what bots are allowed to do on their site. Simply go to example.com/robots.txt and you should find a text file that looks something like this:
The User-agent field is the name of the bot and the rules that follow are what the bot should follow. Some robots.txt will have many User-agents with different rules. Common bots are googlebot, bingbot, and applebot, all of which you can probably guess the purpose and origin of.
We don't really need to provide a User-agent when scraping, so User-agent: * is what we would follow. A * means that the following rules apply to all bots (that's us).
The Crawl-delay tells us the number of seconds to wait before requests, so in this example we need to wait 10 seconds before making another request.
Allow gives us specific URLs we're allowed to request with bots, and vice versa for Disallow. In this example we're allowed to request anything in the /pages/subfolder which means anything that starts with example.com/pages/. On the other hand, we are disallowed from scraping anything from the /scripts/subfolder.
Many times you'll see a * next to Allow or Disallow which means you are either allowed or not allowed to scrape everything on the site.
Sometimes there will be a disallow all pages followed by allowed pages like this:
This means that you're not allowed to scrape anything except the subfolder /pages/. Essentially, you just want to read the rules in order where the next rule overrides the previous rule.
This project will primarily be run through a Jupyter notebook, which is done for teaching purposes and is not the usual way scrapers are programmed. After showing you the pieces, we'll put it all together into a Python script that can be run from command line or your IDE of choice.
With Python's requests
(pip install requests
) library we're getting a web page by using get()
on the URL. The response r
contains many things, but using r.content
will give us the HTML. Once we have the HTML we can then parse it for the data we're interested in analyzing.
There's an interesting website called AllSides that has a media bias rating table where users can agree or disagree with the rating.
Since there's nothing in their robots.txt that disallows us from scraping this section of the site, I'm assuming it's okay to go ahead and extract this data for our project. Let's request the this first page:
Since we essentially have a giant string of HTML, we can print a slice of 100 characters to confirm we have the source of the page. Let's start extracting data.
What does BeautifulSoup do?
We used requests
to get the page from the AllSides server, but now we need the BeautifulSoup library (pip install beautifulsoup4
) to parse HTML and XML. When we pass our HTML to the BeautifulSoup constructor we get an object in return that we can then navigate like the original tree structure of the DOM.
This way we can find elements using names of tags, classes, IDs, and through relationships to other elements, like getting the children and siblings of elements.
We create a new BeautifulSoup object by passing the constructor our newly acquired HTML content and the type of parser we want to use:
This soup
object defines a bunch of methods — many of which can achieve the same result — that we can use to extract data from the HTML. Let's start with finding elements.
To find elements and data inside our HTML we'll be using select_one
, which returns a single element, and select
, which returns a list of elements (even if only one item exists). Both of these methods use CSS selectors to find elements, so if you're rusty on how CSS selectors work here's a quick refresher:
A CSS selector refresher
- To get a tag, such as
<a></a>
,<body></body>
, use the naked name for the tag. E.g.select_one('a')
gets an anchor/link element,select_one('body')
gets the body element .temp
gets an element with a class of temp, E.g. to get<a></a>
useselect_one('.temp')
#temp
gets an element with an id of temp, E.g. to get<a></a>
useselect_one('#temp')
.temp.example
gets an element with both classes temp and example, E.g. to get<a></a>
useselect_one('.temp.example')
.temp a
gets an anchor element nested inside of a parent element with class temp, E.g. to get<div><a></a></div>
useselect_one('.temp a')
. Note the space between.temp
anda
..temp .example
gets an element with class example nested inside of a parent element with class temp, E.g. to get<div><a></a></div>
useselect_one('.temp .example')
. Again, note the space between.temp
and.example
. The space tells the selector that the class after the space is a child of the class before the space.- ids, such as
<a id=one></a>
, are unique so you can usually use the id selector by itself to get the right element. No need to do nested selectors when using ids.
There's many more selectors for for doing various tasks, like selecting certain child elements, specific links, etc., that you can look up when needed. The selectors above get us pretty close to everything we would need for now.
Tips on figuring out how to select certain elements
Most browsers have a quick way of finding the selector for an element using their developer tools. In Chrome, we can quickly find selectors for elements by
- Right-click on the the element then select 'Inspect' in the menu. Developer tools opens and and highlights the element we right-clicked
- Right-click the code element in developer tools, hover over 'Copy' in the menu, then click 'Copy selector'
Sometimes it'll be a little off and we need to scan up a few elements to find the right one. Here's what it looks like to find the selector and Xpath, another type of selector, in Chrome:
Our data is housed in a table on AllSides, and by inspecting the header element we can find the code that renders the table and rows. What we need to do is select
all the rows from the table and then parse out the information from each row.
