JSONFeed
node-fetch
JSONFeed | node-fetch | |
---|---|---|
7 | 92 | |
31 | 8,656 | |
- | 0.4% | |
0.0 | 1.7 | |
almost 7 years ago | 3 months ago | |
Swift | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
JSONFeed
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Make your web feed easy to find, autodiscoverable even
If you have a web feed, be it RSS or Atom or JSON Feed, help others discover it!
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How to Parse RSS Feed in Javascript
Imagine you have an RSS feed similar to this. The objective is to obtain that RSS feed, analyze the data it contains, and take action with it. RSS is an XML format, whereas JSON is arguably easier to work with than XML. While many APIs provide JSON results, RSS is less likely to receive them, despite their existence.
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Is Astro ready for your blog?
At least for now, Astro clearly falls short in this category. Its built-in ability to provide RSS feeds is rather limited, and it doesn’t yet enable JSON feeds at all.5 In the meantime, some users, including Yours Truly, have gotten around this by using the third-party feed package, which supports RSS and JSON feeds.6
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reader 2.0 released – a Python feed reader library
want to also support JSON Feed?
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Natural language search for blog posts using TensorflowJS
-------- # Metadata comes from _data/metadata.json permalink: "{{ metadata.jsonfeed.path | url }}" eleventyExcludeFromCollections: true -------- { "version": "https://jsonfeed.org/version/1", "title": "{{ metadata.title }}", "home_page_url": "{{ metadata.url }}", "feed_url": "{{ metadata.jsonfeed.url }}", "description": "{{ metadata.description }}", "author": { "name": "{{ metadata.author.name }}", "url": "{{ metadata.author.url }}" }, "items": [ {%- for post in collections.posts | reverse %} {%- set absolutePostUrl %}{{ post.url | url | absoluteUrl(metadata.url) }}{% endset -%} { "id": "{{ absolutePostUrl }}", "url": "{{ absolutePostUrl }}", "title": "{{ post.data.title }}", "tags": [ {%- for tag in helpers.removeCollectionTags(post.data.tags) -%} "{{tag}}" {%- if not loop.last %}, {%- endif %} {%- endfor %}], "summary": "{{ post.data.description }}", "content_html": {% if post.templateContent %}{{ post.templateContent | dump | safe }}{% else %}""{% endif %}, "date_published": "{{ post.date | rssDate }}" } {%- if not loop.last -%} , {%- endif -%} {%- endfor %} ] }
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Two undocumented Intel x86 instructions discovered that can be used to modify microcode
Your wish is my command.
- Kill the Newsletter Convert Newsletters into Atom Feeds
node-fetch
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Mastering The Heap: How to Capture and Store Images from Fetch Responses
node-fetch.
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Building a README Crawler With Node.js
To execute the algorithm, we will use Node.js (for the JavaScript runtime) and node-fetch (for network requests). This means we will run the code locally from the command line. For this project, we will have an output folder to store all the README data, as well as a list (queue) of repository URLs to visit. Before diving into the code, it is important to plan the input and output of the algorithm. For this web crawler, we will start at a valid GitHub repository page, which would be one URL string. After visiting each page with a README, we will export the data into a new file. Now lets cover the process of requesting a repository page from a URL. For this, we only care about saving the README file that is displayed, and we will ignore any other links that GitHub displays (such as the navbar). We will send a URL request with node-fetch, and retrieve the result of a HTML string. If we convert the HTML string to a DOM Tree, we can search for a specific element. GitHub stores the README file under a div with the class "markdown-body". We can use a library called 'jsdom' to use Browser API methods, and return a specific node.
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OAuth 2.0 implementation in Node.js
Note: In case you run into install reference error: fetch isn’t defined, ensure you install node-fetch
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5 Ways to Make HTTP Requests in Node.js
Node Fetch is a JavaScript library tailored for Node.js that simplifies making HTTP requests. It offers a straightforward and Promise-based approach for fetching resources from the internet or server, such as GET, POST, PUT, and DELETE requests. Designed for server-side applications, it's compatible with the Fetch API, allowing easy code transition between client-side and server-side environments.
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CommonJS Is Hurting JavaScript
Would anyone be interested in an article about the crusade to move JS to ESM? I've been considering writing one, here's a preview:
Sindresorus wrote a gist "Pure ESM modules"[0] and converted all his modules to Pure ESM, breaking anyone `require`ing his code; he later locked the thread to prevent people from complaining. node-fetch released a pure ESM version a year ago that is 16x less popular than the CommonJS version[1]. The results of these changes broke a lot of code and resulted in many hours of developers figuring out how make their projects compatible with Pure ESM modules (or decide to ignore them and use old CommonJS versions)--not to mention the tons of pointless drama on GitHub issues.
Meanwhile, TC-39 member Matteo Collima advocated a moderate approach dependent on where your module will be run [2]. So the crusade is led not by the Church, but by a handful of zealots dedicated to establishing ESM supremacy for unclear reasons (note how Sindresorus' gist lacks any justifications). It's kind of like the Python 2 to 3 move except with even less rationale and not driven by the core devs.
0 - https://gist.github.com/sindresorhus/a39789f98801d908bbc7ff3...
1 - https://www.npmjs.com/package/node-fetch?activeTab=versions
2 - https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/33954#issuecomment-924...
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Library recommendation
https://www.npmjs.com/package/node-fetch is pretty standard assuming you're referring to an HTTP client library
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Next-Level Technical Blogging with Dev.to API
The API is CORS-enabled, meaning you’ll have to use the getArticles() functions from your backend. For making the actual request, you can use the fetch() function, available since Node.js v18. For older versions of Node.js, you can use a fetch()-compatible library like node-fetch.
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Nuxt 3 in production shows "fetch failed" on load
I have the same setup. On node 18 fetch would not go through. I changed 127.0.0.1 to localhost in my config/env. More info here
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EOS bot
I am making a bot that is supposed to take data from Upland's database from the account "dcrawtu15ye". I am using autocode to take it and I have found some ways to use it but some of my code still comes back as null. I have been using the eos docs to find info and all it can do right now is get account info if I use console.log(await rpc.get_account('dcrawtu1u5ye'));. I am using the dependency node-fetch. I wanted to know if there is something wrong with the code below. I also used greymass from this list and this article supposedly might help too.
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How to Parse RSS Feed in Javascript
The RSS feed's URL will then need to be requested over the network. The native fetch API of JavaScript will be used since it is the most efficient. It undoubtedly works in browsers, and it appears that Node has a pretty well-liked implementation of it.
What are some alternatives?
FeedKit - An RSS, Atom and JSON Feed parser written in Swift
axios - Promise based HTTP client for the browser and node.js
Erik - Erik is an headless browser based on WebKit. An headless browser allow to run functional tests, to access and manipulate webpages using javascript.
request - 🏊🏾 Simplified HTTP request client.
SwiftyConfiguration - Modern Swift API for Plist.
got - 🌐 Human-friendly and powerful HTTP request library for Node.js
SwiftCssParser - A Powerful , Extensible CSS Parser written in pure Swift.
cross-fetch - Universal WHATWG Fetch API for Node, Browsers and React Native.
CoreXLSX - Excel spreadsheet (XLSX) format parser written in pure Swift
undici - An HTTP/1.1 client, written from scratch for Node.js
AcknowledgementsPlist - AcknowledgementsPlist manages the licenses of libraries that depend on your iOS app.
superagent - Ajax for Node.js and browsers (JS HTTP client). Maintained for @forwardemail, @ladjs, @spamscanner, @breejs, @cabinjs, and @lassjs.