Are you just trying to get the html? If so, you can use this code- *import urllib* * * *# fetch the and download a webpage, nameing it test.html* *urllib.urlretrieve("http://www.web2py.com/", filename="test.html")*
I recommend using the requests library, as it's easier to use and more powerful: *import requests* *# retrive the webpage r = requests.get("http://www.web2py.com/")* *# write the content to test_request.html with open("test_requests.html", "wb") as code: * *code.write(r.content)* If you want to get up to speed quickly on internet programming, I have a course I am developing. It's on kickstarter - http://kck.st/VQj8hq. The first section of the book dives into web fundamentals and internet programming. On Thu, Feb 21, 2013 at 4:12 AM, <qoresu...@gmail.com> wrote: > I only just started Python and given that I know nothing about network > programming or internet programming of any kind really, I thought it would > be interesting to try write something that could create an archive of a > website for myself. With this I started trying to use the urllib library, > however I am having a problem understanding why certain things wont work > with the urllib.urlretrieve and urllib.urlopen then reading. > > Why is it that when using urllib.urlopen then reading or > urllib.urlretrieve, does it only give me parts of the sites, loosing the > formatting, images, etc...? How can I get around this? > > Lastly, while its a bit off topic, I lack a good understanding of network > programming as a whole. From making programs communicate or to simply > extract data from URL's, I don't know where to even begin, which has lead > me to learning python to better understand it hopefully then carry it over > to other languages I know. Can anyone give me some advice on where to begin > learning this information? Even if its in another language. > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >
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