| name | ax-grep-cli |
| description | Use ax-grep as a CLI-first page search and page-check tool before opening a browser. Best for agents that need compact semantic trees, source links, hidden app signals, forms, tables, citations, and browser handoff guidance. |
ax-grep CLI
Use ax-grep before browser automation when a subagent needs to inspect a
search result, URL, HTML file, or captured page.
First Command
ax-grep "https://example.com" --agent
If ax-grep is not on PATH, use the npm executable:
npx --yes ax-grep@latest "https://example.com" --agent
For smaller context:
ax-grep "https://example.com" --agent-brief
Search
ax-grep --search "official docs pricing" --agent
Use the returned agent.*CommandArgs fields when continuing. They are JSON argv
arrays in execution order. Use agent.*Command when you need a shell string.
Agent Policy
- Prefer
--agent or --agent-brief over raw text output for subagents.
- Read
agent.executor, agent.handoff, agent.next, agent.readTargets,
and any returned agent.sourceChoices or agent.resultChoices before
deciding.
- If
agent.executor.decision is return, answer from the referenced
readFrom payload instead of opening a browser.
- If a URL follow-up is needed, run the provided
commandArgs one command at a
time.
- Escalate to browser automation only when
needsBrowserHtml,
needsBrowserInteraction, or the executor/handoff fields say it is needed.
- Do not run multiple browser-backed checks in parallel.
Useful Patterns
Inspect a result and open the best match in one step:
ax-grep --search "site:example.com api reference" --open-result best --agent
If an engine rejects best, open the top ranked result directly:
ax-grep --search "site:example.com api reference" --open-result 1 --agent
Check a page for specific terms:
ax-grep "https://example.com/docs" --find "rate limit" --find "authentication" --agent
Read static HTML from another tool:
curl -fsSL "https://example.com" | ax-grep --stdin --agent
What ax-grep Sees
ax-grep --agent can expose:
- semantic headings, landmarks, links, buttons, forms, tables, and lists
- source-like links and ranked search choices
- JSON-LD schema facts, metadata, policies, topics, provenance, and citations
- hydration URLs, API endpoints, runtime hints, app config, and mobile hints
- recommended next commands and browser handoff reasons
Treat the full JSON payload as source of truth; top-level shortcuts are for
fast routing.