cheerio
Tailwind CSS
cheerio | Tailwind CSS | |
---|---|---|
50 | 1,281 | |
27,801 | 78,568 | |
0.6% | 1.2% | |
9.7 | 9.4 | |
2 days ago | 3 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
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.
cheerio
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8 NPM Packages for JavaScript Beginners [2024][+tutorials]
Cheerio is your ticket to the world of server-side magic, allowing you to manipulate HTML and XML documents with jQuery-like syntax. It’s perfect for web scraping, data extraction, or just making sense of the mess that is web content. With Cheerio, you get to play around with the DOM, use CSS selectors, and basically do all the cool things you'd do in the browser, but server-side.
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How to scrape Amazon products
In this guide, we'll be extracting information from Amazon product pages using the power of TypeScript in combination with the Cheerio and Crawlee libraries. We'll explore how to retrieve and extract detailed product data such as titles, prices, image URLs, and more from Amazon's vast marketplace. We'll also discuss handling potential blocking issues that may arise during the scraping process.
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Creating and deploying web scraper using Apify
Used libraries Axios - it is a promise HTTP clients to make requests to the specified URL. Cheerio- it is a library for parsing and manipulating HTML that is commonly used here for extracting data from downloaded HTML content. Apify SDK- it is for building Apify Actors, that is utilized for initializing actor environments, getting input data, and pushing extracted data to the dataset.
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Htmlq: Like Jq, but for HTML
Nice. I've used Cheerio for this in the past: https://github.com/cheeriojs/cheerio?tab=readme-ov-file#sele...
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Automating Data Collection with Apify: From Script to Deployment
For this article, I will be using the TypeScript Starter template as shown in the screenshot above. This comes with Nodejs, Cheerio, Axios
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Web Scraping in Python – The Complete Guide
> I'm not sure why Python web scraping is so popular compared to Node.js web scraping
Take this with a grain of salt, since I am fully cognizant that I'm the outlier in most of these conversations, but Scrapy is A++ the no-kidding best framework for this activity that has been created thus far. So, if there was scrapyjs maybe I'd look into it, but there's not (that I'm aware of) so here we are. This conversation often comes up in any such "well, I just use requests & ..." conversation and if one is happy with main.py and a bunch of requests invocations, I'm glad for you, but I don't want to try and cobble together all the side-band stuff that Scrapy and its ecosystem provide for me in a reusable and predictable way
Also, often those conversations conflate the server side language with the "scrape using headed browser" language which happens to be the same one. So, if one is using cheerio <https://github.com/cheeriojs/cheerio> then sure node can be a fine thing - if the blog post is all "fire up puppeteer, what can go wrong?!" then there is the road to ruin of doing battle with all kinds of detection problems since it's kind of a browser but kind of not
I, under no circumstances, want the target site running their JS during my crawl runs. I fully accept responsibility for reproducing any XHR or auth or whatever to find the 3 URLs that I care about, without downloading every thumbnail and marketing JS and beacon and and and. I'm also cognizant that my traffic will thus stand out since it uniquely does not make the beacon and marketing calls, but my experience has been that I get the ban hammer less often with my target fetches than trying to pretend to be a browser with a human on the keyboard/mouse but is not
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Web Scraping in Node.js Using Axios,Cheerio and Json2csv
Web scraping is a powerful technique used to extract data from websites. In this tutorial, we'll explore how to perform web scraping using Node.js, Axios for making HTTP requests,Cheerio for parsing HTML content and also json2csv for converting json data to csv. We'll scrape product data from a sample website, "https://scrapeme.live/shop/".
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Portadom: A Unified Interface for DOM Manipulation
Web scraping, while immensely useful, often requires developers to navigate a sea of tools and libraries, each with its own quirks and intricacies. Whether it's JSDOM, Cheerio, Playwright, or even just plain old vanilla JS in the DevTools console, moving between these platforms can be a challenge.
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Querying parsed HTML in BigQuery
While looking for a way to implement capo.js in BigQuery to understand how pages in HTTP Archive are ordered, I came across the Cheerio library, which is a jQuery-like interface over an HTML parser.
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JavaScript Web Crawler with Node.js: A Step-By-Step Tutorial
Cheerio is a JavaScript tool for parsing HTML and XML in Node.js. It provides APIs for traversing and manipulating the DOM of a webpage.
Tailwind CSS
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How to Build Your Own ChatGPT Clone Using React & AWS Bedrock
Finally, for our front end, we’re going to be pairing Next.js with the great combination of TailwindCSS and shadcn/ui so we can focus on building the functionality of the app and let them handle making it look awesome!
