npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@dbushell/xml-streamify

v0.7.0

Published

Fetch and parse XML documents using the power of JavaScript web streams and async iterators ✨

Downloads

140

Readme

📰 XML Streamify

JSR NPM

Fetch and parse XML documents using the power of JavaScript web streams and async iterators ✨

  • Small, fast, zero dependencies †
  • Work with data before the fetch is complete
  • Cross-runtime support (Bun, Deno, Node, and web browsers)

This is experimental work in progress. But it does seem to work. It was designed to parse RSS feeds.

Usage

The parse generator function is the main export. Below is a basic example that logs RSS item titles as they're found:

import {parse} from "@dbushell/xml-streamify";

for await (const node of parse('https://dbushell.com/rss.xml')) {
  if (node.is('channel', 'item')) {
    console.log(node.first('title').innerText);
  }
}

See src/types.ts for parse options.

parse uses a lower level XMLStream that can be used alone:

const response = await fetch('https://dbushell.com/rss.xml');
const stream = response.body.pipeThrough(new XMLStream());
for await (const [type, value] of stream) {
  // e.g. declaration: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
  console.log(`${type}: ${value}`);
}

Advanced

See the examples directory for more advanced and platform specific examples.

In the examples/advanced directory there is a Deno web server. It will proxy RSS feeds, add CORS headers, and throttle streaming speed for testing. Run deno run -A examples/advanced/mod.ts for the full example script.

Notes

This project may not be fully XML compliant. It can handle XHTML in some cases. It will not parse HTML where elements like <meta charset="utf-8"> are not self-closing and <li> do not require a closing </li> for example.

Browsers may need a polyfill until they support async iterator on ReadableStream.

† bring your own HTML entities decoder


MIT License | Copyright © 2024 David Bushell