A while ago, I started building my RSS reader to auto-publish to certain platforms, but we never finished it 👀.
Today we will be looking into looping over the articles we get via the RSS reader and keeping track of which ones are posted to the socials.
Pre-condition: You need to know how to set up a basic node app 👈
What you'll learn from this article
- Read data from a JSON file in Node.js
- Write data to a JSON file in Node.js
- Reading RSS data
- Keeping track of run changes
Setting up our JSON file
Our JSON file is going to be quite easy in structure and will look as follows:
{
"https://daily-dev-tips.com/posts/rss-reader-in-node-js": {
"published": true
},
"https://daily-dev-tips.com/posts/top-10-chrome-extensions-for-developers-👀": {
"published": true
}
}
We basically only need to know if an object is already on this list.
Looping through our RSS feed
First, we need to add the rss-parser
package.
npm i rss-parser
Then we can loop through our articles using the sitemap we have.
let Parser = require('rss-parser');
let parser = new Parser();
(async () => {
let feed = await parser.parseURL('https://daily-dev-tips.com/sitemap.xml');
feed.items.forEach(item => {
console.log(item.id);
});
})();
Now we need to make sure we read our JSON file and see if we have already published this article.
First, let's define the file-system
.
const fs = require('fs');
Then we can read out actual JSON file
let rawdata = fs.readFileSync('site.json');
let siteData = JSON.parse(rawdata);
This will at first we an empty object {}
.
In our loop we need to check if we already published this item.
If yes => Don't do anything
If no => Do magic and then add to JSON file.‌
feed.items.forEach(item => {
let url = item.id;
if (!siteData.url) {
// Do magic posting stuff
siteData[url] = {
'published': true
};
}
});
Once the loop is done, we can save our JSON to the actual file.
fs.writeFileSync('site.json', JSON.stringify(siteData));
Our JSON file will then look something like this.
{
"https://daily-dev-tips.com/posts/vanilla-javascript-canvas-images-to-black-and-white/": {
"published": true
},
"https://daily-dev-tips.com/posts/vanilla-javascript-images-in-canvas/": {
"published": true
},
"https://daily-dev-tips.com/posts/vanilla-javascript-colouring-our-canvas-elements-🌈/": {
"published": true
}
}
Awesome, we now parsed our RSS feed, read our JSON file, and wrote data to it if not already in there!
You can find this project on GitHub.
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