Various aspects of Wikipedia can be monitored with RSS or Atom feeds to make it easier to keep track of changes.
You can set up an RSS or Atom feed of your watchlist that is accessible even when logged out: [1]
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php?action=feedwatchlist&wlowner=USERNAME&wltoken=TOKEN
, where USERNAME is your username without the User: prefix and TOKEN is the watchlist token you copied from your preferences. If you would prefer an Atom feed rather than an RSS one, add "&feedformat=atom" to the Link of your feed.&hours=72&wlexcludeuser=USERNAME
to display the maximum length and to exclude your own changes.You can export the contents of a particular article or set of articles in XML format via the Special:Export page. This special page allows exporting the history of the page as well (up to 1000 revisions). Test out the full-history export on a page with a short history, to make sure you know what you are getting.
Scraped feeds from Wikipedia pages:
Various aspects of Wikipedia can be monitored with RSS or Atom feeds to make it easier to keep track of changes.
You can set up an RSS or Atom feed of your watchlist that is accessible even when logged out: [1]
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php?action=feedwatchlist&wlowner=USERNAME&wltoken=TOKEN
, where USERNAME is your username without the User: prefix and TOKEN is the watchlist token you copied from your preferences. If you would prefer an Atom feed rather than an RSS one, add "&feedformat=atom" to the Link of your feed.&hours=72&wlexcludeuser=USERNAME
to display the maximum length and to exclude your own changes.You can export the contents of a particular article or set of articles in XML format via the Special:Export page. This special page allows exporting the history of the page as well (up to 1000 revisions). Test out the full-history export on a page with a short history, to make sure you know what you are getting.
Scraped feeds from Wikipedia pages: