go-readability
pdfcpu
go-readability | pdfcpu | |
---|---|---|
2 | 30 | |
131 | 6,310 | |
- | 2.8% | |
0.0 | 9.1 | |
almost 2 years ago | 6 days ago | |
HTML | Go | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
go-readability
-
Which library/project do you wish was ported to golang?
https://github.com/go-shiori/go-readability https://github.com/mauidude/go-readability
-
Blog with Markdown and Git, and degrade gracefully through time
In terms of extracting the actual blog content from pages, there is a go library that implements the readability algorithm:
https://github.com/mauidude/go-readability
This is the kind of thing pocket/instapaper do to extract the main content from a page in a format that's easier to read (and also probably to programmatically modify)
pdfcpu
- Show HN: A PDF Processing CLI/API Written in Go
- Show HN
-
Making a PDF that's larger than Germany
Slightly tangential: if you are hacking on PDFs, manually or otherwise, this is an incredibly useful tool: https://pdfcpu.io/ (not the author, just a user)
-
Stirling-PDF: local web application to perform various operations on PDFs
A really nice, stand-alone command line tool is pdfcpu.
https://github.com/pdfcpu/pdfcpu
-
pdfcpu v0.6.0 out! - pdfcpu.io
Check it out => https://github.com/pdfcpu/pdfcpu/releases/tag/v0.6.0
-
Marker: Convert PDF to Markdown quickly with high accuracy
I can report that the closest I've came before is with PDFMiner (https://pypi.org/project/pdfminer/) for Python. The benefit of this one is that it retains styling information, so that italics and the like can be retained, at least with some post-processing (I think one might need to convert certain CSS-classes to actual or tags).
The other option I have started looking into is the PDFCPU library for Go. It is a bit more low-level than PDFMiner, but one gets out very well structured info, that seem it might be possible to post-process quite well, for one's particular use case and PDF layouts: https://github.com/pdfcpu/pdfcpu
I also now tried the Marker tool in the OT, and it seems to do a reasonable job. It did intermingle some columns though, at least in some tricky cases such as when there were a round shaped image in between the two columns. One note is that Marker doesn't seem to retain styling like italics though.
-
PDFcpu snippet for read text of PDF file?
Of course, the best way would be to solve it via the API without CLI. But this doesn't seem to work. https://github.com/pdfcpu/pdfcpu/issues/122
- wie splittet ihr denn PDFs - ich hab hier einige - die ich zerlegen muss in Teile
- Do you know any library to make pdf in golang?
- Pdfcpu: A Go PDF Processor
What are some alternatives?
docs - This is a repo of the RetroArch official document page.
gopdf - A simple library for generating PDF written in Go lang
website - The Caddy website
go-wkhtmltopdf - Go bindings for wkhtmltopdf and high-level HTML to PDF conversion interface
blissue - A blog based on github issues
qpdf - QPDF: A content-preserving PDF document transformer
simonwillisonblog-backup - Backups of the database for simonwillison.net
merge2pdf - Merge Image and PDF files (optionally with selective pages) with lossless quality
temporalite-archived - An experimental distribution of Temporal that runs as a single process
markpdf - Watermark PDF files using image or text
bdv32 - This is my website
ngrok - Unified ingress for developers