SelectorSnap
2 ratings
)Overview
Pick a CSS selector, lock it, and extract matching content from any page on the same domain — one page or in bulk.
SelectorSnap lets you point at any element on a webpage and save it. Once saved, it finds and pulls that element's content automatically across any page on the same site. No coding. No scraper setup. Just click, lock, and export. 👥 Who uses it SEO professionals use it to pull titles, headings, prices, and on-page content across large sets of URLs. Developers use it to verify element presence and content across paginated pages. QA teams use it to check repeated content without writing test scripts. Content and data teams use it to collect structured content from product listings, blog archives, or any site with a repeating layout. ⚙️ How it works Activate the picker, hover over any element on the page, and click it. SelectorSnap generates the CSS selector for you. You can edit it manually if needed. Then lock it. After that, open any page on the same domain and go to the Extract tab. Hit Refresh and the matching content appears instantly. Switch between text, HTML, or link output depending on what you need. For bulk collection, go to the Bulk tab, paste your list of URLs (one per line, same domain only), and start the run. SelectorSnap opens each URL silently, extracts the content, and builds a results list you can copy or export as CSV or JSON. ⚠️ What to keep in mind The locked selector only runs on the domain where you picked it. If you need to extract from a different site, pick a new selector there.
5 out of 52 ratings
Details
- Version1.0.0
- UpdatedApril 7, 2026
- Offered byHackit Sagar
- Size21.06KiB
- LanguagesEnglish
- Developer
Email
hackitsagar@gmail.com - Non-traderThis developer has not identified itself as a trader. For consumers in the European Union, please note that consumer rights do not apply to contracts between you and this developer.
Privacy
This developer declares that your data is
- Not being sold to third parties, outside of the approved use cases
- Not being used or transferred for purposes that are unrelated to the item's core functionality
- Not being used or transferred to determine creditworthiness or for lending purposes