Fugotcha
Fugotcha is a command-line utility for scraping data from the Fugazi Live Series on Dischord.com.
You might be interested in this project if:
- You're a Fugazi-obsessed friend of mine (I have many of these) working on a data-visualization project for school (with no data), and your first instinct was to collect it manually.
- You're curious about Puppeteer, Google's Node library for controlling Chrom(e|ium) programmatically, or any of the other technologies used. This project contains relatively simple implementations to get your feet wet.
- You'd like to teach me something about how to do it better. This was a learning project for me; create an issue if you've got something to share!
Installation
Use the package manager npm to install fugotcha.
npm install --global fugotcha
Requirements
Requires Node v7.6.0 or greater.
Usage
Scrape every (-c 0
) release, starting with the first
(-p washington-dc-usa-90387
), and put the results in /tmp/fugotcha.csv:
fugotcha -p washington-dc-usa-90387 -c 0 -o /tmp/fugotcha.csv
Get help:
fugotcha -h
Notes
Data is dumped into a CSV-ish file specified by the -f
option.
CSV-ish? RFC 4180 specifies that each line of a CSV "should contain the same number of fields throughout the file." Because the number of tracks is variable across releases, the rows of the CSV will have different numbers of fields unless I pick an arbitrary number of tracks (x) and supply empty values for releases with fewer than x tracks. Doing so, however, guarantees that Fugazi will get together for another show and play x+1 songs -- and then where would we be?
LibreOffice handles CSV-ish files with unequal numbers of fields without problem. I suspect most spreadsheet applications do.
Technologies
- NodeJS
- Puppeteer - Headless Chrome Node API
- Commander - Helper for developing command-line interfaces
- Chalk - Helper for styling terminal output
Why Puppeteer?
Dischord's website doesn't appear to do much DOM manipulation via JavaScript.
One could argue that launching a web browser capable of interpreting JavaScript,
headless though it may be, is overkill when the content could be fetched using
wget
or similar. That's a totally valid argument.
So, why puppeteer? Eh, I wanted to learn something new.
Contributing
Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.