With Python 2.6+ you can do:
echo '{"foo": "lorem", "bar": "ipsum"}' | python -m json.tool
or, if the JSON is in a file, you can do:
python -m json.tool my_json.json
if the JSON is from an internet source such as an API, you can use
curl http://my_url/ | python -m json.tool
For convenience in all of these cases you can make an alias:
alias prettyjson='python -m json.tool'
For even more convenience with a bit more typing to get it ready:
prettyjson_s() {
echo "$1" | python -m json.tool
}
prettyjson_f() {
python -m json.tool "$1"
}
prettyjson_w() {
curl "$1" | python -m json.tool
}
for all the above cases. You can put this in .bashrc
and it will be available every time in shell. Invoke it like prettyjson_s '{"foo": "lorem", "bar": "ipsum"}'
.
Note that as @pnd pointed out in the comments below, in Python 3.5+ the JSON object is no longer sorted by default. To sort, add the --sort-keys
flag to the end. I.e. ... | python -m json.tool --sort-keys
.
If you want only the remote URL, or if your are not connected to a network that can reach the remote repo:
git config --get remote.origin.url
If you require full output and you are on a network that can reach the remote repo where the origin resides :
git remote show origin
When using git clone
(from GitHub, or any source repository for that matter) the default name for the source of the clone is "origin". Using git remote show
will display the information about this remote name. The first few lines should show:
C:\Users\jaredpar\VsVim> git remote show origin
* remote origin
Fetch URL: git@github.com:jaredpar/VsVim.git
Push URL: git@github.com:jaredpar/VsVim.git
HEAD branch: master
Remote branches:
If you want to use the value in the script, you would use the first command listed in this answer.
Best Answer
Here is a bookmarklet that works perfectly for me:
If you now go to a Markdown page on Github and click the bookmark it will reformat the page and change the CSS so that it looks the same as on screen when you print. Now just print the page.
Bookmarklet contents: