htmldate: find the publication date of web pages

Python package Python versions Code Coverage Downloads JOSS article reference DOI: 10.21105/joss.02439 Code style: black

Logo as PNG image

Find original and updated publication dates of any web page. From the command-line or within Python, all the steps needed from web page download to HTML parsing, scraping, and text analysis are included.

In a nutshell


Demo as GIF image

With Python:

>>> from htmldate import find_date
>>> find_date('http://blog.python.org/2016/12/python-360-is-now-available.html')
'2016-12-23'

On the command-line:

$ htmldate -u http://blog.python.org/2016/12/python-360-is-now-available.html
'2016-12-23'

Features

  • Multilingual, robust and efficient (used in production on millions of documents)

  • URLs, HTML files, or HTML trees are given as input (includes batch processing)

  • Output as string in any date format (defaults to ISO 8601 YMD)

  • Detection of both original and updated dates

  • Compatible with all recent versions of Python

htmldate can examine markup and text. It provides the following ways to date an HTML document:

  1. Markup in header: Common patterns are used to identify relevant elements (e.g. link and meta elements) including Open Graph protocol attributes and a large number of CMS idiosyncrasies

  2. HTML code: The whole document is then searched for structural markers: abbr or time elements and a series of attributes (e.g. postmetadata)

  3. Bare HTML content: Heuristics are run on text and markup:

  • in fast mode the HTML page is cleaned and precise patterns are targeted

  • in extensive mode all potential dates are collected and a disambiguation algorithm determines the most probable one

The output is thoroughly verified in terms of plausibility and adequateness. If a valid date has been found the library outputs a date string corresponding to either the last update or the original publishing statement (the default), in the desired format.

Markup-based extraction is multilingual by nature, text-based refinements for better coverage currently support German, English and Turkish.

Installation

Main package

This Python package is tested on Linux, macOS and Windows systems; it is compatible with Python 3.6 upwards. It is available on the package repository PyPI and can notably be installed with pip or pipenv:

$ pip install htmldate # pip3 install on systems where both Python 2 and 3 are installed
$ pip install --upgrade htmldate # to make sure you have the latest version
$ pip install git+https://github.com/adbar/htmldate.git # latest available code (see build status above)

Optional

The additional library cchardet (or its fork faust-cchardet) can be installed for better execution speed. They may not work on all platforms and have thus been singled out although installation is recommended:

$ pip install htmldate[speed] # install with additional functionality

You can also install or update the packages separately, htmldate will detect which ones are present on your system and opt for the best available combination.

The dateparser package is noticeably slower in its latest versions, version 1.1.2 is recommended for speed.

For infos on dependency management of Python packages see this discussion thread.

Experimental

Experimental compilation with mypyc, as using pre-compiled library may shorten processing speed:

  1. Install mypy: pip3 install mypy

  2. Compile the package: python setup.py --use-mypyc bdist_wheel

  3. Use the newly created wheel: pip3 install dist/...

With Python

find_date

In case the web page features easily readable metadata in the header, the extraction is straightforward. A more advanced analysis of the document structure is sometimes needed:

>>> from htmldate import find_date
>>> find_date('http://blog.python.org/2016/12/python-360-is-now-available.html')
# DEBUG analyzing: <h2 class="date-header"><span>Friday, December 23, 2016</span></h2>
# DEBUG result: 2016-12-23
'2016-12-23'

htmldate can resort to a guess based on a complete screening of the document (extensive_search parameter) which can be deactivated:

>>> find_date('https://creativecommons.org/about/')
'2017-08-11' # has been updated since
>>> find_date('https://creativecommons.org/about/', extensive_search=False)
>>>

Already parsed HTML (that is a LXML tree object):

# simple HTML document as string
>>> htmldoc = '<html><body><span class="entry-date">July 12th, 2016</span></body></html>'
>>> find_date(htmldoc)
'2016-07-12'
# parsed LXML tree
>>> from lxml import html
>>> mytree = html.fromstring('<html><body><span class="entry-date">July 12th, 2016</span></body></html>')
>>> find_date(mytree)
'2016-07-12'

Output format

Change the output to a format known to Python’s datetime module, the default being %Y-%m-%d:

>>> find_date('https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.en.html', outputformat='%d %B %Y')
'18 November 2016'  # may have changed since

Original vs. updated dates

Although the time delta between original publication and “last modified” info is usually a matter of hours or days, it can be useful to prioritize the original publication date:

>>> find_date('https://netzpolitik.org/2016/die-cider-connection-abmahnungen-gegen-nutzer-von-creative-commons-bildern/', original_date=True)  # modified behavior
'2016-06-23'

For more information see options page.

On the command-line

A command-line interface is included:

$ htmldate -u http://blog.python.org/2016/12/python-360-is-now-available.html
'2016-12-23'
$ wget -qO- "http://blog.python.org/2016/12/python-360-is-now-available.html" | htmldate
'2016-12-23'

For usage instructions see htmldate -h:

$ htmldate --help
htmldate [-h] [-f] [-i INPUTFILE] [--original] [-min MINDATE] [-max MAXDATE] [-u URL] [-v] [--version]
optional arguments:
    -h, --help            show this help message and exit
    -f, --fast            fast mode: disable extensive search
    -i INPUTFILE, --inputfile INPUTFILE
                          name of input file for batch processing (similar to wget -i)
    --original            original date prioritized
    -min MINDATE, --mindate MINDATE
                          earliest acceptable date (ISO 8601 YMD)
    -max MAXDATE, --maxdate MAXDATE
                          latest acceptable date (ISO 8601 YMD)
    -u URL, --URL URL     custom URL download
    -v, --verbose         increase output verbosity
    --version             show version information and exit

The batch mode -i takes one URL per line as input and returns one result per line in tab-separated format:

$ htmldate --fast -i list-of-urls.txt

License

This package is distributed under the Apache 2.0 license.

Versions prior to v1.8.0 are under GPLv3+ license.

Author

This effort is part of methods to derive information from web documents in order to build text databases for research (chiefly linguistic analysis and natural language processing). Extracting and pre-processing web texts to the exacting standards of scientific research presents a substantial challenge for those who conduct such research. There are web pages for which neither the URL nor the server response provide a reliable way to find out when a document was published or modified. For more information:

JOSS article reference DOI: 10.21105/joss.02439 Zenodo archive DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.3459599
@article{barbaresi-2020-htmldate,
  title = {{htmldate: A Python package to extract publication dates from web pages}},
  author = "Barbaresi, Adrien",
  journal = "Journal of Open Source Software",
  volume = 5,
  number = 51,
  pages = 2439,
  url = {https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.02439},
  publisher = {The Open Journal},
  year = 2020,
}

You can contact me via my contact page or GitHub.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome!

Feel free to file issues on the dedicated page. Thanks to the contributors who submitted features and bugfixes!

Kudos to the following software libraries:

Going further

Known caveats

The granularity may not always match the desired output format. If only information about the year could be found and the chosen date format requires to output a month and a day, the result is ‘padded’ to be located at the middle of the year, in that case the 1st of January.

Besides, there are pages for which no date can be found, ever:

>>> r = requests.get('https://example.com')
>>> htmldate.find_date(r.text)
>>>

If the date is nowhere to be found, it might be worth considering carbon dating the web page, however this is computationally expensive. In addition, datefinder features pattern-based date extraction for texts written in English.

Indices and tables