Generate Random Amazon Products












1















Bit of an odd question, but I am looking to get around 10,000 random amazon products for a school thesis and I am having trouble figuring out how to go about getting them. There are a few websites which seem to have this down:

www.randomking.com

www.randasin.com

But because these sites don't list their methodology I can't really use their items directly because I have no guarantee it's true random instead of some database. I'm wondering if any of you may know how to go about doing this or if you might have knowledge on how those guys did that?

Any help is greatly appreciated – I've spent too long banging my head against a wall already.


Thanks!










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    You should look into working with scrapy. Also, not many people are just going to code something for you. Give it a try to figure out what you need to do and when you run into a problem look it up or post it here for some help. Hope that helps..

    – Kamikaze_goldfish
    Nov 23 '18 at 22:55











  • Oh no I know I'm not expecting any code just a big picture idea if anyone's ever done something similar. I imagine it's not uncommon to want to research an online marketplace with some semblance of exogeneity you know?

    – Matthew Sciamanna
    Nov 23 '18 at 23:42











  • Gotcha.. I mean if I were going to do something like this I would go to amazon and start to scrape the pages for all the different departments, then the subcategories of each. After I have all the pages in one list, I would then navigate to them one by one putting all the item absolute urls in a dictionary {'item-name':'url'} and when that has over 10000 items then just use the info however you want. Scrapy would be able to accomplish this the fastest of all.

    – Kamikaze_goldfish
    Nov 24 '18 at 0:10
















1















Bit of an odd question, but I am looking to get around 10,000 random amazon products for a school thesis and I am having trouble figuring out how to go about getting them. There are a few websites which seem to have this down:

www.randomking.com

www.randasin.com

But because these sites don't list their methodology I can't really use their items directly because I have no guarantee it's true random instead of some database. I'm wondering if any of you may know how to go about doing this or if you might have knowledge on how those guys did that?

Any help is greatly appreciated – I've spent too long banging my head against a wall already.


Thanks!










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    You should look into working with scrapy. Also, not many people are just going to code something for you. Give it a try to figure out what you need to do and when you run into a problem look it up or post it here for some help. Hope that helps..

    – Kamikaze_goldfish
    Nov 23 '18 at 22:55











  • Oh no I know I'm not expecting any code just a big picture idea if anyone's ever done something similar. I imagine it's not uncommon to want to research an online marketplace with some semblance of exogeneity you know?

    – Matthew Sciamanna
    Nov 23 '18 at 23:42











  • Gotcha.. I mean if I were going to do something like this I would go to amazon and start to scrape the pages for all the different departments, then the subcategories of each. After I have all the pages in one list, I would then navigate to them one by one putting all the item absolute urls in a dictionary {'item-name':'url'} and when that has over 10000 items then just use the info however you want. Scrapy would be able to accomplish this the fastest of all.

    – Kamikaze_goldfish
    Nov 24 '18 at 0:10














1












1








1








Bit of an odd question, but I am looking to get around 10,000 random amazon products for a school thesis and I am having trouble figuring out how to go about getting them. There are a few websites which seem to have this down:

www.randomking.com

www.randasin.com

But because these sites don't list their methodology I can't really use their items directly because I have no guarantee it's true random instead of some database. I'm wondering if any of you may know how to go about doing this or if you might have knowledge on how those guys did that?

Any help is greatly appreciated – I've spent too long banging my head against a wall already.


Thanks!










share|improve this question














Bit of an odd question, but I am looking to get around 10,000 random amazon products for a school thesis and I am having trouble figuring out how to go about getting them. There are a few websites which seem to have this down:

www.randomking.com

www.randasin.com

But because these sites don't list their methodology I can't really use their items directly because I have no guarantee it's true random instead of some database. I'm wondering if any of you may know how to go about doing this or if you might have knowledge on how those guys did that?

Any help is greatly appreciated – I've spent too long banging my head against a wall already.


