IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
212.108.155.170 | cy | 9090 | 2 minutes ago |
176.31.110.126 | fr | 45517 | 2 minutes ago |
67.43.228.250 | ca | 28855 | 2 minutes ago |
128.140.113.110 | de | 4145 | 2 minutes ago |
31.130.127.215 | ru | 5678 | 2 minutes ago |
72.10.164.178 | ca | 10055 | 2 minutes ago |
67.201.33.10 | us | 25283 | 2 minutes ago |
46.105.105.223 | fr | 18579 | 2 minutes ago |
51.89.21.99 | gb | 59577 | 2 minutes ago |
41.230.216.70 | tn | 80 | 2 minutes ago |
168.126.68.80 | kr | 80 | 2 minutes ago |
89.161.90.203 | pl | 5678 | 2 minutes ago |
62.103.186.66 | gr | 4153 | 2 minutes ago |
72.195.34.59 | us | 4145 | 2 minutes ago |
37.128.107.102 | pl | 4145 | 2 minutes ago |
45.177.80.214 | ar | 1080 | 2 minutes ago |
67.43.236.20 | ca | 12651 | 2 minutes ago |
185.49.31.205 | pl | 8080 | 2 minutes ago |
213.143.113.82 | at | 80 | 2 minutes ago |
103.216.50.224 | kh | 8080 | 2 minutes ago |
Simple tool for complete proxy management - purchase, renewal, IP list update, binding change, upload lists. With easy integration into all popular programming languages, PapaProxy API is a great choice for developers looking to optimize their systems.
Quick and easy integration.
Full control and management of proxies via API.
Extensive documentation for a quick start.
Compatible with any programming language that supports HTTP requests.
Ready to improve your product? Explore our API and start integrating today!
And 500+ more programming tools and languages
To scrape tags from XML with Python, you can use the xml.etree.ElementTree module, which is part of the Python standard library. Here's an example of how to extract tags from an XML document
Assuming you have an XML file named example.xml like this:
-
Item 1
10.99
-
Item 2
19.99
You can use the following Python code to extract tags:
import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET
# Load the XML file
xml_file_path = 'path/to/example.xml'
tree = ET.parse(xml_file_path)
root = tree.getroot()
# Extract tags
tags = set()
for element in root.iter():
tags.add(element.tag)
# Print the extracted tags
print("Extracted Tags:")
for tag in tags:
print(tag)
This example uses xml.etree.ElementTree to parse the XML file, iterates over the elements, and adds each tag to a set to ensure uniqueness. You can modify this example based on your specific needs.
If you want to extract tags with attributes, you can modify the code accordingly. For example:
import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET
# Load the XML file
xml_file_path = 'path/to/example.xml'
tree = ET.parse(xml_file_path)
root = tree.getroot()
# Extract tags with attributes
tags_with_attributes = set()
for element in root.iter():
tag_with_attributes = element.tag
if element.attrib:
attributes = ', '.join([f"{key}={value}" for key, value in element.attrib.items()])
tag_with_attributes += f" ({attributes})"
tags_with_attributes.add(tag_with_attributes)
# Print the extracted tags with attributes
print("Extracted Tags with Attributes:")
for tag in tags_with_attributes:
print(tag)
This example includes attributes in the extracted tags, displaying them in a format like tag_name (attribute1=value1, attribute2=value2). Adjust the code based on your XML structure and specific requirements.
You can use Selenium WebDriver to find out the URL of the active tab in the browser. Here's an example using Python with Selenium:
from selenium import webdriver
# Create a WebDriver instance (assuming Chrome in this example)
driver = webdriver.Chrome()
try:
# Navigate to a website
driver.get("https://www.example.com")
# Get the URL of the active tab
current_url = driver.current_url
print("URL of the active tab:", current_url)
# Perform other actions as needed
finally:
# Close the browser window
driver.quit()
In this example:
driver.get("https://www.example.com")
navigates to a specific website.driver.current_url
retrieves the URL of the currently active tab.Make sure to replace "https://www.example.com"
with the actual URL you want to navigate to.
Keep in mind that this method retrieves the URL of the currently active tab. If you have multiple tabs open and you want to switch between them, you can use the driver.window_handles
method to get a list of window handles and then switch to the desired window. For example:
# Open a new tab or window
driver.execute_script("window.open('about:blank', '_blank');")
# Switch to the newly opened tab
driver.switch_to.window(driver.window_handles[1])
# Get the URL of the active tab
new_tab_url = driver.current_url
print("URL of the new tab:", new_tab_url)
This code opens a new tab, switches to it, and then retrieves the URL of the new tab.
Technically, ISP can block only some intermediary servers by IP-addresses. But it's impossible to block absolutely all VPN-servers, because there are so many of them and their addresses are constantly changing. Accordingly, in this case, you just need to use another VPN-server.
It means a proxy that has no access to the Internet. It is created using special software on the user's computer. Most often it is used to check the performance of the created site or web-application.
It's a router that redirects all traffic through a VPN server. Many router models support this function, you only need to specify the data for connecting to a particular VPN (that is, enter the parameters that will provide a VPN service). And some manufacturers provide such routers, in which all settings are already prescribed (the developers themselves provide a VPN-service or are representatives of such).
What else…