Track the completion of sports games from a URL.
const Scores = require("scores")
new Scores({
url: "http://place-where-scores-are.com",
interval: "5m", // or a number of ms
timezone: "America/New_York",
dailyCutoff: 180, // in minutes,
completed: { seriesCompleted: true }, // passed to _.filter to decide if an event is completed
parse: {
// Is used to try and guess the ending time of the event
// In this case we are checking for college basketball where
// there are two 20 minute halves. Eg NBA would be '12m' and 4
finalPeriod: 2,
periodLength: "20m", // or a number of ms
},
})
// Will be fired on the completion of each game
.on("event", (game) => console.log(game))
// Start the watcher
.start()
It intermittently parses the DOM of the URL to see if any games have been completed. There is also logic for what to do in situations where there are no games that day or none of the games have started, or all the games have finished.
options.interval (Integer, default: 15)
Interval in minutes for how often to request the urloptions.timezone (String, default: 'America/New_York')
A moment-timezone string for which timezone you want to base dates offoptions.dailyCutoff (Integer, default: 180)
The amount of minutes after midnight that the date should switch. This allows you to keep checking for the games that might go past midnight.options.url (String)
The url to request.{date}
will be replaced with today's date asYYYYMMDD
options.logger
A bucker compatible instance which will log interesting thingsoptions.parse (Object)
Options that will be passed directly to the parse method
start()
Start the interval to watch for new gamesstop()
Stop watching
scores.on('event', event => { ... })
scores.on('error', err => { ... })