Reputation: 105
I want to extract only the sales rank (which in this case is 5)
Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books )
From web page : http://www.amazon.com/Mockingjay-Hunger-Games-Book-3/dp/0439023513/ref=tmm_hrd_title_0
So far I have gotten down to this, which selects "Amazon Best Sellers Rank:":
//li[@id='SalesRank']/b/text()
I am using PHP DOMDocument
and DOMXPath
.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1434
Reputation: 31621
You can use pure XPath:
substring-before(normalize-space(/html/body//ul/li[@id="SalesRank"]/b[1]/following-sibling::text()[1])," ")
However, if your input is a bit messy you might get more reliable results by using XPath to grab the parent node's text, and then using a regex on the text to get the specific thing you want.
Demonstration of both methods using PHP with DOMDocument
and DOMXPath
:
// Method 1: XPath only
$xp_salesrank = 'substring-before(normalize-space(/html/body//li[@id="SalesRank"]/b[1]/following-sibling::text()[1])," ")';
// Method 2: XPath and Regex
$regex_ranktext = 'string(/html/body//li[@id="SalesRank"])';
$regex_salesrank = '/Best\s+Sellers\s+Rank:\s*(#\d+)\s+/ui';
// Test URLs
$urls = array(
'http://rads.stackoverflow.com/amzn/click/0439023513',
'http://www.amazon.com/Mockingjay-Final-Hunger-Games-ebook/dp/B003XF1XOQ/ref=tmm_kin_title_0?ie=UTF8&m=AG56TWVU5XWC2',
);
// Results
$ranks = array();
$ranks_regex = array();
foreach ($urls as $url) {
$d = new DOMDocument();
$d->loadHTMLFile($url);
$xp = new DOMXPath($d);
// Method 1: use pure xpath
$ranks[] = $xp->evaluate($xp_salesrank);
// Method 2: use xpath to get a section of text, then regex for more specific item
// This method is probably more forgiving of bad HTML.
$rank_regex = '';
$ranktext = $xp->evaluate($regex_ranktext);
if ($ranktext) {
if (preg_match($regex_salesrank, $ranktext, $matches)) {
$rank_regex = $matches[1];
}
}
$ranks_regex[] = $rank_regex;
}
assert($ranks===$ranks_regex); // Both methods should be the same.
var_dump($ranks);
var_dump($ranks_regex);
The output I get is:
array(2) {
[0]=>
string(2) "#4"
[1]=>
string(2) "#3"
}
array(2) {
[0]=>
string(2) "#4"
[1]=>
string(2) "#3"
}
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 243459
Use:
substring-before(substring-after($expr, '#'), ' ')
where $expr
should be substituted by your expression:
substring-before(substring-after(//li[@id='SalesRank']/b, '#'), ' ')
Or, if the right expression that selects the text node is (as per @FrancisAvila):
/html/body//ul/li[@id="SalesRank"]/b[1]/following-sibling::text()[1]
then the above becomes:
substring-before(
substring-after(/html/body//ul/li[@id="SalesRank"]
/b[1]/following-sibling::text()[1], '#'),
' ')
Upvotes: 0