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@defunkt
Created March 1, 2010 10:01
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pipe html to a browser
#!/bin/sh -e
#
# Usage: browser
# pipe html to a browser
# e.g.
# $ echo '<h1>hi mom!</h1>' | browser
# $ ron -5 man/rip.5.ron | browser
if [ -t 0 ]; then
if [ -n "$1" ]; then
open $1
else
cat <<usage
Usage: browser
pipe html to a browser
$ echo '<h1>hi mom!</h1>' | browser
$ ron -5 man/rip.5.ron | browser
usage
fi
else
f="/tmp/browser.$RANDOM.html"
cat /dev/stdin > $f
open $f
fi
@kennethreitz
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Installation:

brew install browser

Or, if you must:

 sudo curl https://gist.github.com/raw/318247/browser -o /usr/local/bin/browser
 sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/browser

@jocap
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jocap commented Nov 10, 2010

Just in case anyone can't figure this out:
TextMate command:
cat $TM_FILE | /usr/local/bin/browser

@rleber
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rleber commented Dec 11, 2010

Small point, but "...hi mom!..." should be '...hi mom!...' in the usage example in the comments. Strong quoting is needed to avoid the dreaded "bash: !: event not found" error.

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ghost commented Feb 8, 2011

/Users/humza/homebrew/bin/browser: line 2: syntax error near unexpected token '<'
'Users/humza/homebrew/bin/browser: line 2: '<title>301 Moved Permanently</title>' I get this for some reason

@codeinthehole
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The URL for installation should be https:

sudo curl https://gist.github.com/raw/318247/browser -o /usr/local/bin/browser
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/browser

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ghost commented May 31, 2011

or with zsh, it is
open =(echo '<h1>zsh rulez!</h1>')

=(foo) takes the output of foo, writes it into a file in /tmp and returns the files path.

@phistep
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phistep commented May 29, 2013

In bash you can do <(foo) to achieve the same as zsh's =(foo). But it doesn't work with the open(1) utility for me. How should it figure out the file type anyway?

@Zeokat
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Zeokat commented Mar 9, 2014

Zeokat usefull piece of code.

@geoff-nixon
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Try

:; I="$(basename $0)"; [ -z $BROWSER ] && open=open || open=$BROWSER

[ $# -eq 0 ] && set -- -; [ "$1" = "-" ] && [ -t 0 ] &&
  echo "Usage: [ COMMAND | $I ] | [ $I < FILE ] | [ $I FILE ... ]" >&2 && exit

for what; do where="/tmp/$(od -N2 < /dev/urandom | openssl dgst -sha1).html"
  cat "$what" > "$where" && $open "$where"; sleep 1 && rm -f "$where" & done

Some advantages:

  • Respect $BROWSER. Can be BROWSER=lynx, BROWSER='open -a Firefox', etc.
  • No bashisms ($RANDOM) or zsh-isms (=(...)).
  • Correctly handles arguments that do not end in .html.
  • Correctly handles multiple arguments and shell globs.
  • Cleans up after itself.
  • Doesn't even need a shebang!

Or, you might prefer what I use: avoid leaving your terminal at all, and:

cat "$what" > "$where" && qlmanage -p "$where" >/dev/null 2>&1; sleep 1 ...

@Boldewyn
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To show Markdown files in browsers, I found a way without temporary files: https://gist.github.com/Boldewyn/4311962

It uses data: URIs for fun and profit:

x-www-browser $(base64 -w0 | cat <(echo -n 'data:text/html;base64,') -)
#  ^--- Debian link to default browser
#               ^---- base64 slurps stdin as default
#                            ^--- concat the "data:" header, then the content

@csonuryilmaz
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It's still working after ~10 years. 😊 Thanks!

Installed with brew install browser 👉 Tested on MacOS Mojave 10.14.6 👍

@benwoodward
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Works perfectly! Thanks Chris. Oh.. and thanks for making Github! 🙂

@iMichka
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iMichka commented May 27, 2021

Small heads up for an improvement: open can be replaced by xdg-open to make this work on Linux. Maybe the script could detect if it is used on Mac/Linux and use the correct command based on that.

@ernstki
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ernstki commented Sep 24, 2022

Small heads up for an improvement: open can be replaced by xdg-open to make this work on Linux. Maybe the script could detect if it is used on Mac/Linux and use the correct command based on that.

Here's @geoff-nixon's version as a standalone Bash script, with support already baked in for Quick Look or some other previewer. Requires bash to be somewhere in the search path if you're on Mac; should mostly work on Linux, too.

@bfontaine
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Note this was removed from Homebrew in January.

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