loudreader
gofeed
loudreader | gofeed | |
---|---|---|
1 | 4 | |
0 | 2,465 | |
- | - | |
4.0 | 6.1 | |
over 2 years ago | 2 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
- | MIT License |
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loudreader
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Show HN: Loud – Podcast-first feed syndication protocol
Currently, the time for that pursuit isn't there, but that's not to say that can't change, which is a big reason behind the MIT license. This is something that is needed, and it can be awesome, but it will take more than 1 person leading the charge, which currently is all that is available.
> Other thing mention in other comments also are issues with this format. I think it isn't good enough, for those and other reasons.
Thank you for this feedback
[0] - https://github.com/loud-feed-format/loudreader
gofeed
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IndieWebifying my Website Part 1 - Microformats and Webmentions
Luckily I did not have to implement any of this myself apart from some glue code to fit it together: I used the library gocron for scheduling the regular intervals, gofeed for parsing the RSS feed and webmention for extracting links and sending webmentions.
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Show HN: The Brutalist Report – A rolling snapshot of the day’s headlines
The whole thing is written in Go on my end. Ingesting new headlines is handled in a goroutine that spawns within the process every 30 mins using a combo of the wonderful gofeed (https://github.com/mmcdole/gofeed) and colly (https://github.com/gocolly/colly) libraries.
When loading the front page, you're loading a 1-minute-cached HTML page of it that was constructed out of headlines already in my PostgreSQL database that were put there by the ingestion goroutine.
I like the idea of word clouds actually, I think you're on to something there. I think you just need to pre-generate them rather than doing it adhoc (if that's what you're doing here) for speed. Additionally, perhaps consider using sentiment in a way that orients stories based on positive and negative sentiment. Right now I am not seeing how I as a visitor/user can act on the sentiment analysis as it is presented now.
It would be neat to see a collection of uplifting stories grouped together through the sentiment analysis.
Anyway, food for thought. I hope you keep hacking away on it as it's just good fun to build things.
- Automatice el README para su perfil de GitHub con Go y GitHub Actions
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Automate Your GitHub Profile README with Go and GitHub Actions
I needed to scan the blog feed and wanted to do it in Go, so the first thing I did was look for any libraries that would make it easier for me not to reinvent the wheel and I found the github.com/mmcdole/gofeed. It had a lot of features but I had enough with the basic use described in its README.
What are some alternatives?
feedloggr - Collect news from your favorite RSS/Atom feeds
gographviz - Parses the Graphviz DOT language in golang
feedparser - feedparser gem - (universal) web feed parser and normalizer (XML w/ Atom or RSS, JSON Feed, HTML w/ Microformats e.g. h-entry/h-feed or Feed.HTML, Feed.TXT w/ YAML, JSON or INI & Markdown, etc.)
micro-editor - A modern and intuitive terminal-based text editor
dasel - Select, put and delete data from JSON, TOML, YAML, XML and CSV files with a single tool. Supports conversion between formats and can be used as a Go package.
go-nmea - A NMEA parser library in pure Go
journalist - Journalist. An RSS aggregator.
ODF - Open Document Format (ODF) generator library for Go.
go-pkg-rss
xml - Package feed implements a flexible, robust and efficient RSS and Atom parser
github_flavored_markdown - GitHub Flavored Markdown renderer with fenced code block highlighting, clickable header anchor links.
goregen - randexp for Go.