in reply to Re: How to view all nodes in a section?
in thread How to view all nodes in a section?

How do you figure that it stops?

By clicking Next entries--> until it runs out in 2002. Yet Super Search tells me that the first obfu node was posted on 30 Dec 1999. I can get at them all via Super Search, it's just that it's slower viewing one node at a time, rather than viewing multiple nodes per page (as when viewing the Obfuscation section).

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Re: Re: Re: How to view all nodes in a section?
by PodMaster (Abbot) on Mar 07, 2004 at 02:38 UTC
    We-he-heeel then, now isn't that curious :) I'd say that some kind of problem in the database which should be addressed.

    update: in the meantime, here they are :)

    MJD says "you can't just make shit up and expect the computer to know what you mean, retardo!"
    I run a Win32 PPM repository for perl 5.6.x and 5.8.x -- I take requests (README).
    ** The third rule of perl club is a statement of fact: pod is sexy.

      Thanks a lot! How did you do that?

      I was thinking of using WWW::Mechanize to screen scrape the contents of all obfu nodes for later detailed analysis on my local PC. Or is there a better way? Being inexperienced, I welcome any pointers to nice example code that screen scrapes (or uses XML Generators/Web Services) on the PerlMonks web site.

        I used the node lister (cause I can), with
        my $data = join '', <DATA>; print "<li>[id://$_]" for $data =~ m{\Q<td style = "text-align: right">\E\s+(\d+)\s+\Q</td>\ +E}g; __DATA__ # raw shizzle from "node lister" here
        You can just use super search.

        There is still http://tinymicros.com/ptav/ and http://perlmonks.thepen.com, so if you feel like crawling, that's where i'd start. In fact, I'd look to improve ptav (ask jcwren about it).

        That's as much as I can divulge. Hmm, it's been about two years since I mirrored perlmonks.thepen.com, hmmm :)

        MJD says "you can't just make shit up and expect the computer to know what you mean, retardo!"
        I run a Win32 PPM repository for perl 5.6.x and 5.8.x -- I take requests (README).
        ** The third rule of perl club is a statement of fact: pod is sexy.