Show HN: Defuddle, an HTML-to-Markdown alternative to Readability

github.com

357 points by kepano 20 hours ago

Defuddle is an open-source JS library I built to parse and extract the main content and metadata from web pages. It can also return the content as Markdown.

I built Defuddle while working on Obsidian Web Clipper[1] (also MIT-licensed) because Mozilla's Readability[2] appears to be mostly abandoned, and didn't work well for many sites.

It's still very much a work in progress, but I thought I'd share it today, in light of the announcement that Mozilla is shutting down Pocket. This library could be helpful to anyone building a read-it-later app.

Defuddle is also available as a CLI:

https://github.com/kepano/defuddle-cli

[1] https://github.com/obsidianmd/obsidian-clipper

[2] https://github.com/mozilla/readability

tmpfs 19 hours ago

Interesting as I was researching this recently and certainly not impressed with the quality of the Readability implementations in various languages. Although Readability.js was clearly the best, it being Javascript didn't suit my project.

In the end I found the python trifatura library to extract the best quality content with accurate meta data.

You might want to compare your implementation to trifatura to see if there is room for improvement.

ahsd1 34 minutes ago

Cool. Im looking for something similar but for stripping signatures and boilerplate disclaimers from html email. Could this work for that?

creakingstairs 18 hours ago

I was just looking at obsidian web-clipper's source code because I've been quite impressed at its markdown conversion results and came across Defuddle in there. I'll be using for my bespoke read-it-later/ knowledge-base app, so thank you in advance :D

Tsarp 14 hours ago

Been using the obsidian clipper since it was out and this is a really neat. The per website profile based extraction is awesome.

Even if you are not a obsidian user, the markdown extraction quality is the most reliable Ive seen.

binarymax 4 hours ago

Really nice work. I appreciate the example with JSDOM as that’s exactly how I use readability, and this looks like a nice drop-in replacement.

Question: How did you validate this? You say it works better than readability but I don’t see any tests or datasets in the repo to evaluate accuracy or coverage. Would it be possible to share that as well?

acrophobic 15 hours ago

Is Mozilla's Readability really abandoned? The latest release (v0.6.0) is just 2 months ago, and its maintainer (Gijs) is pretty active on responding issues.

  • khasan222 12 hours ago

    That codebase definitely leaves much to be desired, I’ve already had to fork it for work in order to fix some bugs.

    1 such bug, find a foreign language with commas in between numbers instead of periods, like Dutch(I think), and a lot of prices on the page. It’ll think all the numbers are relevant text.

    And of course I tried to open a pr and get it merged, but they require tests, and of course the tests don’t work on the page Im testing. It’s just very snafu imho

    • fabrice_d an hour ago

      This seems to be https://github.com/mozilla/readability/pull/853#issuecomment... and I think their expectations are pretty reasonable.

      • khasan222 9 minutes ago

        Meh, maybe I'm standing too close to the problem, Idk. It is always frustrating trying to use a tool, and it not work though. I know it's free and all, but then I feel like helping people make good contributions is paramount in maintaining and fixing bugs.

        Clearly the comma thing is a bug, it's the lack of wanting to fix it actually that is a bit disheartening, and why I think it is a deadish repo

jeanlucas 15 hours ago

Obsidian Web Clipper is a great tool to turn chatGPT conversations in markdown, or to just print it (believe me, it is a user case)

  • kouru225 2 hours ago

    Is that a paid plugin?

  • emaro 10 hours ago

    Not sure about other clients, but Kagi Assistant directly offers to save a conversation as Markdown. Using Obsidian's web-clipper is a good idea too though.

  • T0Bi 15 hours ago

    I just ask ChatGPT to provide the summary or whatever I need as a markdown file.

severusdd 7 hours ago

This is very cool! Given how messy and busy many websites have become, we really need a robust markdown converter that lets readers focus on reading the content. Nice to see something stepping up where Readability left off.

Thank you for picking up this work :-)

ricardonunez 6 hours ago

I’ll give it a try. I’m not happy with my current setup for markdown to HTML on the wysiwyg editor I’m using, this may provide better results if I go with my own tool bar and editor.

jonplackett 10 hours ago

Does anyone know why readers don’t work for some websites where it looks like they should - ie normal article with lots of text.

You just get a completely white page (on the iPhone reader). Usually it’s a news website.

Is this the website intentionally obscuring the content to ensure they can serve their ads? If so how do they go about it?

  • miki123211 10 hours ago

    Cookie and "we care about your privacy" banners are often the cause here, especially if you're in the EU / UK / possibly California[1].

    On some websites, those are just modals that obscure the content, something that reader mode can usually deal with just fine, but on others, they're implemented as redirects or rendered server-side.

    If reader mode doesn't work, dismiss those first and try again.

shrinks99 16 hours ago

I've been super happy with Obsidian Web Clipper! It's worked really well for me with the one exception of importing publish dates (which is more than forgivable !)

rcarmo 20 hours ago

The Python analogues seem to be well maintained. I did my own implementation of the Readability algorithm years ago and dropped it in favor them, and I have a few scrapers going strong with regular updates.

