I've been looking to create a local database of cooking recipes for personal use, but doing it manually is quite tedious, to say the least. It takes maybe 5-ish minutes per recipe to navigate the various websites copy the text, create file, re-format the inevitably flawed text into readable ASCII only, and look over the result for spelling, grammar, and readability errors (one guy who made the recipes was seemingly barely literate, could hardly pass 3rd grade English class).
Are there any utilities you are aware of that would make this easier? Obviously the more automated the better, but automating text-pulling from a website, line sizing, indents, list formatting, and easy headers would be the minimum to be "worth it". Useful features would be automated file creation and naming, savable config presets, unified functionality (I.E. one utility that does everything, rather than a web API, a reformatter, and a file-writer, for example). The recipes tend to be in a certain format (Rich text? not sure) that prevents much of the readability from being retained when copied and pasted manually.
I'm looking for one single utility if at all possible, due to not wanting excessive headaches on my end. I'm running Linux Mint. Thanks for the heads-up.
The problem with "de-bloat" (the one I am familiar with, the one Mental Outlaw spotlighted a few years ago) is that it's deprecated and Microsoft actively works against debloating software. If you're familiar with some script/software that works in 2024, I'd be glad to hear it.