IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
213.143.113.82 | at | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
41.230.216.70 | tn | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
82.119.96.254 | sk | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
50.175.123.235 | us | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
72.10.160.91 | ca | 12411 | 12 minutes ago |
50.168.61.234 | us | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
203.99.240.182 | jp | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
50.231.110.26 | us | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
50.171.122.28 | us | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
183.240.46.42 | cn | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
62.99.138.162 | at | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
80.120.130.231 | at | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
50.175.123.232 | us | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
50.223.246.237 | us | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
190.58.248.86 | tt | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
105.214.49.116 | za | 5678 | 12 minutes ago |
50.218.208.13 | us | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
50.207.199.80 | us | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
50.145.138.156 | us | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
203.99.240.179 | jp | 80 | 12 minutes ago |
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Each option has its own advantages and disadvantages. HTTP is faster because it supports caching. And SOCKS provides better anonymity because it hides the headers of requested pages.
Automapper is a library primarily used for mapping data between objects in C# applications. It is not specifically designed for parsing XML, but you can use it in conjunction with other libraries, such as XmlDocument or XDocument, to map XML data to C# objects.
Here's a simple example of parsing XML using XDocument and Automapper:
Assuming you have the following XML structure:
John
Doe
And a corresponding C# class:
public class PersonDto
{
public string FirstName { get; set; }
public string LastName { get; set; }
}
You can use Automapper to map the XML data to your C# object:
using AutoMapper;
using System;
using System.Xml.Linq;
class Program
{
static void Main()
{
// XML data
string xmlData = "John Doe ";
// Parse XML using XDocument
XDocument xmlDoc = XDocument.Parse(xmlData);
// Configure Automapper
MapperConfiguration config = new MapperConfiguration(cfg =>
{
cfg.CreateMap()
.ForMember(dest => dest.FirstName, opt => opt.MapFrom(src => src.Element("FirstName").Value))
.ForMember(dest => dest.LastName, opt => opt.MapFrom(src => src.Element("LastName").Value));
});
IMapper mapper = config.CreateMapper();
// Map XML to C# object
PersonDto personDto = mapper.Map(xmlDoc.Root);
// Print the result
Console.WriteLine($"FirstName: {personDto.FirstName}");
Console.WriteLine($"LastName: {personDto.LastName}");
}
}
In this example, we use Automapper's CreateMap method to define a mapping between XElement and PersonDto. The ForMember method is used to specify how each property of PersonDto should be mapped from the corresponding XML element.
Keep in mind that Automapper may be more beneficial when dealing with complex object mappings rather than simple XML parsing scenarios. For straightforward XML parsing tasks, using XDocument or XmlDocument directly might be sufficient.
SQLite is a relational database management system, and XML is a markup language for encoding structured data. SQLite itself doesn't inherently support XML parsing. However, if you have XML data that you want to store in SQLite or retrieve from SQLite, you can follow a process of converting between XML and SQLite data.
Here's a general approach:
Convert XML to a Text Representation: Convert your XML data into a text representation, for example, by serializing it as a string. This can be done using XML serialization libraries available in your programming language.
Store the Text in a SQLite Table: Create a table in SQLite with a column to store the serialized XML text. Insert the XML data into this table.
CREATE TABLE xml_data (id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, xml_text TEXT);
INSERT INTO xml_data (xml_text) VALUES ('value ');
Retrieve the Text from the SQLite Table: Query the SQLite table to retrieve the stored XML text.
SELECT xml_text FROM xml_data WHERE id = 1;
Convert Text to XML: Deserialize the retrieved text back into XML using XML parsing libraries.
Example in Python using the xml.etree.ElementTree
module:
import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET
# Retrieve XML text from SQLite (replace with actual retrieval logic)
xml_text = "value "
# Parse XML text
root = ET.fromstring(xml_text)
# Access XML elements as needed
element_value = root.find('element').text
print("Element value:", element_value)
This is a basic approach, and the exact steps may depend on the programming language you're using and the tools available in that language for XML serialization and deserialization.
If you're working with XML data frequently, consider exploring databases designed for handling XML, such as XML databases or document-oriented databases, which may offer more native support for XML storage and retrieval. SQLite, being a relational database, is optimized for relational data rather than XML.
A proxy server spoofs the IP address, port, and hardware information. It can also act as a secure gateway for data transmission in an already encrypted form (for example, this is how a proxy with the SOCKS5 protocol works).
The easiest option is to use ready-made online proxy checkers. For example, Hidemy.name, which shows the type of protocol used. Or you can simply run Speedtest - this will show you the bandwidth and response speed (ping).
What else…