Here's how to quickly find the table in the source code:
Simplifying the table's HTML, the structure looks like this (comments <!-- -->
added by me):
So to get each row, we just select all <tr>
inside <tbody>
:
tbody tr
tells the selector to extract all <tr>
(table row) tags that are children of the <tbody>
body tag. If there were more than one table on this page we would have to make a more specific selector, but since this is the only table, we're good to go.
Now we have a list of HTML table rows that each contain four cells:
- News source name and link
- Bias data
- Agreement buttons
- Community feedback data
Below is a breakdown of how to extract each one.
The outlet name (ABC News) is the text of an anchor tag that's nested inside a <td>
tag, which is a cell — or table data tag.
Getting the outlet name is pretty easy: just get the first row in rows
and run a select_one
off that object:
The only class we needed to use in this case was .source-title
since .views-field
looks to be just a class each row is given for styling and doesn't provide any uniqueness.
Notice that we didn't need to worry about selecting the anchor tag a
that contains the text. When we use .text
is gets all text in that element, and since 'ABC News' is the only text, that's all we need to do. Bear in mind that using select
or select_one
will give you the whole element with the tags included, so we need .text
to give us the text between the tags.
.strip()
ensures all the whitespace surrounding the name is removed. Many websites use whitespace as a way to visually pad the text inside elements so using strip()
is always a good idea.
You'll notice that we can run BeautifulSoup methods right off one of the rows. That's because the rows become their own BeautifulSoup objects when we make a select from another BeautifulSoup object. On the other hand, our name
variable is no longer a BeautifulSoup object because we called .text
.
We also need the link to this news source's page on AllSides. If we look back at the HTML we'll see that in this case we do want to select the anchor in order to get the href
that contains the link, so let's do that:
It is a relative path in the HTML, so we prepend the site's URL to make it a link we can request later.
Getting the link was a bit different than just selecting an element. We had to access an attribute (href
) of the element, which is done using brackets, like how we would access a Python dictionary. This will be the same for other attributes of elements, like src
in images and videos.
We can see that the rating is displayed as an image so how can we get the rating in words? Looking at the HTML notice the link that surrounds the image has the text we need:
We could also pull the alt
attribute, but the link looks easier. Let's grab it:
Here we selected the anchor tag by using the class name and tag together: .views-field-field-bias-image
is the class of the <td>
and <a>
is for the anchor nested inside.
After that we extract the href
just like before, but now we only want the last part of the URL for the name of the bias so we split on slashes and get the last element of that split (left-center).
The last thing to scrape is the agree/disagree ratio from the community feedback area. The HTML of this cell is pretty convoluted due to the styling, but here's the basic structure:
The numbers we want are located in two span
elements in the last div
. Both span
elements have classes that are unique in this cell so we can use them to make the selection:
Using .text
will return a string, so we need to convert them to integers in order to calculate the ratio.
Side note: If you've never seen this way of formatting print statements in Python, the f
at the front allows us to insert variables right into the string using curly braces. The :.2f
is a way to format floats to only show two decimals places.
If you look at the page in your browser you'll notice that they say how much the community is in agreement by using 'somewhat agree', 'strongly agree', etc. so how do we get that? If we try to select it:
It shows up as None because this element is rendered with Javascript and requests
can't pull HTML rendered with Javascript. We'll be looking at how to get data rendered with JS in a later article, but since this is the only piece of information that's rendered this way we can manually recreate the text.
To find the JS files they're using, just CTRL+F for '.js' in the page source and open the files in a new tab to look for that logic.
It turned out the logic was located in the eleventh JS file and they have a function that calculates the text and color with these parameters:
Range | Agreeance |
$ratio > 3$ | absolutely agrees |
$2 < ratio leq 3$ | strongly agrees |
$1.5 < ratio leq 2$ | agrees |
$1 < ratio leq 1.5$ | somewhat agrees |
$ratio = 1$ | neutral |
$0.67 < ratio < 1$ | somewhat disgrees |
$0.5 < ratio leq 0.67$ | disgrees |
$0.33 < ratio leq 0.5$ | strongly disagrees |
$ratio leq 0.33$ | absolutely disagrees |
Now that we have the general logic for a single row and we can generate the agreeance text, let's create a loop that gets data from every row on the first page:
In the loop we can combine any multi-step extractions into one to create the values in the least number of steps.
Our data
list now contains a dictionary containing key information for every row.
Keep in mind that this is still only the first page. The list on AllSides is three pages long as of this writing, so we need to modify this loop to get the other pages.
