Reputation: 33704
I am trying to scrape some data from a shopping site Express.com. Here's 1 of many products that contains image, price, title, color(s).
<div class="cat-thu-product cat-thu-product-all item-1">
<div class="cat-thu-p-cont reg-thumb" id="p-50715" style="position: relative;"><a href="/rocco-slim-fit-skinny-leg-corduroy-jean-50715-647/control/show/3/index.pro" onclick="var x=".tl(";s_objectID="http://www.express.com/rocco-slim-fit-skinny-leg-corduroy-jean-50715-647/control/show/3/index.pro_1";return this.s_oc?this.s_oc(e):true"><img class="cat-thu-p-ima widget-app-quickview" src="http://t.express.com/com/scene7/s7d5/=/is/image/expressfashion/25_323_2516_900/i81?$dcat191$" alt="ROCCO SLIM FIT SKINNY LEG CORDUROY JEAN"></a><a href="#jsLink"><img id="widget-quickview-but" class="widget-ie6png glo-but-css-off2" src="/assets/images/but/cat/but-cat-quickview.png" alt="Express View" style="position: absolute; left: 50px;"></a></div>
<ul>
<li class="cat-cat-more-colors">
<div class="productId-50715">
<img class="js-swatchLinkQuickview" title="INK BLUE" src="http://t.express.com/com/scene7/s7d5/=/is/image/expressfashion/25_323_2516_900_s/i81?$swatch$" width="16" height="6" alt="INK BLUE">
<img class="js-swatchLinkQuickview" title="GRAPHITE" src="http://t.express.com/com/scene7/s7d5/=/is/image/expressfashion/25_323_2516_924_s/i81?$swatch$" width="16" height="6" alt="GRAPHITE">
<img class="js-swatchLinkQuickview" title="MERCURY GRAY" src="http://t.express.com/com/scene7/s7d5/=/is/image/expressfashion/25_323_2516_930_s/i81?$swatch$" width="16" height="6" alt="MERCURY GRAY">
<img class="js-swatchLinkQuickview" title="HARVARD RED" src="http://t.express.com/com/scene7/s7d5/=/is/image/expressfashion/25_323_2516_853_s/i81?$swatch$" width="16" height="6" alt="HARVARD RED">
</div>
</li>
<li class="cat-thu-name"><a href="/rocco-slim-fit-skinny-leg-corduroy-jean-50715-647/control/show/3/index.pro" onclick="var x=".tl(";s_objectID="http://www.express.com/rocco-slim-fit-skinny-leg-corduroy-jean-50715-647/control/show/3/index.pro_2";return this.s_oc?this.s_oc(e):true">ROCCO SLIM FIT SKINNY LEG CORDUROY JEAN
</a></li>
<li>
<strong>$88.00</strong>
</li>
<li class="cat-thu-promo-text"><font color="BLACK" style="font-weight:normal">Buy 1, Get 1 50% Off</font>
</li>
</ul>
The very naive and possibly error-prone approach I've done is to first to grab all prices, images, titles and colors:
var price_objects = $('.cat-thu-product li strong');
var image_objects = $('.cat-thu-p-ima');
var name_objects = $('.cat-thu-name a');
var color_objects = $('.cat-cat-more-colors div');
Next, I populate arrays with the data from DOM extracted using jsdom or cheerio scraping libraries for node.js. (Cheerio in this case).
// price info
for (var i = 0; i < price_objects.length; i++) {
prices.push(price_objects[i].children[0].data);
}
// image links
for (var i = 0; i < image_objects.length; i++) {
images.push(image_objects[i].attribs.src.slice(0, -10));
}
// name info
for (var i = 0; i < name_objects.length; i++) {
names.push(name_objects[i].children[0].data);
}
// color info
for (var i = 0; i < color_objects.length; i++) {
colors.push(color_objects[i].attribs.src);
}
Lastly, based on the assumption that price, title, image and colors will match up create a product object:
for (var i = 0; i < images.length; i++) {
items.push({
id: i,
name: names[i],
price: prices[i],
image: images[i],
colors: colors[i]
});
}
This method is slow, error-prone, and very anti-DRY. I was thinking it would be nice if we could grab $('.cat-thu-product')
and using a single for-loop extract relevant information from a single product a time.
But have you ever tried traversing the DOM in jsdom or cheerio? I am not sure how anyone can even comprehend it. Could someone show how would I use this proposed method of scraping, by grabbing $('.cat-thu-product')
div element containing all relevant information and then extract necessary data?
Or perhaps there is a better way to do this?
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1721
Reputation: 1
using https://github.com/rc0x03/node-promise-parser
products = [];
pp('website.com/products')
.find('div.cat-thu-product')
.set({
'id': 'div.cat-thu-p-cont @id',
'name': 'li.cat-thu-name a',
'price': 'ul li strong',
'image': '.cat-thu-p-ima',
'colors[]': '.cat-cat-more-colors div img @alt',
})
.get(function(product) {
console.log(product);
products.push(product);
})
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 56
I would suggest still using jQuery (because it's easy, fast and secure) with one .each example:
var items = [];
$('div.cat-thu-product').each(function(index, productElement) {
var product = {
id: $('div.cat-thu-p-cont', productElement).attr('id'),
name: $('li.cat-thu-name a', productElement).text().trim(),
price: $('ul li strong', productElement).text(),
image: $('.cat-thu-p-ima', productElement).attr('src'),
colors: []
};
// Adding colors array
$('.cat-cat-more-colors div img', productElement).each(function(index, colorElement) {
product.colors.push({name: $(colorElement).attr('alt'), imageUrl: $(colorElement).attr('src')});
});
items.push(product);
});
console.log(items);
And to validate that you have all the required fields, you can write easilly validator or test. But if you are using different library, you still should loop through "div.cat-thu-product" elements.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 925
Try node.io https://github.com/chriso/node.io/wiki
This will be a good approach of doing what you are trying to do.
Upvotes: 2