Andr2Andr 9 hours ago

Serious question - who and why would be using this tool? What is the use case? In other comments I have only seen exporting ChatGPT conversations to md

  • rollcat 9 hours ago

    This is a library, not a tool. You can use it for a number of purposes:

    - Providing "reader mode" for your visitors

    - Using it in a browser extension to add reader mode

    - Scrapping

    - Plugging it into a [reverse] proxy that automatically removes unnecessary bloat from pages, for e.g. easier access on retro hardware <https://web.archive.org/web/20240621144514/https://humungus....> (archive.org link, because the website goes down regularly)

  • degosuke 9 hours ago

    I use LogSeq a lot - and having the option to scrape a website with only the text in MD seems like a great fit.

timdeve 9 hours ago

Looks good, I'm gonna try to swap readability in my RSS reader with this.

And with Pocket going away I might have to add save it later to it...

inhumantsar 18 hours ago

can confirm that readability seems to be on life support. I used it slurp, an obsidian plugin which serves the same basic purpose as web clipper, and always had a hard time getting PRs reviewed and merged.

i started working on my own alternative but life (and web clipper) derailed the work.

it's funny. somehow slurp keeps gaining new users even though web clipper exists. so i might have to refactor it to use your library sometime soon even though I don't use slurp myself anymore.

billconan 19 hours ago

Are you using ai models behind the scenes? I saw Gemini and others in the code. I am asking mainly to understand the cost of using yours vs. readability. Thank!

  • kepano 19 hours ago

    No it's all rules-based. I think the code you're referring to is "extractors", which are website-specific rules that I'm working on to standardize the output from sites with comments threads (e.g. HN, Reddit) and conversational chats (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini).

    • pugio 14 hours ago

      I would love something which reliably extracted a markdown back/forth from all the main LLM providers. I tried `defuddle` on a shared Gemini URL and it returned nothing but the "Sign In" link. Maybe I'm using your extractor wrong? How are you managing to get the rendered conversation HTML?

      • bambax 10 hours ago

        I think most LLM APIs return markdown and the conversion md->html happens after; so if you query the API directly you get markdown "for free".

90s_dev 17 hours ago

Neat. With ~3 more lines of code, you could get a URL and render it in simpler HTML and be a full fledged replacement.

khaki54 16 hours ago

seems pretty much perfect including obsidian clipper. Thanks!

ioma8 7 hours ago

Tried it on some webpages, doesnt work well.

revskill 9 hours ago

Interesting that Markdown does not support form element.

busymom0 20 hours ago

In the playground, after I enter a url, I can't seem to figure out how to submit it to fetch the url? I tried pressing the return key on iOS keyboard but it didn't do anything. Am I missing something?

  • kepano 19 hours ago

    The input is there to test the url option — which I admit is a bit confusing, so I have removed it for now. I haven't found a good and free way to proxy requests from a GitHub page (yet).

input_sh 18 hours ago

A bit off-topic, but I'm very excited to see the launch of Bases! I've obsessively followed the roadmap for like a year awaiting this day and have been frequently disappointed to still see it stuck somewhere under "planned".

Not that I didn't already implement a read-it-later solution with Obsidian+Dataview, but this definitely makes things simpler!

  • jeanlucas 15 hours ago

    Didn't it release just some days ago?

andrethegiant 17 hours ago

[flagged]

  • simpaticoder 17 hours ago

    Interesting. How do you avoid users misusing such a tool? How do users know you won't misuse the tool against users? On a technical note, do you rotate IP's on each request, even for sub-resources of the same page?

latchkey 16 hours ago

[flagged]

  • kepano 16 hours ago

    Feel free to help :)

    • latchkey 15 hours ago

      As an open source developer for 3 decades now, I used to have this flippant attitude. Trust me when I say, it doesn't work.

      Build the framework for tests and then require anyone who wants to help build the product to write tests with their PRs.

      You can't just push some code out there and expect people to "feel free to help", it doesn't happen, and is quite a turnoff.

      To the downvoters, this is what I see as valid feedback to a rather flippant response.

      • jeanlucas 15 hours ago

        You just wanted to complain and not add anything? Not really getting your point at all

        • latchkey 15 hours ago

          Sorry you're not getting my point. It isn't a complaint. I'm responding to a rather flippant "feel free to help" with some advice from someone who's been doing this a long time.

          I've got a project that has been going for 6 years now and attracted 500 stars and gets 49k downloads a month. It works because it has comprehensive unit tests and people can rely on it. When I was just starting out on that project, I didn't tell people to feel free to help. I put the effort in. It is important to lay the groundwork beyond just writing the utility.

          • m0zzie 14 hours ago

            Apologies if you already know this, but I noticed you’re getting flagged so thought I’d add some context: the author is the CEO of Obsidian and has a few successful projects, so bragging about your 500 stars and saying things like “when I was just starting out, I didn't tell people to feel free to help. I put the effort in” is probably rubbing people the wrong way.

            • latchkey 14 hours ago

              Clarified "starting out on that project". I've been doing this for 30 years and I'm also a CEO. I've had multiple successful projects, like starting Java@Apache and open sourcing Tomcat.

              I made a lot of mistakes along the way and one of them was being flippant on my responses to people like that. Just sharing my insights.

              • m0zzie 14 hours ago

                Your follow up post and edits help with clarifying the tone, hopefully readers see that.