Hi Niels, please always answer to the mailing list (no problem if you CC me, but not needed).
It was just an example for POSIX regexes - it's up to you to work out the details ;-) Or maybe there is a volunteer reading this. The implicitly downloaded HTML pages should be removed after parsing when you use --accept-regex. Except the explicitly 'starting' page from your command line. Regards, Tim On 06/20/2018 04:28 PM, Nils Gerlach wrote: > Hi Tim, > > I am sorry but your command does not work. It only downloads the thumbnails > from the first page > and follows none of the links. Open the link in a browser. Click on the > pictures to get a larger picture. > There is a link "high quality picture" the pictures behind those links are > the ones i want to download. > Regex being ".*little-nemo.*n\l.jpeg". And not only the first page but from > the other search result pages, too. > Can you work that one out? Does this work with wget? Best result would be > if the visited html-pages were > deleted by wget. But if they stay I can delete them afterwards. But > automatism would be better, that's why I am > trying to use wget ;) > > Thanks for the information on the filename and path, though. > > Greetings > > 2018-06-20 16:13 GMT+02:00 Tim Rühsen <[email protected]>: > >> Hi Nils, >> >> On 06/20/2018 06:16 AM, Nils Gerlach wrote: >>> Hi there, >>> >>> in #wget on freenode I was suggested to write this to you: >>> I tried using wget to get some images: >>> wget -nd -rH -Dcomicstriplibrary.org -A >>> "little-nemo*s.jpeg","*html*","*.html.*","*.tmp","*page*","*display*" >> -p -e >>> robots=off 'http://comicstriplibrary.org/search?search=little+nemo' >>> I wanted to download the images only but wget was not following any of >> the >>> links so I got that much more into -A. But it still does not follow the >>> links. >>> Page numbers of the search result contain "page" in the link, links to >> the >>> big pictures i want wget to download contain "display". Both are given in >>> -A and are seen in the html-document wget gets. Neither is followed by >> wget. >>> >>> Why does this not work at all? Website is public, anybody is free to >> test. >>> But this is not my website! >> >> -A / -R works only on the filename, not on the path. The docs (man page) >> is not very explicit about it. >> >> Instead try --accept-regex / --reject-regex which acts on the complete >> URL - but shell wildcard's won't work. >> >> For your example this means to replace '.' by '\.' and '*' by '.*'. >> >> To download those nemo jpegs: >> wget -d -rH -Dcomicstriplibrary.org --accept-regex >> ".*little-nemo.*n\.jpeg" -p -e robots=off >> 'http://comicstriplibrary.org/search?search=little+nemo' >> --regex-type=posix >> >> Regards, Tim >> >> >
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
