datasette-ripgrep
selectolax
datasette-ripgrep | selectolax | |
---|---|---|
1 | 6 | |
70 | 973 | |
- | - | |
5.0 | 7.7 | |
7 months ago | 2 months ago | |
Python | Cython | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
datasette-ripgrep
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GitHub – GSA/code-gov: An informative repo for all Code.gov repos
https://github.com/simonw/datasette-ripgrep
Seeing as there's already a JSONLD @context (schema) for code.json, CSVW as JSONLD and/or YAMLLD would be an easy way merge Linked Data graphs of tabular data:
selectolax
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GitHub – GSA/code-gov: An informative repo for all Code.gov repos
https://github.com/rushter/selectolax#simple-benchmark )
(Apache Nutch is a Java-based web crawler which supports e.g. CommonCrawl (which backs various foundational LLMs)) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Nutch#Search_engines_bu... . But extruct extracts more types of metadata and data than Nutch AFAIU: https://github.com/scrapinghub/extruct )
datasette-graphql adds a GraphQL HTTP API to a SQLite database:
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8 Most Popular Python HTML Web Scraping Packages with Benchmarks
selectolax
- High performance code in Python
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Web Scraping with Python: Everything you need to know to get started (2022)
try this... https://github.com/rushter/selectolax
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The State of Web Scraping in 2021
Lazyweb link: https://github.com/rushter/selectolax
although I don't follow the need to have what appears to be two completely separate HTML parsing C libraries as dependencies; seeing this in the readme for Modest gives me the shivers because lxml has _seen some shit_
> Modest is a fast HTML renderer implemented as a pure C99 library with no outside dependencies.
although its other dep seems much more cognizant about the HTML5 standard, for whatever that's worth: https://github.com/lexbor/lexbor#lexbor
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> It looks like the author of the article just googled some libraries for each language and didn't research the topic
Heh, oh, new to the Internet, are you? :-D
- Show HN: Fast HTML5 parser for Python with multiple backends