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CraigslistScraper

Note: CraigslistScraper is for personal use and data science only.

Updated (12/26/2023): Craigslist implemented some changes a couple of months ago that broke the previous version of this library. The recent updates to this library address these changes. That said, it also involved a complete refactor of the library, and the new version 1.1.1 is not backwards compatible with the previous version 1.0.1.

CraigslistScraper is a lightweight tool for scraping Craigslist. Users can define what they would like to search for, then CraigslistScraper can fetch and parse data from both searches and individual ads.

There are no official docs, but the code-base is ~200 lines of code and is documented.

Table of Contents

Installation

To install the package just run:

pip install craigslistscraper

The only requirements are Python 3.7+, and the requests and beautifulsoup4 libraries.

Usage

CraigslistScraper is built around 6 functions/classes for flexibility. These functions/classes are listed below.

For general searches:

  • Search
  • SearchParser
  • fetch_search

For single ads/posts:

  • Ad
  • AdParser
  • fetch_ad

SearchParser and AdParser are BeautifulSoup-like abstractions for extracting certain fields from the html data received from Craigslist. Developers may find this useful.

Search and Ad are classes that lazily fetch data from user-defined searches and ads. To define a search you need at least a query and city, and to define an ad you need at least a url. Examples are provied below and in the examples/ folder.

fetch_search() and fetch_ad() are eager and functional implementations that return a Search and Ad.


Below is a simple example, more examples can be found in the examples/ folder.

import craigslistscraper as cs
import json

# Define the search. Everything is done lazily, and so the html is not 
# fetched at this step.
search = cs.Search(
    query = "bmw e46",
    city = "minneapolis",
    category = "cto"
)

# Fetch the html from the server. Don't forget to check the status. 
status = search.fetch()
if status != 200:
    raise Exception(f"Unable to fetch search with status <{status}>.")

for ad in search.ads:
    # Fetch additional information about each ad. Check the status again.
    status = ad.fetch()
    if status != 200:
        print(f"Unable to fetch ad '{ad.title}' with status <{status}>.")
        continue

    # There is a to_dict() method for convenience. 
    data = ad.to_dict()

    # json.dumps is merely for pretty printing. 
    print(json.dumps(data, indent = 4))

Analyzing

Data can easily be converted to your json, csv, etc. and used in various downstream data analysis tasks.

CSV Example

This data can then be analyzed, some examples include:

CSV Example

CSV Example

License

Distributed under the MIT License. See LICENSE for more information.