From e3ee5e93bf83ae94099dce698363daacf9549ea6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Adam Pash Date: Fri, 30 Sep 2016 15:01:48 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] chore: small doc fixes --- src/extractors/custom/README.md | 13 +++++++++---- 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/extractors/custom/README.md b/src/extractors/custom/README.md index 7f9f2d19..96b000b4 100644 --- a/src/extractors/custom/README.md +++ b/src/extractors/custom/README.md @@ -55,11 +55,10 @@ The text you want isn't the text inside a matching element, but rather, inside t export const ExampleExtractor = { ... - // This example returns the datetime attribute if it exists; if not, it falls back to the text of time.article-timestamp + // This example returns the datetime attribute if it exists date_published: { selectors: [ ['time.article-timestamp[datetime]', 'datetime'], - 'time.article-timestamp', ], }, @@ -148,13 +147,19 @@ Now that you know the basics of how custom extractors work, let's walk through t First, you'll need to clone the Mercury Parser repository and install dependencies. ```bash -git clone https://github.com/postlight/mercury-parser.git +git clone git@github.com:postlight/readability-parser.git -cd mercury-parser +cd readibilty-parser npm install ``` +If you don't have already have watchman installed, you'll also need to install that: + +```bash +brew install watchman +``` + You should also create a new git branch for your custom extractor: ```bash