IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
50.169.222.243 | us | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
115.22.22.109 | kr | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
50.174.7.152 | us | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
50.171.122.27 | us | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
50.174.7.162 | us | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
47.243.114.192 | hk | 8180 | 35 minutes ago |
72.10.160.91 | ca | 29605 | 35 minutes ago |
218.252.231.17 | hk | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
62.99.138.162 | at | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
50.217.226.41 | us | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
50.174.7.159 | us | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
190.108.84.168 | pe | 4145 | 35 minutes ago |
50.169.37.50 | us | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
50.223.246.238 | us | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
50.223.246.239 | us | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
50.168.72.116 | us | 80 | 35 minutes ago |
72.10.160.174 | ca | 3989 | 35 minutes ago |
72.10.160.173 | ca | 32677 | 35 minutes ago |
159.203.61.169 | ca | 8080 | 35 minutes ago |
209.97.150.167 | us | 3128 | 35 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
On smartphones, when a proxy is turned on, the corresponding indicator (the "VPN" icon) appears in the status bar. In Windows you have to go to "Settings", open "Network and Internet". Under "Proxy Server", if the item "Manual" is activated, it means that the proxy is engaged right now.
If you want to close an application running in the background while using PyQt5 and Selenium in Python, you can use the pyautogui library to simulate keyboard shortcuts or mouse clicks that trigger the application's exit action.
Here's an example using PyQt5 for the GUI and Selenium for web automation, along with pyautogui to close the application:
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QMainWindow, QPushButton
from selenium import webdriver
import pyautogui
import sys
import time
class MyMainWindow(QMainWindow):
def __init__(self):
super(MyMainWindow, self).__init__()
# Create a button to close the application
self.close_button = QPushButton("Close Application", self)
self.close_button.clicked.connect(self.close_application)
def close_application(self):
# Add code here to close the application or trigger the exit action
print("Closing application")
if __name__ == '__main__':
# Create the PyQt application
app = QApplication(sys.argv)
main_window = MyMainWindow()
main_window.show()
# Start the Selenium WebDriver
driver = webdriver.Chrome()
try:
# Navigate to a webpage (you can replace this with your Selenium code)
driver.get("https://example.com")
# Simulate a user interacting with the application
# ...
# Simulate closing the application using pyautogui
time.sleep(2) # Wait for the application to be in focus
pyautogui.hotkey('alt', 'f4') # Simulate pressing Alt+F4 to close the active window
finally:
# Close the Selenium WebDriver
driver.quit()
# Start the PyQt application event loop
sys.exit(app.exec_())
- The MyMainWindow class is a basic PyQt5 window with a button.
- The close_application method is connected to the button's click event and prints a message.
- After starting the Selenium WebDriver, you can simulate user interactions with the application.
- pyautogui.hotkey('alt', 'f4') simulates pressing Alt+F4, a common keyboard shortcut to close the active window.
In Scrapy, you can navigate to the next page of a website by following the links or buttons that lead to subsequent pages. This typically involves extracting the link or button URL from the current page and generating a new request to scrape the content of the next page.
Here's a basic example of how you can navigate to the next page in a Scrapy spider:
import scrapy
class MySpider(scrapy.Spider):
name = 'my_spider'
start_urls = ['http://example.com/page1']
def parse(self, response):
# Extract data from the current page
# ...
# Follow the link to the next page (assuming pagination link is in an anchor tag)
next_page_url = response.css('a.next-page-link::attr(href)').extract_first()
if next_page_url:
yield scrapy.Request(url=next_page_url, callback=self.parse)
- The spider starts with the initial URL (start_urls).
- The parse method extracts data from the current page.
- It then extracts the URL of the next page using a CSS selector (response.css('a.next-page-link::attr(href)').extract_first()). Adjust this selector based on the structure of the website you are scraping.
- If a next page URL is found, a new scrapy.Request is yielded with the URL and the same callback function (self.parse). This creates a new request to scrape the content of the next page.
This is a proxy server integrated into the app to redirect traffic. It allows you to protect yourself from being tracked or to use the program where it is blocked. For example, at one time, users used a proxy server to bypass Telegram blocking.
The easiest way to do this is to use online proxy checking services. For example, Hidemy Name. It is free, displays technical data about the connection, and at the same time it also checks the ping.
What else…