Nunzio Puntillo
Nunzio Puntillo

Reputation: 33

Download files from a web page using VBA HTML

I have been trying desperately for months to automate a process whereby a csv file is downloaded, maned and saved in a given location. so far I only managed with excel vba to open the web page and click the bottom to download the csv file, but the code stop and required a manual intervention to to be completed, i would like it to be fully automated if possible. see the code used (I am not the author):

Sub WebDataExtraction()
Dim URL As String
Dim IeApp As Object
Dim IeDoc As Object
Dim ieForm As Object
Dim ieObj As Object
Dim objColl As Collection

URL = "http://www.bmreports.com/bsp/BMRSSystemData.php?pT=DDAD&zT=N&dT=NRT"

Set IeApp = CreateObject("InternetExplorer.Application")
IeApp.Visible = True
IeApp.Navigate URL

Do Until IeApp.ReadyState = READYSTATE_COMPLETE
Loop

Set IeDoc = IeApp.Document
For Each ele In IeApp.Document.getElementsByTagName("span")

If ele.innerHTML = "CSV" Then
Application.Wait (Now + TimeValue("0:00:15"))
DoEvents
ele.Click
'At this point you need to Save the document manually
' or figure out for yourself how to automate this interaction.
Test_Save_As_Set_Filename
File_Download_Click_Save
End If

Next

IeApp.Quit
End Sub"

thanks in advance

Nunzio

Upvotes: 3

Views: 33181

Answers (2)

David Zemens
David Zemens

Reputation: 53663

I am posting a second answer, since, as I believe my first answer is adequate for many similar applications, it does not work in this instance.

Why the other methods fail:

  • The .Click method: This raises a new window which expects user input at run-time, it doesn't seem to be possible to use the WinAPI to control this window. Or, at least not any way that I can determine. The code execution stops on the .Click line until the user manually intervenes, there is no way to use a GoTo or a Wait or any other method to circumvent this behavior.
  • Using a WinAPI function to download the source file directly does not work, since the button's URL does not contain a file, but rather a js function that serves the file dynamically.

Here is my proposed workaround solution:

You can read the webpage's .body.InnerText, write that out to a plain text/csv file using FileSystemObject and then with a combination of Regular Expressions and string manipulation, parse the data into a properly delimited CSV file.

Sub WebDataExtraction()
    Dim url As String
    Dim fName As String
    Dim lnText As String
    Dim varLine() As Variant
    Dim vLn As Variant
    Dim newText As String
    Dim leftText As String
    Dim breakTime As Date
'## Requires reference to Microsoft VBScript Regular Expressions 5.5
    Dim REMatches As MatchCollection
    Dim m As Match
'## Requires reference to Microsoft Internet Controls
    Dim IeApp As InternetExplorer
'## Requires reference to Microsoft HTML object library
    Dim IeDoc As HTMLDocument
    Dim ele As HTMLFormElement
'## Requires reference to Microsoft Scripting Runtime
    Dim fso As FileSystemObject
    Dim f As TextStream
    Dim ln As Long: ln = 1


    breakTime = DateAdd("s", 60, Now)
    url = "http://www.bmreports.com/bsp/BMRSSystemData.php?pT=DDAD&zT=N&dT=NRT"
    Set IeApp = CreateObject("InternetExplorer.Application")

    With IeApp
        .Visible = True
        .Navigate url

        Do Until .ReadyState = 4
        Loop

        Set IeDoc = .Document
    End With
    'Wait for the data to display on the page
    Do
        If Now >= breakTime Then
            If MsgBox("The website is taking longer than usual, would you like to continue waiting?", vbYesNo) = vbNo Then
                GoTo EarlyExit
            Else:
                breakTime = DateAdd("s", 60, Now)
            End If
        End If
    Loop While Trim(IeDoc.body.innerText) = "XML CSV Please Wait Data Loading Sorting"

    '## Create the text file
    fName = ActiveWorkbook.Path & "\exported-csv.csv"
    Set fso = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
    Set f = fso.OpenTextFile(fName, 2, True, -1)
    f.Write IeDoc.body.innerText
    f.Close
    Set f = Nothing

    '## Read the text file
    Set f = fso.OpenTextFile(fName, 1, False, -1)
    Do
        lnText = f.ReadLine
        '## The data starts on the 4th line in the InnerText.
        If ln >= 4 Then
            '## Return a collection of matching date/timestamps to which we can parse
            Set REMatches = SplitLine(lnText)
            newText = lnText
            For Each m In REMatches
                newText = Replace(newText, m.Value, ("," & m.Value & ","), , -1, vbTextCompare)
            Next
            '## Get rid of consecutive delimiters:
            Do
                newText = Replace(newText, ",,", ",")
            Loop While InStr(1, newText, ",,", vbBinaryCompare) <> 0
            '## Then use some string manipulation to parse out the first 2 columns which are
            '   not a match to the RegExp we used above.
            leftText = Left(newText, InStr(1, newText, ",", vbTextCompare) - 1)
            leftText = Left(leftText, 10) & "," & Right(leftText, Len(leftText) - 10)
            newText = Right(newText, Len(newText) - InStr(1, newText, ",", vbTextCompare))
            newText = leftText & "," & newText

