pup
up
pup | up | |
---|---|---|
52 | 25 | |
8,000 | 8,150 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
about 2 months ago | 8 months ago | |
HTML | Go | |
MIT License | 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.
pup
-
script to download some notes
And lnk=$(curl -s https://www.selfstudys.com$url |grep "PDFFlip" | cut -d '"' -f 6) to lnk=$(curl -s https://www.selfstudys.com$url | pup "div#PDFF attr{source}" ) here pup will print content of source attribute from div tag with id PDFF i dont know that much about html & css so this is what i came up with. but i am sure you can also select class & make list of suburls from them. check out the video from bugswriter on pup or read docs from git hub for more info github link: https://github.com/ericchiang/pup
-
What monitoring tool do you use or recommend?
jq is pretty amazing. If you are comfortable with its jquery-like CSS selector syntax, then I should also mention a couple similar cli utilities that apply it to HTML: htmlp and pup.
-
Creating a data scraper as a beginner?
Regex is not a great tool for parsing web pages. Open up a browser dev tools window and select a bit of the page. Right click > copy... XPath expression or CSS selector. A proper web scraping tool will accept either of those. No muss, no fuss. You can even use simple command line tools: xpath or pup
- December 5, 2022: FLiP Stack Weekly
-
Show HN: A tool like jq, but for parsing HTML
This is HTML to JSON, written in Rust, and there's also pup[1] which I found out about just the other day on HN[2] which uses a very similar syntax (CSS selectors) but outputs HTML and is written in Go.
I can see room for both though it would interesting to have a more detailed comparison to go on (e.g. types of HTML, speed etc).
[1] https://github.com/ericchiang/pup
[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33805732
- Pup: Parsing HTML at the command line
-
pup: Parsing HTML at the Command Line
It looks like the project became inactive for a bit and there are alternatives such as htmlq, etc. https://github.com/ericchiang/pup/issues/150
-
Converting field before delimiter to uppercase and how to replace with multiple newlines
Another tool worth mentioning is pup - it can produce JSON output which means you can pipe it to jq
up
-
Fx – Terminal JSON Viewer
This fx rewrite is very exciting. I'll have to try it. I thought of fx as a wrapper around jq, that allowed quick iteration over building jq scripts. Sort of an Ultimate Plumber [1] but only for jq. It looks like it is now more like a JavaScript processor plus an interactive viewer.
Someone mention Visidata[2]? VisiData is also a TUI that is great on tabular data, and it can work with json. If your JSON is mostly tabular in nature, Visidata does a great job at showing that data and allowing you to explore it. A lot of json I deal with is tabular-like data. There is a great tutorial [3], that can help you get your bearings with Visidata. Once you understand those basics you might want to look at this thread [4] for what commands you can use with json.
[1] Ultimate Plumber: https://github.com/akavel/up
- Up: Plumber is a tool for writing Linux pipes with instant live preview
-
Show HN: LineSelect, shell utility to interactively select lines in a pipeline
Ultimate plumber can do this.
https://github.com/akavel/up
- Ultimate Plumber – a tool for writing Linux pipes with live preview
-
`jqp`, a TUI playground for `jq`
Been using up for years but this looks nice too
-
An interactive wrapper around `jq`
Fun. But I can achieve the same result (I think) with ultimate plumber and regular jq, but without being restricted just to jq. Feel free to correct me.
-
What are some useful cli tools that arent popular?
Up - The Ultimate Plumber makes the best pipes !
-
A list of new(ish) command line tools – Julia Evans
As an alternative allowing the use of any shell command/pipeline on the results interactively, see also: https://github.com/akavel/up
- RegExr: Learn, Build and Test Regex
-
Is there any command-line application that you wish existed but doesn't (or isn't as good as you wished)?
Would https://github.com/akavel/up solve your problem?
What are some alternatives?
htmlq - Like jq, but for HTML.
nvim-jqx - Populate the quickfix with json entries
xidel - Command line tool to download and extract data from HTML/XML pages or JSON-APIs, using CSS, XPath 3.0, XQuery 3.0, JSONiq or pattern matching. It can also create new or transformed XML/HTML/JSON documents.
zsh-history-substring-search - 🐠 ZSH port of Fish history search (up arrow)
gron - Make JSON greppable!
dive - A tool for exploring each layer in a docker image
yq - Command-line YAML, XML, TOML processor - jq wrapper for YAML/XML/TOML documents
fzf-tab - Replace zsh's default completion selection menu with fzf!
cascadia - Go cascadia package command line CSS selector
fx - Terminal JSON viewer & processor
ddgr - :duck: DuckDuckGo from the terminal
hurl - Hurl, run and test HTTP requests with plain text.