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Radiostats

Overview

Radiostats is a platform for the analysis of music played on radio stations. It is in the preliminary phases, with most work focused on amassing a large amount of data from as many sources as possible. This will be followed by the development of a flexible web application which enables users to perform their own analyses on the collected data.

Contributing

Are you interested in the project? Would you like to be able to analyse data from your local radio stations on radiostats.org? All help is greatly appreciated. Simply fork the repository, read the following sections, and submit a pull request.

Code a scraper

If you want to help, the best way would be to contribute a scraper for a radio station website.

Scrapers can be viewed as plugins defined by individual classes. In order to code a scraper, you'll need to create a scraper class in scrapers.py that scrapes data from the new radio station's website.

Each scraper class must have the following attributes:

  • date: A datetime.datetime object representing the date being scraped. One scraper instance will be created per date by the scrape django-admin job.
  • tracks: A list of tuples, each of the form: ("artist name", "track title", <datetime object of time track was played>)
  • scrape(): The function called from the scrape job which populates the tracks list.

It's a good idea to have a quick read of scrapers.py to see examples of how other scrapers work. In order to simplify the task of creating a scraper, a GenericScraper class is provided. This class provides a typical scrape() function which is sufficient for many cases. It behaves as follows:

  • Iterates over self.tracklist_urls - a list of URLs, each containing a playlist to be parsed and stored. This is necessary as many radio stations separate tracklists on an hour-by-hour basis, meaning that there are 24 URLs to be scraped for one day. If the radio station in question puts all tracks for the entire day on one webpage, this can simply be a list containing one string (see, for example, the FluxFMScraper).
  • For each URL, GET the HTML content and store its BeautifulSoup representation in self.soup.
  • Call self.extract_tracks(), a function that will find all tracks in self.soup and append them to self.tracks

Occasionally, it is necessary to override the scrape function (see the SWR1Scraper), but for the most part it should be necessary to just create a class that inherits from GenericScraper and defines self.name, self.tracklist_urls and self.extract_tracks.

Scrapers do not need to take care of the following:

  • Decoding HTML entities
  • Timezone conversion
  • Determining a canonical artist name and song title for entries (the normalize job takes care of this, querying Last.fm for metadata, so that the application doesn't record "Beatles, The - Taxman" and "The Beatles - Taxman" as two different songs by different artists)
  • Deduplication of mistakenly duplicated tracks on radio websites (the remove_duplicates job takes care of this)
  • Retrying GET requests (as long as the http_get helper is used)

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Collecting and analysing data about music on the radio

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  • Python 100.0%