cssselectvsscrapling
cssselect is a BSD-licensed Python library to parse CSS3 selectors and translate them to XPath 1.0 expressions.
XPath 1.0 expressions can be used in lxml or another XPath engine to find the matching elements in an XML or HTML document.
cssselect is used by other popular Python packages like parsel and scrapy but can also be used on it's own to generate
valid XPath 1.0 expressions for parsing HTML and XML documents in other tools.
Note that because XPath selectors are more powerful than CSS selectors this translation is only possible one way. Converting XPath to CSS selectors is impractical and not supported by cssselect.
Scrapling is an adaptive web scraping framework for Python that introduces "self-healing" selectors — selectors that can track and find elements even when the website's DOM structure changes. This solves one of the biggest maintenance headaches in web scraping: broken selectors after website updates.
Key features include:
- Self-healing selectors Scrapling uses smart element matching that can identify target elements even after the page structure changes. It builds a fingerprint of the element based on multiple attributes (text, position, siblings, attributes) and uses fuzzy matching to relocate it.
- Multiple parsing backends Supports different parsing engines including lxml (fast) and a custom engine, allowing you to choose the right balance of speed and features.
- Scrapy-like Spider API Provides a familiar Spider class pattern for organizing crawling logic, similar to Scrapy but with the added benefit of adaptive selectors.
- CSS and XPath selectors Full support for CSS selectors and XPath, plus the adaptive matching system on top.
- Type hints and modern Python Built with full type annotations and 92% test coverage for reliability.
- Async support Supports asynchronous crawling for efficient concurrent scraping.
Scrapling gained massive traction in 2025 as one of the most starred new Python scraping libraries. It is particularly useful for scraping targets that frequently update their HTML structure, where traditional selector-based scrapers would break.