Notice that the URLs for each page follow a pattern. The first page has no parameters on the URL, but the next pages do; specifically they attach a ?page=#
to the URL where '#' is the page number.
Right now, the easiest way to get all pages is just to manually make a list of these three pages and loop over them. If we were working on a project with thousands of pages we might build a more automated way of constructing/finding the next URLs, but for now this works.
According to AllSides' robots.txt we need to make sure we wait ten seconds before each request.
Our loop will:
- request a page
- parse the page
- wait ten seconds
- repeat for next page.
Remember, we've already tested our parsing above on a page that was cached locally so we know it works. You'll want to make sure to do this before making a loop that performs requests to prevent having to reloop if you forgot to parse something.
By combining all the steps we've done up to this point and adding a loop over pages, here's how it looks:
Now we have a list of dictionaries for each row on all three pages.
To cap it off, we want to get the real URL to the news source, not just the link to their presence on AllSides. To do this, we will need to get the AllSides page and look for the link.
If we go to ABC News' page there's a row of external links to Facebook, Twitter, Wikipedia, and the ABC News website. The HTML for that sections looks like this:
Notice the anchor tag (<a>
) that contains the link to ABC News has a class of 'www'. Pretty easy to get with what we've already learned:
So let's make another loop to request the AllSides page and get links for each news source. Unfortunately, some pages don't have a link in this grey bar to the news source, which brings up a good point: always account for elements to randomly not exist.
Up until now we've assumed elements exist in the tables we scraped, but it's always a good idea to program scrapers in way so they don't break when an element goes missing.
Using select_one
or select
will always return None or an empty list if nothing is found, so in this loop we'll check if we found the website element or not so it doesn't throw an Exception when trying to access the href
attribute.
Finally, since there's 265 news source pages and the wait time between pages is 10 seconds, it's going to take ~44 minutes to do this. Instead of blindly not knowing our progress, let's use the tqdm
library (pip install tqdm
) to give us a nice progress bar:
tqdm
is a little weird at first, but essentially tqdm_notebook
is just wrapping around our data list to produce a progress bar. We are still able to access each dictionary, d
, just as we would normally. Note that tqdm_notebook
is only for Jupyter notebooks. In regular editors you'll just import tqdm from tqdm
and use tqdm
instead.
So what do we have now? At this moment, data
is a list of dictionaries, each of which contains all the data from the tables as well as the websites from each individual news source's page on AllSides.
The first thing we'll want to do now is save that data to a file so we don't have to make those requests again. We'll be storing the data as JSON since it's already in that form anyway:
If you're not familiar with JSON, just quickly open allsides.json
in an editor and see what it looks like. It should look almost exactly like what data
looks like if we print it in Python: a list of dictionaries.
Before ending this article I think it would be worthwhile to actually see what's interesting about this data we just retrieved. So, let's answer a couple of questions.
Which ratings for outlets does the communityabsolutely agreeon?
To find where the community absolutely agrees we can do a simple list comprehension that checks each dict
for the agreeance text we want:
Using some string formatting we can make it look somewhat tabular. Interestingly, C-SPAN is the only center bias that the community absolutely agrees on. The others for left and right aren't that surprising.
Which ratings for outlets does the communityabsolutely disagreeon?
To make analysis a little easier, we can also load our JSON data into a Pandas DataFrame as well. This is easy with Pandas since they have a simple function for reading JSON into a DataFrame.
As an aside, if you've never used Pandas (pip install pandas
), Matplotlib (pip install matplotlib
), or any of the other data science libraries, I would definitely recommend checking out Jose Portilla's data science course for a great intro to these tools and many machine learning concepts.
Now to the DataFrame:
agree | agree_ratio | agreeance_text | allsides_page | bias | disagree | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
name | ||||||
ABC News | 8355 | 1.260371 | somewhat agrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/abc-news-.. | left-center | 6629 |
Al Jazeera | 1996 | 0.694986 | somewhat disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/al-jazeer.. | center | 2872 |
AllSides | 2615 | 2.485741 | strongly agrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/allsides-0 | allsides | 1052 |
AllSides Community | 1760 | 1.668246 | agrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/allsides-.. | allsides | 1055 |
AlterNet | 1226 | 2.181495 | strongly agrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/alternet | left | 562 |
agree | agree_ratio | agreeance_text | allsides_page | bias | disagree | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
name | ||||||
CNBC | 1239 | 0.398905 | strongly disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/cnbc | center | 3106 |
Quillette | 45 | 0.416667 | strongly disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/quillette.. | right-center | 108 |
The Courier-Journal | 64 | 0.410256 | strongly disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/courier-j.. | left-center | 156 |
The Economist | 779 | 0.485964 | strongly disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/economist | left-center | 1603 |
The Observer (New York) | 123 | 0.484252 | strongly disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/observer | center | 254 |
The Oracle | 33 | 0.485294 | strongly disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/oracle | center | 68 |
The Republican | 108 | 0.392727 | strongly disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/republican | center | 275 |
It looks like much of the community disagrees strongly with certain outlets being rated with a 'center' bias.
