The 2nd easiest kind of webpage “scraping”, as it is called, is also pretty simple. You get 4 opportunities to “Keep After ___” and/or “Keep Before ____”.
Allow me to illustrate.
Suppose a webpage contained “The price of Gold is $1350 USD today.” If you wanted to extract only the number “1350″, you would use:
Keep After $
Keep Before USD
After the first “Keep After $” command it chops away everything before “$” and the result is “1350 USD today.” Then, after the second command “Keep Before USD”, it would discard everything from USD onward, and keeping only “1350″. Got it?
I think of it like putting a long string of characters onto a “Chopping Block”, starting at the left side of the string. These KeepAfter and KeepBefore things always work from Left to Right.
Suppose there is a different page, and it has <title>Animal Kingdom</title> tags that put a title in the top of the window, but you don’t want that. Instead, you want the title of an item inside that webpage, and it also happens to be in between title tags like this <title>Article about Bees</title> somewhere in the middle of the page (just like this paragraph).
So you want to skip past the first title, and get the second one. You could
Keep After /title
Keep After <title>
Keep Before </title>
and that would leave being “Article about Bees” in your Chop Result, ready to be spoken by the Moose.