[Postlight](https://postlight.com)'s Mercury Parser extracts the bits that humans care about from any URL you give it. That includes article content, titles, authors, published dates, excerpts, lead images, and more.
Mercury Parser powers the [Mercury AMP Converter](https://mercury.postlight.com/amp-converter/) and [Mercury Reader](https://mercury.postlight.com/reader/), a Chrome extension that removes ads and distractions, leaving only text and images for a beautiful reading view on any site.
Mercury Parser allows you to easily create custom parsers using simple JavaScript and CSS selectors. This allows you to proactively manage parsing and migration edge cases. There are [many examples available](https://github.com/postlight/mercury-parser/tree/master/src/extractors/custom) along with [documentation](https://github.com/postlight/mercury-parser/blob/master/src/extractors/custom/README.md).
"excerpt": "Thunder Thunder is the stage name for the horse who is the official live animal mascot for the Denver Broncos",
"word_count": 4677,
"direction": "ltr",
"total_pages": 1,
"rendered_pages": 1
}
```
If Mercury is unable to find a field, that field will return `null`.
#### `parse()` Options
##### Content Formats
By default, Mercury Parser returns the `content` field as HTML. However, you can override this behavior by passing in options to the `parse` function, specifying whether or not to scrape all pages of an article, and what type of output to return (valid values are `'html'`, `'markdown'`, and `'text'`). For example:
This returns the the page's `content` as GitHub-flavored Markdown:
```json
"content": "...**Thunder** is the [stage name](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stage_name) for the..."
```
##### Custom Request Headers
You can include custom headers in requests by passing name-value pairs to the `parse` function as follows:
```javascript
Mercury.parse(url, {
headers: {
Cookie: 'name=value; name2=value2; name3=value3',
'User-Agent':
'Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 10_3_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/603.1.30 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/10.0 Mobile/14E304 Safari/602.1',
},
}).then(result => console.log(result));
```
##### Pre-fetched HTML
You can use Mercury Parser to parse custom or pre-fetched HTML by passing an HTML string to the `parse` function as follows:
```javascript
Mercury.parse(url, {
html:
'<html><body><article><h1>Thunder (mascot)</h1><p>Thunder is the stage name for the horse who is the official live animal mascot for the Denver Broncos</p></article></body></html>',
}).then(result => console.log(result));
```
Note that the URL argument is still supplied, in order to identify the web site and use its custom parser, if it has any, though it will not be used for fetching content.
#### The command-line parser
Mercury Parser also ships with a CLI, meaning you can use the Mercury Parser
# Pass optional --header.name=value arguments to include custom headers in the request
mercury-parser https://postlight.com/trackchanges/mercury-goes-open-source --header.Cookie="name=value; name2=value2; name3=value3" --header.User-Agent="Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 10_3_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/603.1.30 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/10.0 Mobile/14E304 Safari/602.1"
# Pass optional --extend argument to add a custom type to the response
Licensed under either of the below, at your preference:
- Apache License, Version 2.0
([LICENSE-APACHE](LICENSE-APACHE) or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license
([LICENSE-MIT](LICENSE-MIT) or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
## Contributing
For details on how to contribute to Mercury, including how to write a custom content extractor for any site, see [CONTRIBUTING.md](./CONTRIBUTING.md)
Unless it is explicitly stated otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above without any additional terms or conditions.