pup
glow
pup | glow | |
---|---|---|
52 | 60 | |
8,000 | 14,825 | |
- | 1.7% | |
0.0 | 6.7 | |
about 2 months ago | 11 days ago | |
HTML | Go | |
MIT License | 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.
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
glow
-
Essential Command Line Tools for Developers
To get started, install Mods and check out some of the examples below. Since Mods has built-in Markdown formatting, you may also want to grab Glow to give the output some pizzazz.
- Ask HN: How do you synchronise your notes?
-
Not trying to start a rumble, but why neovim
I recently started using markdown in neovim (with an LSP) along with https://github.com/charmbracelet/glow to view markdown / navigate. Does everything I used to use Obsidian for minus the links / graph functionality which I don't really need and it's pretty snappy on an old Lenovo. Very customizable as well.
- How would you read your files if Obsidian disappeared?
-
Show HN: GPT-engineer ā platform for devs to tinker with AI programming tools
Yup, those seem to be the key challenges. I've been making good progress on them, but there's plenty more work to do!
On the topic of "AI-generated PRs", I used my tool to file a PR to the `glow` CLI tool. I don't know the go language, so I had aider make the changes to glow.
https://github.com/charmbracelet/glow/pull/502
I've also been able solve a couple of github issues that were file by users by just pasting the issue into my tool... it fixed itself. Links below:
https://github.com/paul-gauthier/aider/issues/13#issuecommen...
https://github.com/paul-gauthier/aider/issues/5#issuecomment...
- FLiPN-FLaNK Stack Weekly May 8 2023
-
How to host your own Golang based Git server for the command line.
I'm personally also quite fond of Glow. I use it pretty much every time I touch a markdown file.
-
Show HN: Frogmouth ā A Markdown browser for your terminal
Nice idea! Iām excited to check it out. I write a lot of docs in Markdown and this could be a great way to browse them.
Out of curiosity, have you seen glow[0]?
[0] https://github.com/charmbracelet/glow
-
Recommendations on file/dir/module structure, common dependencies, and/or anti-patterns for writing CLI tool in Rust
Charm's Glow is a joy to use, a good example of having the Charm's Bubbletea usage - but from the code perspective, it's a bit difficult to navigate as many code paths are put in the same package
-
AI - a commandline ChatGPT client in with conversation/completion support
thanks! Yeah all the markdown is handled through glow, which is one fairly awesome tool.
What are some alternatives?
htmlq - Like jq, but for HTML.
markdown-preview.nvim - markdown preview plugin for (neo)vim
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.
pcstat - Page Cache stat: get page cache stats for files on Linux
gron - Make JSON greppable!
mdless
yq - Command-line YAML, XML, TOML processor - jq wrapper for YAML/XML/TOML documents
mdcat - cat for markdown
cascadia - Go cascadia package command line CSS selector
glow.nvim - A markdown preview directly in your neovim.
ddgr - :duck: DuckDuckGo from the terminal
bat - A cat(1) clone with wings.