reader is for your command line what the “readability” view is for modern browsers: A lightweight tool offering better readability of web pages on the CLI.
reader
parses a web page for its actual content and displays it in nicely
highlighted text on the command line. In addition, reader
renders embedded
images from that page as colored block-renders on the terminal as well.
go install github.com/mrusme/reader@latest
If the above fails, then the following should work:
git clone https://github.com/mrusme/reader.git
cd reader
go install
reader https://xn--gckvb8fzb.com/superhighway84/
Don't render images:
reader --image-mode none https://xn--gckvb8fzb.com/superhighway84/
Output raw markdown, don't pretty print:
reader -o https://xn--gckvb8fzb.com/superhighway84/
Read from file:
reader ${HOME}/downloads/example.com.html
Read from stdin:
curl -o - https://superhighway84.com | reader -
Render images using the SIXEL graphics encoder:
reader --image-mode sixel https://xn--gckvb8fzb.com/travel-aruba/
More options:
reader -h
While on a web page in w3m, press !
and enter the following:
reader $W3M_URL
This will open the current url with reader
. w3m
will wait for you to press
any key in order to resume browsing.
If you want to navigate through the page:
reader $W3M_URL | less -R
Add the following function/mapping to your init.vim
:
function s:vertopen_url()
normal! "uyiW
let mycommand = "reader " . @u
execute "vertical terminal " . mycommand
endfunction
noremap <Plug>vertopen_url : call <SID>vertopen_url()<CR>
nmap gx <Plug>vertopen_url
Open a document and place the cursor on a link, then press g
followed by x
.
Vim will open a new terminal and show you the output of reader
.