2008 3.07: Difference between revisions

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== Code ==
== Code ==
The following is a example of a Python CGI-script that uses Beautiful Soup to display only the link tags of a given page. Link's are re-directed to load the referred to page using the same script, so that the user can "browse" through the links of one or more sites through the filter of the script. This basic framework could be used to produce alternative "browsers" viewable via a users own regular browser like [[Firefox]].


<source lang="python">
<source lang="python">

Revision as of 01:03, 31 May 2008

Radical Browsers

Walk into any of your more "service oriented" stores in the United States and you're likely to be quickly "greeted" by a salesperson with something along the line of "is there something I can help you out with today?" A simple, and oft-used, non-committal response is to say, "No, thanks. I'm just browsing".

A software "browser" is for many quite their most frequently used piece of software. As a result of it's very persistence and ubiquity, the browser as a particular piece of software threatens to fade into the background, becoming a "natural" and seemingly neutral part of one's daily (computing) experience.

The original conception of the world wide web was one that supported a variety of means of viewing and interacting with online content.

By digging into the underlying network mechanisms, protocols, and markup languages it's possible to create radically different kinds of "browsing" of the material made available via the world wide web.

some examples

Page mashups with Python & Beautiful Soup

Some useful tools built into Python:

Issue with urllib and wikipedia (Setting User-Agent to "pretend" to be a "real" browser):


Code

The following is a example of a Python CGI-script that uses Beautiful Soup to display only the link tags of a given page. Link's are re-directed to load the referred to page using the same script, so that the user can "browse" through the links of one or more sites through the filter of the script. This basic framework could be used to produce alternative "browsers" viewable via a users own regular browser like Firefox.

#!/usr/bin/python

import BeautifulSoup, cgi
import urllib, urllib2, urlparse
import cgitb; cgitb.enable()

inputs = cgi.FieldStorage()
pageurl = inputs.getvalue("url", "http://news.bbc.co.uk")

# setting the user-agent
request = urllib2.Request(pageurl)
user_agent = "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.8.1.14) Gecko/20080418 Ubuntu/7.10 (gutsy) Firefox/2.0.0.14"
request.add_header("User-Agent", user_agent)

pagefile=urllib2.urlopen(request)
page=BeautifulSoup.BeautifulSoup(pagefile)
realurl = pagefile.geturl()

def scriptURL():
	""" returns: current URL without query """
	httpHost = os.environ.get('HTTP_HOST', os.environ.get('SERVER_NAME'))
	scriptName = os.environ.get('SCRIPT_NAME')
	return "http://" + httpHost + scriptName

this = scriptURL()

print "Content-type: text/html"
print

# make absolute all href's
for r in page.findAll(True, {'href': True}):
	href = r['href']
	if not href.lower().startswith("http"):
		r['href'] = urlparse.urljoin(realurl, href)
# make absolute all src's
for r in page.findAll(True, {'src': True}):
	href = r['src']
	if not href.lower().startswith("http"):
		r['src'] = urlparse.urljoin(realurl, href)

title = ""
try:
	title = page.title.string
except AttributeError:
	pass

print "<h1>%s</h1>" % title
print "<h2>%s</h2>" % (realurl)
print "<ol>"
links=page.findAll("a")
for l in links:
	if not l.has_key("href"): continue
	href = l['href']
	if not href.lower().startswith("http"):
		href = urlparse.urljoin(realurl, href)
	label = l.renderContents()
	href = this + "?url=" + urllib.quote(href, "")
	
	print """<li><a href="%s">%s</a></li>""" % (href, label)

print "</ol>"