ReadSharp was previously PocketSharp.Reader and is now hosted without the PocketSharp dependency.
Install ReadSharp using NuGet
Install-Package ReadSharp
The library extracts the main content of a website and returns the article as HTML with it's associated title, description, favicon and all included images.
The content can be encapsulated in a <body>-Tag and displayed as a readable website with a custom CSS (it's up to you!).
ReadSharp is based on a custom PCL port of NReadability and SgmlReader, which are included in the solution.
This library is a replacement for the Article View API by Pocket which is limited by usage and privacy.
With ReadSharp you won't hit any usage limits, as you are extracting the content directly. And it's open source.
using ReadSharp;
Reader reader = new Reader();
Article article;
try
{
  article = await reader.Read(new Uri("http://frontendplay.com/story/4/http-caching-demystified-part-2-implementation"));
}
catch (ReadException exc)
{
  // handle exception
}You can pass HttpOptions to the Reader constructor, which count for all requests:
- HttpMessageHandlerCustomHttpHandler
 Use your own HTTP handler
- int?RequestTimeout
 Define a custom timeout in seconds, after which requests should cancel
- boolUseMobileUserAgent
 Gets or sets a value indicating whether [use mobile user agent]
- stringUserAgent
 Override the user agent, which is passed to the destination server
- stringUserAgentMobile
 Override the mobile user agent, which is passed to the destination server
- boolUseMobileUserAgent
 There are desktop and mobile default user agents. By enabling this property, the mobile user agent is used. If you pass a custom user agent, this property is ignored!
- intMultipageLimit
 Gets or sets the download limit for articles with multiple pages (default: 10)
There are also ReadOptions available, which are passed on every request:
- boolHasHeaderTags
 Return complete HTML document or just the body part
- boolHasNoHeadline
 Removes- <h1>title from the article
- boolUseDeepLinks
 If you check this option, deep-links (containing hashes, e.g.- href="#article") are not transformed into absolute URIs
- boolPrettyPrint
 Determines whether the HTML output will be formatted
- boolPreferHTMLEncoding
 Determines whether to prefer the encoding found in the HTML or the one found in the HTTP Header (default: true)
- boolMultipageDownload
 Download all pages for articles with multiple pages (default: false)
- boolReplaceImagesWithPlaceholders
 If true, replace all img-tags with placeholders
The Article contains following fields:
- stringTitle (the title of the page)
- stringDescription (description of the page, extracted from meta information)
- stringContent (contains the article)
- UriFrontImage (main page image extracted from meta tags like apple-touch-icon and others)
- UriFavicon (the favicon of the page)
- List<ArticleImage>Images (contains all images found in the text)
- stringNextPage (contains the next page URI, if available)
- UriUri
- stringTitle (extracted from the title attribute)
- stringAlternativeText (extracted from the alt attribute)
ReadSharp is a Portable Class Library, therefore it's compatible with multiple platforms and Universal Apps:
- .NET >= 4.5 (including WPF)
- UWP
- Windows Phone (Silverlight + WinPRT) >= 8
- Windows Store >= 8
- Xamarin iOS + Android
- WP7 and Silverlight are dropped in 6.0, use ReadSharp < 6.0, if you want to support them
forks are included in the primary source code
| ceee | 