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Building an Email Assistant Application with Burr
You can use any frontend framework you want — react-based tooling, however, has a natural advantage as it models everything as a function of state, which can map 1:1 with the concept in Burr. In the demo app we use react, react-query, and tailwind, but we’ll be skipping over this largely (it is not central to the purpose of the post).
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Shared Data-Layer Setup For Micro Frontend Application with Nx Workspace
Tailwind CSS: A utility-first CSS framework for rapidly building custom designs.
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Preline UI + Gowebly CLI = ❤️
First, you need to make sure that you have a working Tailwind CSS project…
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Customer service pages for e-commerce built with Tailwind CSS
Tailwind CSS
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The best testing strategies for frontends
With better CSS approaches like TailwindCSS and Vanilla Extract (which we're heavily using) it's much easier to maintain the UI and make sure it doesn't change unexpectedly. No more conflicting CSS classes, much less CSS specificity issues and much less CSS code in general.
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ChatCrafters - Chat with AI powered personas
This app was built with Svelte Kit, Tailwind CSS, and many other technologies. For a full rundown, please visit the GitHub repository
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Mojo CSS vs. Tailwind: Choosing the best CSS framework
Unlike Tailwind, which has over 77,000 stars on GitHub, Mojo CSS has about 200 stars on GitHub. But the Mojo CSS documentation is fairly good and you can find most of the information you’ll need there.
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Collab Lab #66 Recap
JavaScript React Flowbite Tailwind Firebase - Auth, Database, and Hosting Vite
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Show HN: Brutalisthackernews.com – A HN reader inspired by brutalist web design
- Performance is a feature.
Another common interpretation of brutalism is aesthetic, reacting to overly complicated user interfaces by creating simpler, more direct ones. Tailwind CSS (https://tailwindcss.com), one of today's most popular CSS libraries, promotes this approach in its component examples. There's also a neat library I've seen recently called "Neobrutalism Components" for React that I like (https://neobrutalism-components.vercel.app), providing components with a similar look and feel to Gumroad. This might more accurately be called 'Neo-Brutalism,' as noted in the comments.
A more engineering-centric interpretation of Brutalism focuses on form, structure, and efficiency, drawing significantly from brutalist architecture principles. Apart from the user interface itself, most mobile, desktop, and web applications are extremely bloated and often perform worse than sites from 10 years ago did. While one HTML file might be "less brutalist" than the original HN site, it is substantially more brutalist than any HN mobile app in existence, and offers nearly identical functionality.
A broader interpretation of brutalism, which could be termed 'Meta-Brutalism,' is embodied in the overall experience on this site through UX flows. Yes, in the strictest sense, the original HN site is more Brutalist in many ways, but it only shows 30 articles at a time and does not function as a PWA. For this site, the experience of reading 10 stories is arguably less brutalist, but for quickly browsing through several pages and skimming articles (which is how I read HN) it is a lot faster, and in my opinion, more Brutalist.
My primary inspiration was addressing software and tool bloat in UIs rather than strictly adhering to every principle set forth by David Bryant Copeland. I don't find it convincing that this site "isn't brutalist" compared to really any other experience apart from the Main HN site, and I would argue the overall experience is more brutalist in its performance and scrolling behavior.
As a side note: I generally don't like Brutalist architecture that much although I believe it is unfairly maligned. I visited the Salk Institute once and enjoyed it though (https://www.archdaily.com/61288/ad-classics-salk-institute-l...).
What are some alternatives?
jsdom - A JavaScript implementation of various web standards, for use with Node.js
flowbite - Open-source UI component library and front-end development framework based on Tailwind CSS
puppeteer - Node.js API for Chrome
antd - An enterprise-class UI design language and React UI library
Electron - :electron: Build cross-platform desktop apps with JavaScript, HTML, and CSS
unocss - The instant on-demand atomic CSS engine.
Prettyprint Object - Function to pretty-print an object with an ability to annotate every value.
windicss - Next generation utility-first CSS framework.
Playwright - Playwright is a framework for Web Testing and Automation. It allows testing Chromium, Firefox and WebKit with a single API.
emotion - 👩🎤 CSS-in-JS library designed for high performance style composition
webworker-threads - Lightweight Web Worker API implementation with native threads
Material UI - Ready-to-use foundational React components, free forever. It includes Material UI, which implements Google's Material Design.