Feedjira is a Ruby library designed to parse feeds.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem "feedjira"
An example of parsing a feed with Feedjira:
xml = HTTParty.get(url).body
feed = Feedjira.parse(xml)
feed.entries.first.title
# => "Announcing version 3.0"
If you have the XML and just want to provide a parser class for one parse, you
can specify that using parse
with the parser option:
Feedjira.parse(xml, parser: MyAwesomeParser)
# Add the generator attribute to all feed types
Feedjira::Feed.add_common_feed_element("generator")
xml = HTTParty.get("http://www.pauldix.net/atom.xml").body
Feedjira.parse(xml).generator
# => "TypePad"
If you want to add attributes for only one class you simply have to declare them in the class
# Add some GeoRss information
class Feedjira::Parser::RSSEntry
element "georss:elevation", as: :elevation
end
# Fetch a feed containing GeoRss info and print them
url = "https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/feed/v1.0/summary/significant_week.atom"
xml = HTTParty.get(url).body
Feedjira.parse(xml).entries.each do |entry|
puts "Elevation: #{entry.elevation}"
end
You can insert your own parser at the front of the available parser list by:
Feedjira.configure do |config|
config.parsers.unshift(MyAwesomeParser)
end
Now when you call Feedjira.parse
, MyAwesomeParser
will be the first one to
get a chance to parse the feed.
Feedjira can be configured to use a specific set of parsers and in a specific order:
Feedjira.configure do |config|
config.parsers = [
Feedjira::Parser::ITunesRSS,
MyAwesomeParser,
Feedjira::Parser::RSS
]
end
Feedjira can be configured to strip all whitespace but defaults to lstrip only:
Feedjira.configure do |config|
config.strip_whitespace = true
end
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/feedjira/feedjira. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.
Feedjira is used in some awesome projects around the web - from RSS readers to add-ons and everything in between. Here are some of them:
-
Feedbin: Feedbin bills itself as a fast, simple RSS reader that delivers a great reading experience. It's a paid RSS reader that integrates with mobile apps and it even has a fully featured API!
-
Stringer: Stringer is a self-hosted, anti-social RSS reader. It's an open-source project that's easy to deploy to any host, there's even a one-click button to deploy on Heroku.
-
BlogFeeder: BlogFeeder is a paid Shopify App that makes it easy for you to import any external blog into your Shopify store. It helps improve your store's SEO and keeps your blogs in sync, plus a lot more.
-
Feedbunch: Feedbunch is an open source feed reader built to fill the hole left by Google Reader. It aims to support all features of Google Reader and actually improve on others.
-
The Old Reader: The Old Reader advertises as the ultimate social RSS reader. It's free to start and also has a paid premium version. There's an API and it integrates with many different mobile apps.
-
Solve for All: Solve for All combines search engine and feed parsing while protecting your privacy. It's even extendable by the community!
-
Feedi API: Feedi simplifies how you handle RSS, Atom, or JSON feeds. You can add and keep track of your favourite feed data with a simple and clean REST API. All entries are enriched by Machine Learning and Semantic engines.
-
Breaker: The social podcast app
-
Huginn: Huginn is a system for building agents that perform automated tasks for you online.
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