Nayuki-web-published-code
readability
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Nayuki-web-published-code | readability | |
---|---|---|
5 | 51 | |
135 | 8,056 | |
- | 7.4% | |
5.7 | 6.3 | |
5 months ago | 8 days ago | |
Java | JavaScript | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
Nayuki-web-published-code
- Ask HN: Could you show your personal blog here?
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Ask HN: Those making $0/month or less on side projects – Show and tell
My works over the years are accumulated on https://www.nayuki.io/ . Lately I finished writing a new PNG library ( https://www.nayuki.io/page/png-library ), and now I'm revamping a DEFLATE library ( https://www.nayuki.io/page/deflate-library-java ).
- Ask HN: What Is the Name of This Blog?
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Which developers should I follow?
https://www.nayuki.io/ seems good usually.
But yes, i would mainly recommend the standard lib of the language in question, but not all programming languages have a "standard lib" you can read.
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Adding is favoured over subtracting in problem solving
Me too - I enjoy reviewing my existing work, and over months and years, I slowly modify my code to become shorter or clearer. Some evidence exists in the history of https://github.com/nayuki/Nayuki-web-published-code .
It's funny you call yourself "pessimizer", because you seem to be good at optimizing.
readability
- Mozilla: Readability.js
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CSS for readability
I'm working with the Mozilla's readability library https://github.com/mozilla/readability to get the "readable" text from articles and now I want to style the extracted text in a readable way.
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Building a Serverless Reader View with Lambda and Chrome
Do you remember the Firefox Reader View? It's a feature that removes all unnecessary components like buttons, menus, images, and so on, from a website, focusing on the readable content of the page. The library powering this feature is called Readability.js, which is open source.
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Webrecorder: Capture interactive websites and replay them at a later time
I wonder if Firefox "reader mode as a utility" might be a viable alternative for Pinboard like "content oriented" archiving?
https://github.com/mozilla/readability
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Creating an advanced search engine with PostgreSQL
Depending upon the type of content, one might want to look into using the Readability (Browder's reader view) to parse the webpage. It will give you all the useful info without the junk. Then you can put it in the DB as needed.
https://github.com/mozilla/readability
Btw, readability, is also available in few other languages like Kotlin:
https://github.com/dankito/Readability4J
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Seeking a tool or method to convert webpages into Q&A format using NLP
Use Mozilla's Readability to extract that sweet, sweet text content from webpages.
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I built a free prompt managing tool - Knit
Same as above but the ability to grab the entire article text (you can use the Readability library for that: https://github.com/mozilla/readability)
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I need automatic source URLs when I paste any text onto a card or note, like on OneNote.
// Original script // https://gist.github.com/kepano/90c05f162c37cf730abb8ff027987ca3 // Bookmarklet Converter // https://caiorss.github.io/bookmarklet-maker/ // Libraries // https://github.com/mixmark-io/turndown // https://github.com/mozilla/readability javascript: Promise.all([import('https://unpkg.com/[email protected]?module'), import('https://unpkg.com/@tehshrike/[email protected]'), ]).then(async ([{ default: Turndown }, { default: Readability }]) => { /* Optional vault name */ const vault = ""; /* Optional folder name such as "Clippings/" */ const folder = "Clippings/"; /* Optional tags */ const tags = ""; function getSelectionHtml() { var html = ""; if (typeof window.getSelection != "undefined") { var sel = window.getSelection(); if (sel.rangeCount) { var container = document.createElement("div"); for (var i = 0, len = sel.rangeCount; i < len; ++i) { container.appendChild(sel.getRangeAt(i).cloneContents()); } html = container.innerHTML; } } else if (typeof document.selection != "undefined") { if (document.selection.type == "Text") { html = document.selection.createRange().htmlText; } } return html; } const selection = getSelectionHtml(); const { title, byline, content } = new Readability(document.cloneNode(true)).parse(); function getFileName(fileName) { var userAgent = window.navigator.userAgent, platform = window.navigator.platform, windowsPlatforms = ['Win32', 'Win64', 'Windows', 'WinCE']; if (windowsPlatforms.indexOf(platform) !== -1) { fileName = fileName.replace(':', '').replace(/[/\\?%*|"<>]/g, '-'); } else { fileName = fileName.replace(':', '').replace(/\//g, '-').replace(/\\/g, '-'); } return fileName; } const fileName = getFileName(title); if (selection) { var markdownify = selection; } else { var markdownify = content; } if (vault) { var vaultName = '&vault=' + encodeURIComponent(`${vault}`); } else { var vaultName = ''; } const markdownBody = new Turndown({ headingStyle: 'atx', hr: '---', bulletListMarker: '-', codeBlockStyle: 'fenced', emDelimiter: '*', }).turndown(markdownify); var date = new Date(); function convertDate(date) { var yyyy = date.getFullYear().toString(); var mm = (date.getMonth()+1).toString(); var dd = date.getDate().toString(); var mmChars = mm.split(''); var ddChars = dd.split(''); return yyyy + '-' + (mmChars[1]?mm:"0"+mmChars[0]) + '-' + (ddChars[1]?dd:"0"+ddChars[0]); } const today = convertDate(date); // This is the output template // It is similar to an Obsidian core template // except to insert a value we use: ${value} instead of {{value}} const fileContent =`--- type: clipping date_added: ${today} aliases: [] tags: [${tags}] --- author:: ${byline.toString().split('\n')[0].trim()} source:: [${title}](${document.URL}) ${markdownBody} `; // This copies your text to the clipboard navigator.clipboard.writeText(fileContent); // This creates a new document in Obsidian containing your clipping // I commented it out as this isn't what you asked for /* document.location.href = "obsidian://new?" + "file=" + encodeURIComponent(folder + fileName) + "&content=" + encodeURIComponent(fileContent) + vaultName; */ })
- Any js packages to only scrape relevant content from a webpage?
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RSS meets GPT-3
So first part of the task is to "extract the text from URL", and that is achieved by using descendant of https://github.com/mozilla/readability library which can extract text of any URL.
What are some alternatives?
QR-Code-generator - High-quality QR Code generator library in Java, TypeScript/JavaScript, Python, Rust, C++, C.
parser - 📜 Extract meaningful content from the chaos of a web page
All_Programs_and_algorithms - In this repository, you can add all your programs and algorithm using any coding languages
koreader - An ebook reader application supporting PDF, DjVu, EPUB, FB2 and many more formats, running on Cervantes, Kindle, Kobo, PocketBook and Android devices
Graal - GraalVM compiles Java applications into native executables that start instantly, scale fast, and use fewer compute resources 🚀
hn-search - Hacker News Search
chrisfrew.in - chrisfrew.in Website Source
readability.php - PHP port of Mozilla's Readability.js
open-location-code - Open Location Code is a library to generate short codes, called "plus codes", that can be used as digital addresses where street addresses don't exist.
rssguard - Feed reader (and podcast player) which supports RSS/ATOM/JSON and many web-based feed services.
java-hash - LiamLoads is a fast cryptographic hashing algorithm in Java.
SponsorBlock - Skip YouTube video sponsors (browser extension)