Thanks!







python web-scraping beautifulsoup amazon amazon-product-api






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 23 '18 at 5:57









Matthew SciamannaMatthew Sciamanna

214




214








  • 1





    You should look into working with scrapy. Also, not many people are just going to code something for you. Give it a try to figure out what you need to do and when you run into a problem look it up or post it here for some help. Hope that helps..

    – Kamikaze_goldfish
    Nov 23 '18 at 22:55











  • Oh no I know I'm not expecting any code just a big picture idea if anyone's ever done something similar. I imagine it's not uncommon to want to research an online marketplace with some semblance of exogeneity you know?

    – Matthew Sciamanna
    Nov 23 '18 at 23:42











  • Gotcha.. I mean if I were going to do something like this I would go to amazon and start to scrape the pages for all the different departments, then the subcategories of each. After I have all the pages in one list, I would then navigate to them one by one putting all the item absolute urls in a dictionary {'item-name':'url'} and when that has over 10000 items then just use the info however you want. Scrapy would be able to accomplish this the fastest of all.

    – Kamikaze_goldfish
    Nov 24 '18 at 0:10














  • 1





    You should look into working with scrapy. Also, not many people are just going to code something for you. Give it a try to figure out what you need to do and when you run into a problem look it up or post it here for some help. Hope that helps..

    – Kamikaze_goldfish
    Nov 23 '18 at 22:55











  • Oh no I know I'm not expecting any code just a big picture idea if anyone's ever done something similar. I imagine it's not uncommon to want to research an online marketplace with some semblance of exogeneity you know?

    – Matthew Sciamanna
    Nov 23 '18 at 23:42











  • Gotcha.. I mean if I were going to do something like this I would go to amazon and start to scrape the pages for all the different departments, then the subcategories of each. After I have all the pages in one list, I would then navigate to them one by one putting all the item absolute urls in a dictionary {'item-name':'url'} and when that has over 10000 items then just use the info however you want. Scrapy would be able to accomplish this the fastest of all.

    – Kamikaze_goldfish
    Nov 24 '18 at 0:10








1




1





You should look into working with scrapy. Also, not many people are just going to code something for you. Give it a try to figure out what you need to do and when you run into a problem look it up or post it here for some help. Hope that helps..

– Kamikaze_goldfish
Nov 23 '18 at 22:55





You should look into working with scrapy. Also, not many people are just going to code something for you. Give it a try to figure out what you need to do and when you run into a problem look it up or post it here for some help. Hope that helps..

– Kamikaze_goldfish
Nov 23 '18 at 22:55













Oh no I know I'm not expecting any code just a big picture idea if anyone's ever done something similar. I imagine it's not uncommon to want to research an online marketplace with some semblance of exogeneity you know?

– Matthew Sciamanna
Nov 23 '18 at 23:42





Oh no I know I'm not expecting any code just a big picture idea if anyone's ever done something similar. I imagine it's not uncommon to want to research an online marketplace with some semblance of exogeneity you know?

– Matthew Sciamanna
Nov 23 '18 at 23:42













Gotcha.. I mean if I were going to do something like this I would go to amazon and start to scrape the pages for all the different departments, then the subcategories of each. After I have all the pages in one list, I would then navigate to them one by one putting all the item absolute urls in a dictionary {'item-name':'url'} and when that has over 10000 items then just use the info however you want. Scrapy would be able to accomplish this the fastest of all.

– Kamikaze_goldfish
Nov 24 '18 at 0:10





Gotcha.. I mean if I were going to do something like this I would go to amazon and start to scrape the pages for all the different departments, then the subcategories of each. After I have all the pages in one list, I would then navigate to them one by one putting all the item absolute urls in a dictionary {'item-name':'url'} and when that has over 10000 items then just use the info however you want. Scrapy would be able to accomplish this the fastest of all.

– Kamikaze_goldfish
Nov 24 '18 at 0:10












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