I'm really curious about the results of this test.
How many pages were parsed correctly? How many had errors? Any fatal errors?
I think this could be a very valuable tool to measure both the performance and the forgiveness/flexibility of the parser, and a great way to convince potential users of lexbor's value.
However, most users are going to at least want to see the highlights of the results on a website or in a markdown document instead of having to clone and run the benchmark themselves.
Thanks for all your hard work!
I'm really curious about the results of this test.
How many pages were parsed correctly? How many had errors? Any fatal errors?
I think this could be a very valuable tool to measure both the performance and the forgiveness/flexibility of the parser, and a great way to convince potential users of lexbor's value.
However, most users are going to at least want to see the highlights of the results on a website or in a markdown document instead of having to clone and run the benchmark themselves.
Thanks for all your hard work!