googler is a power tool to Google (web, news, videos and site search) from the command-line. It shows the title, URL and abstract for each result, which can be directly opened in a browser from the terminal. Results are fetched in pages (with page navigation). Supports sequential searches in a single googler instance.
googler was initially written to cater to headless servers without X. You can integrate it with a text-based browser. However, it has grown into a very handy and flexible utility that delivers much more. For example, fetch any number of results or start anywhere, limit search by any duration, define aliases to google search any number of websites, switch domains easily... all of this in a very clean interface without ads or stray URLs. The shell completion scripts make sure you don't need to remember any options.
googler isn't affiliated to Google in any way.
Here are some usage examples:
Google hello world:
$ googler hello world
Fetch 15 results updated within the last 14 months, starting from the 3rd result for the keywords jungle book in site imdb.com:
Fetch results on IPL cricket from Google India server in English:
$ googler -c in -l en IPL cricket
Search for videos on PyCon 2020:
$ googler -V PyCon 2020
Search quoted text:
$ googler it\'s a \"beautiful world\" in spring
Search for a specific file type:
$ googler instrumental filetype:mp3
Disable automatic spelling correction, e.g. fetch results for googler instead of google:
$ googler -x googler
I'm feeling lucky search:
$ googler -j leather jackets
Website specific search:
$ googler -w amazon.com -w ebay.com digital camera
Site specific search continues at omniprompt.
Positional arguments are joined (with delimiting whitespace) to form the final query, so you can be creative with your aliases. For instance, always exclude seoarticlefactory.com from search results:
$ alias googler='googler " -site:seoarticlefactory.com"'
$ googler '<hugely popular keyword filled with SEO garbage>'
Alias to find definitions of words:
alias define='googler -n 2 define'
Look up n, p, o, O, q, g keywords or a result index at the omniprompt: as the omniprompt recognizes these keys or index strings as commands, you need to prefix them with g, e.g.,
g n
g g keywords
g 1
Input and output redirection:
$ googler -C hello world < input > output
Note that -C is required to avoid printing control characters (for colored output).
Pipe output:
$ googler -C hello world | tee output
Use a custom color scheme, e.g., a warm color scheme designed for Solarized Dark (screenshot):
$ googler --colors bjdxxy google
$ GOOGLER_COLORS=bjdxxy googler google
Tunnel traffic through an HTTPS proxy, e.g., a local Privoxy instance listening on port 8118:
$ googler --proxy localhost:8118 google
By default the environment variable https_proxy is used, if defined.
Quote multiple search keywords to auto-complete (using completion script):
Google Search, Google Site Search, Google News, Google Videos
Fast and clean (no ads, stray URLs or clutter), custom color
Navigate result pages from omniprompt, open URLs in browser
Effortless keyword-based site search with googler @t add-on
Search and option completion scripts for Bash, Zsh and Fish
Fetch n results in a go, start at the nth result
Disable automatic spelling correction and search exact keywords
Specify duration, country/domain (default: worldwide/.com), language
Google keywords (e.g. filetype:mime, site:somesite.com) support
Open the first result directly in browser (as in I'm Feeling Lucky)
Non-stop searches: fire new searches at omniprompt without exiting
HTTPS proxy, User Agent, TLS 1.2 (default) support
Comprehensive documentation, man page with handy usage examples
Minimal dependencies
Installation
Dependencies
googler requires Python 3.6 or later. Only the latest patch release of each minor version is supported.
To copy url to clipboard at the omniprompt, googler looks for xsel or xclip or termux-clipboard-set (in the same order) on Linux, pbcopy (default installed) on macOS and clip (default installed) on Windows. It also supports GNU Screen and tmux copy-paste buffers in the absence of X11.
From a package manager
Install googler from your package manager. If the version available is dated try an alternative installation method.
Search keyword and option completion scripts for Bash, Fish and Zsh can be found in respective subdirectories of auto-completion/. Please refer to your shell's manual for installation instructions.
Usage
Cmdline options
usage: googler [-h] [-s N] [-n N] [-N] [-V] [-c TLD] [-l LANG] [-g CC] [-x]
[--colorize [{auto,always,never}]] [-C] [--colors COLORS] [-j] [-t dN] [--from FROM]
[--to TO] [-w SITE] [-e SITE] [--unfilter] [-p PROXY] [--notweak] [--json]
[--url-handler UTIL] [--show-browser-logs] [--np] [-4] [-6] [-u] [--include-git] [-v] [-d]
[KEYWORD [KEYWORD ...]]
