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README.md | ||
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Firecrawl JavaScript SDK
The Firecrawl JavaScript SDK is a library that allows you to easily scrape and crawl websites, and output the data in a format ready for use with language models (LLMs). It provides a simple and intuitive interface for interacting with the Firecrawl API.
Installation
To install the Firecrawl JavaScript SDK, you can use npm:
npm install @mendable/firecrawl-js
Usage
- Get an API key from firecrawl.dev
- Set the API key as an environment variable named
FIRECRAWL_API_KEY
or pass it as a parameter to theFirecrawlApp
class.
Here's an example of how to use the SDK with error handling:
import FirecrawlApp from '@mendable/firecrawl-js';
async function main() {
try {
// Initialize the FirecrawlApp with your API key
const app = new FirecrawlApp({ apiKey: "YOUR_API_KEY" });
// Scrape a single URL
const url = 'https://mendable.ai';
const scrapedData = await app.scrapeUrl(url);
console.log(scrapedData);
// Crawl a website
const crawlUrl = 'https://mendable.ai';
const params = {
crawlerOptions: {
excludes: ['blog/'],
includes: [], // leave empty for all pages
limit: 1000,
},
pageOptions: {
onlyMainContent: true
}
};
const crawlResult = await app.crawlUrl(crawlUrl, params);
console.log(crawlResult);
} catch (error) {
console.error('An error occurred:', error.message);
}
}
main();
Scraping a URL
To scrape a single URL with error handling, use the scrapeUrl
method. It takes the URL as a parameter and returns the scraped data as a dictionary.
async function scrapeExample() {
try {
const url = 'https://example.com';
const scrapedData = await app.scrapeUrl(url);
console.log(scrapedData);
} catch (error) {
console.error(
'Error occurred while scraping:',
error.message
);
}
}
scrapeExample();
Crawling a Website
To crawl a website with error handling, use the crawlUrl
method. It takes the starting URL and optional parameters as arguments. The params
argument allows you to specify additional options for the crawl job, such as the maximum number of pages to crawl, allowed domains, and the output format.
async function crawlExample() {
try {
const crawlUrl = 'https://example.com';
const params = {
crawlerOptions: {
excludes: ['blog/'],
includes: [], // leave empty for all pages
limit: 1000,
},
pageOptions: {
onlyMainContent: true
}
};
const waitUntilDone = true;
const timeout = 5;
const crawlResult = await app.crawlUrl(
crawlUrl,
params,
waitUntilDone,
timeout
);
console.log(crawlResult);
} catch (error) {
console.error(
'Error occurred while crawling:',
error.message
);
}
}
crawlExample();
Checking Crawl Status
To check the status of a crawl job with error handling, use the checkCrawlStatus
method. It takes the job ID as a parameter and returns the current status of the crawl job.
async function checkStatusExample(jobId) {
try {
const status = await app.checkCrawlStatus(jobId);
console.log(status);
} catch (error) {
console.error(
'Error occurred while checking crawl status:',
error.message
);
}
}
// Example usage, assuming you have a jobId
checkStatusExample('your_job_id_here');
Error Handling
The SDK handles errors returned by the Firecrawl API and raises appropriate exceptions. If an error occurs during a request, an exception will be raised with a descriptive error message. The examples above demonstrate how to handle these errors using try/catch
blocks.
Contributing
Contributions to the Firecrawl JavaScript SDK are welcome! If you find any issues or have suggestions for improvements, please open an issue or submit a pull request on the GitHub repository.
License
The Firecrawl JavaScript SDK is open-source and released under the MIT License.