            '## Store these lines in an array
            ReDim Preserve varLine(ln - 4)
            varLine(ln - 4) = newText
        End If
        ln = ln + 1

    Loop While Not f.AtEndOfStream
    f.Close

'## Re-open the file for writing the delimited lines:
    Set f = fso.OpenTextFile(fName, 2, True, -1)
    '## Iterate over the array and write the data in CSV:
    For Each vLn In varLine
        'Omit blank lines, if any.
        If Len(vLn) <> 0 Then f.WriteLine vLn
    Next
    f.Close

EarlyExit:
    Set fso = Nothing
    Set f = Nothing
    IeApp.Quit
    Set IeApp = Nothing

End Sub

Function SplitLine(strLine As String) As MatchCollection
'returns a RegExp MatchCollection of Date/Timestamps found in each line
'## Requires reference to Microsoft VBScript Regular Expressions 5.5
Dim RE As RegExp
Dim matches As MatchCollection
    Set RE = CreateObject("vbscript.regexp")
    With RE
        .MultiLine = False
        .Global = True
        .IgnoreCase = True
        '## Use this RegEx pattern to parse the date & timestamps:
        .Pattern = "(19|20)\d\d[-](0[1-9]|1[012])[-](0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])[ ]\d\d?:\d\d:\d\d"
    End With
    Set matches = RE.Execute(strLine)
    Set SplitLine = matches
End Function

Upvotes: 2

David Zemens
David Zemens

Reputation: 53663

EDIT

I tested my original answer code using the URL:

http://www.bmreports.com/bsp/BMRSSystemData.php?pT=DDAD&zT=N&dT=NRT#saveasCSV

But this method does not seem to work, for this site. The ele.Click doesn't seem to initiate the download, it just opens the data tabular on the webpage. To download, you need to do the right-click/save-as. If you have gotten that far (as I suspect, based on the subroutines you are calling, but for which you did not provide the code), then you can probably use the Win API to get the HWND of the Save dialog and possibly automate that event. Santosh provides some information on that:

VBA - Go to website and download file from save prompt

Here is also a good resource that should help solve your problem:

http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/beb6fa0e-fbc8-49df-9f2e-30f85d941fad/download-file-from-ie-with-vba

Original Answer

If you are able to determine the URL of the CSV then you can use this subroutine to open a connection to the CSV data and import it directly to the workbook. You may need to automate a text-to-columns operation on the imported data, but that can easily be replicated with the macro recorder. I put an example of this in the Test() subroutine below.

You could easily modify this to add the QueryTables in a new workbook, and then automate the SaveAs method on that workbook to save the file as a CSV.

This example uses a known URL for Yahoo Finance, Ford Motor Company, and will add a QueryTables with the CSV data in cell A1 of the active worksheet. This can be modified pretty easily to put it in another sheet, another workbook, etc.

Sub Test()
Dim MyURL as String
MyURL = "http://ichart.finance.yahoo.com/table.csv?s=GM&a0&b=1&c2010&d=05&e=20&f=2013&g=d&ignore=.csv"

OpenURL MyURL

'Explode the CSV data:
Range("A:A").TextToColumns Destination:=Range("A1"), DataType:=xlDelimited, _
    TextQualifier:=xlDoubleQuote, ConsecutiveDelimiter:=False, Tab:=False, _
    Semicolon:=False, Comma:=True, Space:=False, Other:=False, FieldInfo _
    :=Array(Array(1, 3), Array(2, 1), Array(3, 1), Array(4, 1), Array(5, 1), Array(6, 1), _
    Array(7, 1)), TrailingMinusNumbers:=True

End Sub

Private Sub OpenURL(fullURL As String)

'This opens the CSV in querytables connection.
On Error GoTo ErrOpenURL
    With ActiveSheet.QueryTables.Add(Connection:= _
        "URL;" & fullURL, Destination:=Range("A1"))
        .Name = fullURL
        .FieldNames = True
        .RowNumbers = False
        .FillAdjacentFormulas = False
        .PreserveFormatting = True
        .RefreshOnFileOpen = False
        .BackgroundQuery = True
        .RefreshStyle = xlInsertDeleteCells
        .SavePassword = True
        .SaveData = True
        .AdjustColumnWidth = True
        .RefreshPeriod = 0
        .WebSelectionType = xlEntirePage
        .WebFormatting = xlWebFormattingAll
        .WebPreFormattedTextToColumns = True
        .WebConsecutiveDelimitersAsOne = True
        .WebSingleBlockTextImport = False
        .WebDisableDateRecognition = False
        .WebDisableRedirections = False
        .Refresh BackgroundQuery:=False
    End With

ExitOpenURL:
Exit Sub 'if all goes well, you can exit

'Error handling...

ErrOpenURL:
Err.Clear
bCancel = True
Resume ExitOpenURL


End Sub

Upvotes: 0

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