Google from the command-line.
positional arguments:
KEYWORD search keywords
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-s N, --start N start at the Nth result
-n N, --count N show N results (default 10)
-N, --news show results from news section
-V, --videos show results from videos section
-c TLD, --tld TLD country-specific search with top-level domain .TLD, e.g., 'in' for India
-l LANG, --lang LANG display in language LANG
-g CC, --geoloc CC country-specific geolocation search with country code CC, e.g. 'in' for India.
Country codes are the same as top-level domains
-x, --exact disable automatic spelling correction
--colorize [{auto,always,never}]
whether to colorize output; defaults to 'auto', which enables color when stdout
is a tty device; using --colorize without an argument is equivalent to
--colorize=always
-C, --nocolor equivalent to --colorize=never
--colors COLORS set output colors (see man page for details)
-j, --first, --lucky open the first result in web browser and exit
-t dN, --time dN time limit search [h5 (5 hrs), d5 (5 days), w5 (5 weeks), m5 (5 months), y5 (5
years)]
--from FROM starting date/month/year of date range; must use American date format with
slashes, e.g., 2/24/2020, 2/2020, 2020; can be used in conjunction with --to,
and overrides -t, --time
--to TO ending date/month/year of date range; see --from
-w SITE, --site SITE search a site using Google
-e SITE, --exclude SITE
exclude site from results
--unfilter do not omit similar results
-p PROXY, --proxy PROXY
tunnel traffic through an HTTP proxy; PROXY is of the form
[http://][user:password@]proxyhost[:port]
--notweak disable TCP optimizations and forced TLS 1.2
--json output in JSON format; implies --noprompt
--url-handler UTIL custom script or cli utility to open results
--show-browser-logs do not suppress browser output (stdout and stderr)
--np, --noprompt search and exit, do not prompt
-4, --ipv4 only connect over IPv4 (by default, IPv4 is preferred but IPv6 is used as a
fallback)
-6, --ipv6 only connect over IPv6
-u, --upgrade perform in-place self-upgrade
--include-git when used with --upgrade, get latest git master
-v, --version show program's version number and exit
-d, --debug enable debugging
omniprompt keys:
n, p fetch the next or previous set of search results
index open the result corresponding to index in browser
f jump to the first page
o [index|range|a ...] open space-separated result indices, numeric ranges
(sitelinks unsupported in ranges), or all, in browser
open the current search in browser, if no arguments
O [index|range|a ...] like key 'o', but try to open in a GUI browser
g keywords new Google search for 'keywords' with original options
should be used to search omniprompt keys and indices
c index copy url to clipboard
u toggle url expansion
q, ^D, double Enter exit googler
? show omniprompt help
* other inputs issue a new search with original options
Configuration file
googler doesn't have any! This is to retain the speed of the utility and avoid OS-specific differences. Users can enjoy the advantages of config files using aliases (with the exception of the color scheme, which can be additionally customized through an environment variable; see Colors). There's no need to memorize options.
For example, the following alias for bash/zsh/ksh/etc.
alias g='googler -n 7 -c ru -l ru'
fetches 7 results from the Google Russia server, with preference towards results in Russian.
The alias serves both the purposes of using config files:
Persistent settings: when the user invokes g, it expands to the preferred settings.
Override settings: thanks to the way Python argparse works, googler is written so that the settings in alias are completely overridden by any options passed from cli. So when the same user runs g -l de -c de -n 12 hello world, 12 results are returned from the Google Germany server, with preference towards results in German.
googler @t
googler @t is a convenient add-on to Google Site Search with unique keywords. While googler has an integrated option to search a site, we simplified it further with aliases. The file googler_at contains a list of website search aliases. To source it, run:
$ source googler_at
or,
$ . googler_at
With googler @t, here's how you search Wikipedia for hexspeak:
$ @w hexspeak
Oh yes! You can combine other googler options too! To make life easier, you can also configure your shell to source the file when it starts.
All the aliases start with the @ symbol (hence the name googler @t) and there is minimum chance they will conflict with any shell commands. Feel free to add your own aliases to the file and contribute back the interesting ones.
