| \section{Standard Module \sectcode{urlparse}} |
| \label{module-urlparse} |
| \stmodindex{urlparse} |
| \index{WWW} |
| \index{World-Wide Web} |
| \index{URL} |
| \indexii{URL}{parsing} |
| \indexii{relative}{URL} |
| |
| |
| This module defines a standard interface to break URL strings up in |
| components (addessing scheme, network location, path etc.), to combine |
| the components back into a URL string, and to convert a ``relative |
| URL'' to an absolute URL given a ``base URL''. |
| |
| The module has been designed to match the Internet RFC on Relative |
| Uniform Resource Locators (and discovered a bug in an earlier |
| draft!). Refer to \rfc{1808} for details on relative |
| URLs and \rfc{1738} for information on basic URL syntax. |
| |
| It defines the following functions: |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{urlparse}{urlstring\optional{, default_scheme\optional{, allow_fragments}}} |
| Parse a URL into 6 components, returning a 6-tuple: (addressing |
| scheme, network location, path, parameters, query, fragment |
| identifier). This corresponds to the general structure of a URL: |
| \code{\var{scheme}://\var{netloc}/\var{path};\var{parameters}?\var{query}\#\var{fragment}}. |
| Each tuple item is a string, possibly empty. |
| The components are not broken up in smaller parts (e.g. the network |
| location is a single string), and \% escapes are not expanded. |
| The delimiters as shown above are not part of the tuple items, |
| except for a leading slash in the \var{path} component, which is |
| retained if present. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| urlparse('http://www.cwi.nl:80/%7Eguido/Python.html') |
| \end{verbatim} |
| % |
| yields the tuple |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| ('http', 'www.cwi.nl:80', '/%7Eguido/Python.html', '', '', '') |
| \end{verbatim} |
| % |
| If the \var{default_scheme} argument is specified, it gives the |
| default addressing scheme, to be used only if the URL string does not |
| specify one. The default value for this argument is the empty string. |
| |
| If the \var{allow_fragments} argument is zero, fragment identifiers |
| are not allowed, even if the URL's addressing scheme normally does |
| support them. The default value for this argument is \code{1}. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{urlunparse}{tuple} |
| Construct a URL string from a tuple as returned by \code{urlparse()}. |
| This may result in a slightly different, but equivalent URL, if the |
| URL that was parsed originally had redundant delimiters, e.g. a ? with |
| an empty query (the draft states that these are equivalent). |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{urljoin}{base, url\optional{, allow_fragments}} |
| Construct a full (``absolute'') URL by combining a ``base URL'' |
| (\var{base}) with a ``relative URL'' (\var{url}). Informally, this |
| uses components of the base URL, in particular the addressing scheme, |
| the network location and (part of) the path, to provide missing |
| components in the relative URL. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| urljoin('http://www.cwi.nl/%7Eguido/Python.html', 'FAQ.html') |
| \end{verbatim} |
| % |
| yields the string |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| 'http://www.cwi.nl/%7Eguido/FAQ.html' |
| \end{verbatim} |
| % |
| The \var{allow_fragments} argument has the same meaning as for |
| \code{urlparse()}. |
| \end{funcdesc} |