1
0
mirror of https://github.com/ericchiang/pup synced 2024-11-24 00:48:36 +00:00
Parsing HTML at the command line
Go to file
2014-09-01 16:39:26 -04:00
selector attribute selectors added 2014-09-01 16:39:26 -04:00
.gitignore Initial commit 2014-09-01 12:54:45 -04:00
LICENSE license added 2014-09-01 13:36:10 -04:00
main.go attribute selectors added 2014-09-01 16:39:26 -04:00
printing.go cleaned up code and add comments 2014-09-01 15:07:42 -04:00
README.md attribute selectors added 2014-09-01 16:39:26 -04:00

pup

pup is a command line tool for processing HTML. It read from stdin, prints to stdout, and allows the user to filter parts ot the page using CCS selectors.

Inspired by jq, pup aims to be a fast and flexible way of exploring HTML from the terminal.

Install

go get github.com/ericchiang/pup

Examples

Download a webpage with wget.

$ wget http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robots_exclusion_standard -O robots.html

###Clean and indent

By default, pup will fill in missing tags, and properly indent the page.

$ cat robots.html
# nasty looking HTML
$ cat robots.html | pup --color
# cleaned, indented, and colorful HTML

###Filter by tag

$ pup < robots.html title
<title>
 Robots exclusion standard - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
</title>

###Filter by id

$ pup < robots.html span#See_also
<span class="mw-headline" id="See_also">
 See also
</span>

###Chain selectors together

The following two commands are equivalent. (NOTE: pipes do not work with the --color flag)

$ pup < robots.html table.navbox ul a | tail
$ pup < robots.html table.navbox | pup ul | pup a | tail

Both produce the ouput:

</a>
<a href="/wiki/Stop_words" title="Stop words">
 Stop words
</a>
<a href="/wiki/Poison_words" title="Poison words">
 Poison words
</a>
<a href="/wiki/Content_farm" title="Content farm">
 Content farm
</a>

###How many nodes are selected by a filter?

$ pup < robots.html a -n
283

###Limit print level

$ pup < robots.html table -l 2
<table class="metadata plainlinks ambox ambox-content" role="presentation">
 <tbody>
  ...
 </tbody>
</table>
<table style="background:#f9f9f9;font-size:85%;line-height:110%;max-width:175px;">
 <tbody>
  ...
 </tbody>
</table>
<table cellspacing="0" class="navbox" style="border-spacing:0;">
 <tbody>
  ...
 </tbody>
</table>

TODO:

  • Print attribute value rather than html ({href})
  • Print result as JSON (--json)