Text-based browser integration
googler works out of the box with several text-based browsers if the BROWSER environment variable is set. For instance,
$ export BROWSER=w3m
or for one-time use,
$ BROWSER=w3m googler query
Due to certain graphical browsers spewing messages to the console, googler suppresses browser output by default unless BROWSER is set to one of the known text-based browsers: currently elinks, links, lynx, w3m or www-browser. If you use a different text-based browser, you will need to explicitly enable browser output with the --show-browser-logs option. If you believe your browser is popular enough, please submit an issue or pull request and we will consider whitelisting it. See the man page for more details on --show-browser-logs.
If you need to use a GUI browser with BROWSER set, use the omniprompt key O. googler will try to ignore text-based browsers and invoke a GUI browser. Browser logs are always suppressed with O.
Colors
googler allows you to customize the color scheme via a six-letter string, reminiscent of BSD LSCOLORS. The six letters represent the colors of
indices
titles
URLs
metadata/publishing info (Google News only)
abstracts
prompts
respectively. The six-letter string is passed in either as the argument to the --colors option, or as the value of the environment variable GOOGLER_COLORS.
We offer the following colors/styles:
Letter
Color/Style
a
black
b
red
c
green
d
yellow
e
blue
f
magenta
g
cyan
h
white
i
bright black
j
bright red
k
bright green
l
bright yellow
m
bright blue
n
bright magenta
o
bright cyan
p
bright white
A-H
bold version of the lowercase-letter color
I-P
bold version of the lowercase-letter bright color
x
normal
X
bold
y
reverse video
Y
bold reverse video
The default colors string is GKlgxy, which stands for
bold bright cyan indices
bold bright green titles
bright yellow URLs
cyan metadata/publishing info
normal abstracts
reverse video prompts
Note that
Bright colors (implemented as \x1b[90m–\x1b[97m) may not be available in all color-capable terminal emulators;
Some terminal emulators draw bold text in bright colors instead;
Some terminal emulators only distinguish between bold and bright colors via a default-off switch.
Please consult the manual of your terminal emulator as well as the Wikipedia article on ANSI escape sequences.
Domain-only URL
To show the domain names in search results instead of the expanded URL (and use lesser space), set the environment variable DISABLE_URL_EXPANSION.
Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)
On WSL, GUI browsers on the Windows side cannot be detected by default. You need to explicitly set the BROWSER environment variable to the path of a Windows executable. For instance, you can put the following in your shell's rc:
In some instances googler may show fewer number of results than you expect, e.g., if you fetch a single result (-n 1) it may not show any results. The reason is Google shows some Google service (e.g. Youtube) results, map locations etc. depending on your geographical data, which googler tries to omit. In some cases Google (the web-service) doesn't show exactly 10 results (default) on a search. We chose to omit these results as far as possible. While this can be fixed, it would need more processing (and more time). You can just navigate forward to fetch the next set of results.
By default googler applies some TCP optimizations and forces TLS 1.2 (on Python 3.4 and above). If you are facing connection issues, try disabling both using the --notweak switch.
Google News service is not available if the language is dk (Denmark), fi (Finland) or is (Iceland). Use -l en. Please refer to #187 for more information.
Some users have reported problems with a colored omniprompt (refer to issue #203) with iTerm2 on macOS. To force a plain omniprompt:
export DISABLE_PROMPT_COLOR=1
Notes
Initially I raised a pull request but I could see that the last change was made 7 years earlier. In addition, there is no GitHub activity from the original author Henri Hakkinen in past year. I have created this independent repo for the project with the name googler. I retained the original copyright information (though googler is organically different now).
Google provides a search API which returns the results in JSON format. However, as per my understanding from the official docs, the API issues the queries against an existing instance of a custom search engine and is limited by 100 search queries per day for free. In addition, I have reservations in paying if they ever change their plan or restrict the API in other ways. So I refrained from coupling with Google plans & policies or exposing my trackable personal custom search API key and identifier for the public. I retained the browser-way of doing it by fetching html, which is a open and free specification.
You can find a rofi script for googlerhere. Written by an anonymous user, untested and we don't maintain it.
The Albert Launcher python plugins repo
(awesome-albert-plugins)
includes suggestions-enabled search plugins for a variety of websites using
googler. Refer to the latter for demos and usage instructions.
Contributions
Pull requests are welcome. Please visit #209 for a list of TODOs.
You may freely redistribute it alongside the code, or use it when describing or linking to this project. You should NOT create modified versions of it, make it the logo or icon of your project (except personal forks and/or forks with the goal of upstreaming), or otherwise use it without written permission.
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