rust-headless-chrome
zeal
rust-headless-chrome | zeal | |
---|---|---|
7 | 100 | |
2,076 | 11,067 | |
1.3% | 0.5% | |
7.2 | 7.9 | |
22 days ago | 27 days ago | |
Rust | C++ | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
rust-headless-chrome
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Recent 'MFA Bombing' Attacks Targeting Apple Users
I'm using this to fill forms interactively and emulate a user. https://github.com/rust-headless-chrome/rust-headless-chrome
Afaict, it drives a stock Chromium instance. I'm not sure how Fidelity is detecting it, but they detect it even in normal headful mode. Idk if there's some JS that notices there's no mouse-move movements.
It's just not worth the headache. I despise bending over backwards for companies like this. But obviously I have no choice since they're my 401k plan facilitator.
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Web scraping with Playwright?
Thanks, I was looking into that as well and got their example up and running. I also saw that chromiumoxide mentions rust-headless-chrome in its references section in the README, which is also updated recently, any differences between the two? Seems like chromiumoxide is async with code gen whereas rust-headless-chrome is not, is that right?
- headless_chrome v1.0.x is now released!
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mdbook-pdf: A mdBook backend for generating PDF files
mdBook allows you to create book from markdown files. It's pretty much alike Gitbook but implemented in Rust. However, unlike Gitbook that supports using calibre for generating PDF, for a long time, mdBook doesn't support generating PDF files natively, and supporting that is also not in their roadmap. Existing plugins (backends) such as mdbook-latex that utilize Tectonic as well as pandoc solutions will generate a PDF page that doesn't unify with the existing mdBook generated HTML version. Considering these facts, I created a mdBook backend named mdbook-pdf for generating PDF based on headless chrome and Chrome DevTools Protocol Page.printToPDF.
- Is Rust really only good for larger-scale projects?
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What libraries do you miss from other languages?
There's https://github.com/stevepryde/thirtyfour for Selenium, and https://github.com/atroche/rust-headless-chrome for Chromium.
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Looking for maintainers: Headless Chrome crate
I published headless-chrome a few years ago, but I haven't cut a new release in almost two years now — despite the issues and pull requests piling up. I'm not relying on it for my work like I was previously, and I just don't have the spare energy to be a good maintainer.
zeal
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DevDocs
There's also Zeal (https://zealdocs.org/) which is basically the same as Dash but open source and runs on non-Mac devices.
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How would you work effectively with an extremely slow 56Kbps connection?
For offline tech documentation you can use Zeal. Must have tool for poor internet connection places. Present in ubuntu repos. https://zealdocs.org/
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Simple Mobile Tools suite to be acquired by Israeli adware company
ads don't have to proprietary
here's one example of ads in FOSS https://github.com/zealdocs/zeal/issues/779
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Ask HN: How do I code offline for a week?
There’s stuff like https://zealdocs.org/ that allow you to take all relevant documentation with you so offline coding will work.
If you just want to be productive, you could also bring a lot of books or downloaded tutorials on a drive.
Btw, make sure your drive is encrypted and you think of a way to backup your data so you don’t lose the offline progress.
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Memex is already here, it’s just not evenly distributed
I’d suggest you look into Kiwix¹ and also Zeal².
1. https://www.kiwix.org/
2. https://zealdocs.org/
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What's the Difference Between `ruby-doc.org` and `docs.ruby-lang.org`?
For offline documentation, I use Zeal (called Dash on macos) which looks/works almost identically to rubydoc.info but much faster since it's offline, has a standard interface for all installed language documentations, and only 1 global hotkey away while programming.
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Googling for answers costs you time
I highly recommend using local solutions to this local issue: Zeal[1] (aka Dash[2] on MacOS)
Load up the "docsets" of your languages (lightly edited HTML docs for indexing purposes) and use a global keyboard shortcut (F8 for me) to pull up Python/Postgres/Terraform docs, searching for the right function without internet query.
This isn't straight up applicable to all questions of course, but "How do I search regular expressions in Python again?" is now as easy as "re"
Note that the docsets can be converted from normal HTML ones via doc2dash[3], especially useful to load up custom docs like private providers.
[1]: https://zealdocs.org/
- Crear mi propio AskSAM/Zeal: muchas dudas
- Zeal is an offline documentation browser for software developers
What are some alternatives?
cloudscraper - A Python module to bypass Cloudflare's anti-bot page.
devdocs - API Documentation Browser
Ink - 🌈 React for interactive command-line apps
dash.nvim - 🏃💨 Search Dash.app from your Neovim fuzzy finder. Built with Rust 🦀 and Lua
tiny-skia - A tiny Skia subset ported to Rust
dash-contrib-docset-feeds - A collection of Dash's user contributed docset feed for using with Zeal
fantoccini - A high-level API for programmatically interacting with web pages through WebDriver.
zeavim.vim - Zeal for Vim
crates.io - The Rust package registry
Dash-iOS - Dash for iOS was discontinued. Please check out Dash for macOS instead.
Trex - Package Manager for deno 🦕
terraform-docs-as-pdf - Complete Terraform documentation (core + all official providers) as PDF files. Updating nightly.