1.1.0 • Published 10 years ago

jsgrep v1.1.0

Weekly downloads
16
License
-
Repository
github
Last release
10 years ago

Introduction

This is a tool for performing jQuery CSS selection from the command line. It outputs elements or attributes to the command line letting you use the rest of the command line tools to do sexy things with HTML content. I wrote this mainly to solve a small problem I had but also as an excuse to use node.js

Usage: node src/jsgrep.js [options]
Show this help message
	--help
Also print subelements (with tags unless --no-tags is set)
	-r, --recursive
Only print text nodes, do not print tags
	-nt, --no-tags
Extract and print attribute per element matching (with source tags unless --no-tags is set)
	-a, --attribute <value>
The CSS selector to use 
	-s, --selector <value>
HTML URL or Filename
	-i, --input <value>

Installation

You can use npm to install jsgrep like this: npm install jsgrep or you can clone this and have a go yourself.

Examples

###Get the geo location of a wiki-commons image (if it has one)

Command:

curl -s http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Trento-panorama_Povo.jpg | jsgrep -s "a[href*=geo]" -nt

Output:

46° 4' 10.61" N, 11° 9' 23.28" E

###Get all the images from a url and use sort and uniq to get a unique list

Command:

curl -s sinjax.net | jsgrep -s img -a src -nt | sort | uniq

Outputs:

/graphics/cats.png
/graphics/comments.png
/graphics/date.png
/graphics/globe.png
/graphics/link.png
/style/face

###Get all the top level section names of a wikipedia article

Command:

curl -s http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markdown | jsgrep -s ".toclevel-1>a>.toctext" -nt -r  | sed 's/ /_/g'

Output:

Syntax_examples
Markdown_users
See_also
References
External_links
1.1.0

10 years ago

1.0.0

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0.3.0

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0.2.0

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0.1.0

13 years ago