I'm trying to use Python to download the HTML source code of a website but I'm receiving this error.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Users\Sergio.Tapia\Documents\NetBeansProjects\DICParser\src\WebDownload.py", line 3, in &开发者_JAVA百科lt;module>
file = urllib.urlopen("http://www.python.org")
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'urlopen'
I'm following the guide here: http://www.boddie.org.uk/python/HTML.html
import urllib
file = urllib.urlopen("http://www.python.org")
s = file.read()
f.close()
#I'm guessing this would output the html source code?
print(s)
I'm using Python 3.
This works in Python 2.x.
For Python 3 look in the docs:
import urllib.request
with urllib.request.urlopen("http://www.python.org") as url:
s = url.read()
# I'm guessing this would output the html source code ?
print(s)
A Python 2+3 compatible solution is:
import sys
if sys.version_info[0] == 3:
from urllib.request import urlopen
else:
# Not Python 3 - today, it is most likely to be Python 2
# But note that this might need an update when Python 4
# might be around one day
from urllib import urlopen
# Your code where you can use urlopen
with urlopen("http://www.python.org") as url:
s = url.read()
print(s)
import urllib.request as ur
s = ur.urlopen("http://www.google.com")
sl = s.read()
print(sl)
In Python v3 the "urllib.request" is a module by itself, therefore "urllib" cannot be used here.
To get 'dataX = urllib.urlopen(url).read()' working in python3 (this would have been correct for python2) you must just change 2 little things.
1: The urllib statement itself (add the .request in the middle):
dataX = urllib.request.urlopen(url).read()
2: The import statement preceding it (change from 'import urlib' to:
import urllib.request
And it should work in python3 :)
Change TWO lines:
import urllib.request #line1
#Replace
urllib.urlopen("http://www.python.org")
#To
urllib.request.urlopen("http://www.python.org") #line2
If You got ERROR 403: Forbidden Error exception try this:
siteurl = "http://www.python.org"
req = urllib.request.Request(siteurl, headers={'User-Agent': 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/80.0.3987.100 Safari/537.36'})
pageHTML = urllib.request.urlopen(req).read()
I hope your problem resolved.
import urllib.request as ur
filehandler = ur.urlopen ('http://www.google.com')
for line in filehandler:
print(line.strip())
For python 3, try something like this:
import urllib.request
urllib.request.urlretrieve('http://crcv.ucf.edu/THUMOS14/UCF101/UCF101/v_YoYo_g19_c02.avi', "video_name.avi")
It will download the video to the current working directory
I got help from HERE
Solution for python3:
from urllib.request import urlopen
url = 'http://www.python.org'
file = urlopen(url)
html = file.read()
print(html)
import urllib
import urllib.request
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
with urllib.request.urlopen("http://www.newegg.com/") as url:
s = url.read()
print(s)
soup = BeautifulSoup(s, "html.parser")
all_tag_a = soup.find_all("a", limit=10)
for links in all_tag_a:
#print(links.get('href'))
print(links)
One of the possible way to do it:
import urllib
...
try:
# Python 2
from urllib2 import urlopen
except ImportError:
# Python 3
from urllib.request import urlopen
If your code uses Python version 2.x, you can do the following:
from urllib.request import urlopen
urlopen(url)
By the way, I suggest another module called requests
, which is more friendly to use. You can use pip
install it, and use it like this:
import requests
requests.get(url)
requests.post(url)
Use the third-party six
module to make your code compatible between Python2 and Python3.
from six.moves import urllib
urllib.request.urlopen("<your-url>")
imgResp = urllib3.request.RequestMethods.urlopen(url)
Add this RequestMethods
before using urlopen
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