hq
xmltodict
hq | xmltodict | |
---|---|---|
8 | 7 | |
64 | 5,383 | |
- | - | |
5.2 | 0.6 | |
7 months ago | 3 months ago | |
Shell | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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hq
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pup: Parsing HTML at the Command Line
This has support for both XPath and CSS selectors: https://github.com/ludovicianul/hq
- Hq – like htmlq and XPath support
- hq - like jq, but for HTML
- Hq – Like Jq for HTML
- hq - command line HTML processor built with Quarkus and compiled to native using GraalVM
- hq: lightweight grep for HTML using CSS selectors
- Hq – a lightweight HTML grep-er
- Like JQ, but for HTML
xmltodict
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XML to CSV or JSON using Cloud Function
Your Cloud Function would be written in Node.js, Python, Go, Java, C#, Ruby, or PHP; pick the one you're most comfortable with. It would get the name and bucket of the newly uploaded XML file as an input parameter. It would then load the file and call a library that makes the conversion. Example libraries: xml-js (for Node), xmltodict (for Python).
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Did I reinvent a wheel?
Go with xmltodict. Works pretty fine, and you just have to drop any key begining with @ or # (if there is not already an option for that).
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Top python libraries/ frameworks that you suggest every one
Nope, sorry, it's just an XML generator. The Python stdlib offers https://docs.python.org/3/library/xml.etree.elementtree.html and PyPI offers https://github.com/martinblech/xmltodict for parsing, and you could write CSV with csvwriter or pandas.
- Dict or List to store table like data
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Like JQ, but for HTML
xmlstarlet is really nothing like jq, as a language. But yes, I use it because it is the best commandline xml processor I'd found. That's the only similarity to jq.
Is this the yq? https://kislyuk.github.io/yq/ It does contain an 'xq', as a literal wrapper for jq, piping output into it after transcoding XML to JSON using xmltodict https://github.com/martinblech/xmltodict (which explodes xml into separate JSON data structures).
This is a bash one-liner! But TBF it really is a 'jq for xml'. I think it would be horrible for some things, but you could also do a lot of useful things painlessly.
- Parsing unknown XML file with Python?
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I used raw data from my watch (and Python) to make a map of all the NH48 hikes from this year. I hiked Liberty and Flume before I got the watch in June, so I need to do those again! Color-coded by altitude.
Super-easy, take a look at xmltodict https://github.com/martinblech/xmltodict xmltodict.parse(xml_str) gets you a dictionary
What are some alternatives?
lol-html - Low output latency streaming HTML parser/rewriter with CSS selector-based API
lxml - The lxml XML toolkit for Python
pup - Parsing HTML at the command line
untangle - Converts XML to Python objects
htmlq - Like jq, but for HTML.
MarkupSafe - Safely add untrusted strings to HTML/XML markup.
yq - Command-line YAML, XML, TOML processor - jq wrapper for YAML/XML/TOML documents
pyquery - A jquery-like library for python
tq - Perform a lookup by CSS selector on an HTML input
xhtml2pdf - A library for converting HTML into PDFs using ReportLab
cascadia - Go cascadia package command line CSS selector
xmldataset - xmldataset: xml parsing made easy 🗃️