Let's make a quick visualization of agreeance. Since there's too many news sources to plot so let's pull only those with the most votes. To do that, we can make a new column that counts the total votes and then sort by that value:
agree | agree_ratio | agreeance_text | allsides_page | bias | disagree | total_votes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
name | |||||||
CNN (Web News) | 22907 | 0.970553 | somewhat disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/cnn-media.. | left-center | 23602 | 46509 |
Fox News | 17410 | 0.650598 | disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/fox-news-.. | right-center | 26760 | 44170 |
Washington Post | 21434 | 1.682022 | agrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/washingto.. | left-center | 12743 | 34177 |
New York Times - News | 12275 | 0.570002 | disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/new-york-.. | left-center | 21535 | 33810 |
HuffPost | 15056 | 0.834127 | somewhat disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/huffpost-.. | left | 18050 | 33106 |
Politico | 11047 | 0.598656 | disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/politico-.. | left-center | 18453 | 29500 |
Washington Times | 18934 | 2.017475 | strongly agrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/washingto.. | right-center | 9385 | 28319 |
NPR News | 15751 | 1.481889 | somewhat agrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/npr-media.. | center | 10629 | 26380 |
Wall Street Journal - News | 9872 | 0.627033 | disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/wall-stre.. | center | 15744 | 25616 |
Townhall | 7632 | 0.606967 | disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/townhall-.. | right | 12574 | 20206 |
Visualizing the data
To make a bar plot we'll use Matplotlib with Seaborn's dark grid style:
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As mentioned above, we have too many news outlets to plot comfortably, so just make a copy of the top 25 and place it in a new df2
variable:
agree | agree_ratio | agreeance_text | allsides_page | bias | disagree | total_votes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
name | |||||||
CNN (Web News) | 22907 | 0.970553 | somewhat disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/cnn-media.. | left-center | 23602 | 46509 |
Fox News | 17410 | 0.650598 | disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/fox-news-.. | right-center | 26760 | 44170 |
Washington Post | 21434 | 1.682022 | agrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/washingto.. | left-center | 12743 | 34177 |
New York Times - News | 12275 | 0.570002 | disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/new-york-.. | left-center | 21535 | 33810 |
HuffPost | 15056 | 0.834127 | somewhat disagrees | https://www.allsides.com/news-source/huffpost-.. | left | 18050 | 33106 |
Web Scraping For Dummies 5th
With the top 25 news sources by amount of feedback, let's create a stacked bar chart where the number of agrees are stacked on top of the number of disagrees. This makes the total height of the bar the total amount of feedback.
Below, we first create a figure and axes, plot the agree bars, plot the disagree bars on top of the agrees using bottom
, then set various text features:
For a slightly more complex version, let's make a subplot for each bias and plot the respective news sources.
This time we'll make a new copy of the original DataFrame beforehand since we can plot more news outlets now.
Instead of making one axes, we'll create a new one for each bias to make six total subplots:
Hopefully the comments help with how these plots were created. We're just looping through each unique bias and adding a subplot to the figure.
When interpreting these plots keep in mind that the y-axis has different scales for each subplot. Overall it's a nice way to see which outlets have a lot of votes and where the most disagreement is. This is what makes scraping so much fun!
We have the tools to make some fairly complex web scrapers now, but there's still the issue with Javascript rendering. This is something that deserves its own article, but for now we can do quite a lot.
There's also some project organization that needs to occur when making this into a more easily runnable program. We need to pull it out of this notebook and code in command-line arguments if we plan to run it often for updates.
These sorts of things will be addressed later when we build more complex scrapers, but feel free to let me know in the comments of anything in particular you're interested in learning about.
Resources
Web Scraping with Python: Collecting More Data from the Modern Web — Book on Amazon
Jose Portilla's Data Science and ML Bootcamp — Course on Udemy
Easiest way to get started with Data Science. Covers Pandas, Matplotlib, Seaborn, Scikit-learn, and a lot of other useful topics.
Web Scraping For Beginners
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