0.0.3 • Published 7 months ago

save-webpage v0.0.3

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
7 months ago

save-html-screenshot

A node package that allows you to save HTML and screenshots of an URL. It utilizes the locally installed Chrome browser or browserless.io using Puppeteer to save the html and screenshot of the URL.

NPM version

Features

  • Complete web page saving as a single HTML file.
  • Option to save HTML and URL screenshots.
  • Automatic Chrome browser download if not installed.
  • Browserless.io supported.

Installation

You can install save-html-screenshot using npm:

npm install save-html-screenshot 

Using yarn:

yarn add save-html-screenshot 

And, using pnpm:

pnpm add save-html-screenshot 

Usage

First, import the necessary modules:

import { HtmlScreenshotSaver, SaveResult } from 'save-html-screenshot'

Constructor

Create an instance of the HtmlScreenshotSaver class with options:

const saver = new HtmlScreenshotSaver(options)

See here on what options can be passed: HtmlScreenshotSaverOptions

Save Method

The save method captures the html and screenshot of the specified URL and saves it to the specified folder path:

const result: SaveResult = await saver.save(url, outputDirectory)

The url parameter is the URL of the webpage to capture.

The outputDirectory parameter is optional and specifies the folder path where the screenshot and related files will be saved. If not provided, a temporary directory will be used.

The method returns a SaveResult object with the following properties:

  • status: Indicates the status of the operation, either 'success' or 'error'.
  • message: Provides additional information or an error message if the operation failed.
  • savedDirectory: The path where the HTML webpage and screenshot are saved.
  • webpage: The path to the saved HTML webpage.
  • screenshot: The path to the saved screenshot image.
  • title: The title of the captured webpage.
  • timestamp: The timestamp of when the screenshot was captured (in seconds).

Example

Here's an example that demonstrates the usage of save-html-screenshot using browserless:

import { HtmlScreenshotSaver } from 'save-html-screenshot'

const apiKey = 'your-api-key'
const url = 'https://example.com'
const outputDirectory = '/path/to/save'

const options = {
  browserlessOptions: {
    apiKey,
  }
}

const saver = new HtmlScreenshotSaver(options)

const result = await saver.save(url, outputDirectory)
if (result.status === 'success') {
  console.log('Screenshot saved successfully!')
  console.log('Webpage:', result.webpage)
  console.log('Screenshot:', result.screenshot)
  console.log('Title:', result.title)
  console.log('Timestamp:', result.timestamp)
}
else {
  console.error('Error saving screenshot:', result.message)
}

In the above example, replace 'your-API-key' with your actual browserless.io API key and specify the desired URL and folder path.

Without using browserless,

import { HtmlScreenshotSaver } from 'save-html-screenshot'

const url = 'https://example.com'
const outputDirectory = '/path/to/save'

const saver = new HtmlScreenshotSaver()

const result = saver.save(url, outputDirectory)
if (result.status === 'success') {
  console.log('Screenshot saved successfully!')
  console.log('Webpage:', result.webpage)
  console.log('Screenshot:', result.screenshot)
  console.log('Title:', result.title)
  console.log('Timestamp:', result.timestamp)
}
else {
  console.error('Error saving screenshot:', result.message)
}

Related

License

MIT License © 2023 Pawan Paudel