14 Integrations with ScrapFly

View a list of ScrapFly integrations and software that integrates with ScrapFly below. Compare the best ScrapFly integrations as well as features, ratings, user reviews, and pricing of software that integrates with ScrapFly. Here are the current ScrapFly integrations in 2025:

  • 1
    Zapier

    Zapier

    Zapier

    Connect your apps and automate workflows. Easy automation for busy people. Zapier moves info between your web apps automatically, so you can focus on your most important work. Link your web apps with a few clicks, so they can share data. Pass info between your apps with workflows called Zaps. Build processes faster and get more done—no code required. Discover how Zapier makes automation accessible to everyone. Stick with the tools that work for you. Zapier connects more web apps than anyone, and we add new options every week. We integrate with apps such as Facebook Lead Ads, Slack, Quickbooks, Google Sheets, Google Docs, & many more! Our editor was made for do-it-yourself automation. Set up Zaps without developer help. Use Zapier’s built-in apps to create powerful workflows without using separate services. More than 3 million people rely on Zapier to take care of their tedious tasks. Zapier Agents allow businesses to automate real-world tasks by creating custom AI-powered teammates.
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    Starting Price: $19.99 per month
  • 2
    Make

    Make

    Make

    Make is a visual platform for anyone to design, build, and automate anything—from tasks and workflows to apps and systems—without coding. SMBs, startups, scaleups, teams, and enterprises around the world use Make to scale their business faster than ever. Make enables people to connect and create workflows at the speed of their ideas. With Make, anyone can build like a developer, launching solutions across all industries and business areas at a fraction of the cost and time. Make allows teams to visualize, modify, and collaborate on processes that scale as quickly as their organization. Whether you’re integrating sales and marketing tools, automating a customer journey, improving business operations, or building a custom back-end system—creating on Make is powerful, intuitive, and playful. As our Maker community has shown us, when the experience of building sparks as much joy as the solution, there are no limits to what's possible.
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    Starting Price: $9 per month
  • 3
    n8n

    n8n

    n8n

    Build complex automations 10x faster, without fighting APIs. Your days spent slogging through a spaghetti of scripts are over. Use JavaScript when you need flexibility and UI for everything else. n8n allows you to build flexible workflows focused on deep data integration. And with sharable templates and a user-friendly UI, the less technical people on your team can collaborate on them too. Unlike other tools, complexity is not a limitation. So you can build whatever you want — without stressing over budget. Connect APIs with no code to automate basic tasks. Or write vanilla Javascript when you need to manipulate complex data. You can implement multiple triggers. Branch and merge your workflows. And even pause flows to wait for external events. Interface easily with any API or service with custom HTTP requests. Avoid breaking live workflows by separating dev and prod environments with unique sets of auth data.
    Starting Price: $20 per month
  • 4
    Python

    Python

    Python

    The core of extensible programming is defining functions. Python allows mandatory and optional arguments, keyword arguments, and even arbitrary argument lists. Whether you're new to programming or an experienced developer, it's easy to learn and use Python. Python can be easy to pick up whether you're a first-time programmer or you're experienced with other languages. The following pages are a useful first step to get on your way to writing programs with Python! The community hosts conferences and meetups to collaborate on code, and much more. Python's documentation will help you along the way, and the mailing lists will keep you in touch. The Python Package Index (PyPI) hosts thousands of third-party modules for Python. Both Python's standard library and the community-contributed modules allow for endless possibilities.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 5
    LangChain

    LangChain

    LangChain

    LangChain is a powerful, composable framework designed for building, running, and managing applications powered by large language models (LLMs). It offers an array of tools for creating context-aware, reasoning applications, allowing businesses to leverage their own data and APIs to enhance functionality. LangChain’s suite includes LangGraph for orchestrating agent-driven workflows, and LangSmith for agent observability and performance management. Whether you're building prototypes or scaling full applications, LangChain offers the flexibility and tools needed to optimize the LLM lifecycle, with seamless integrations and fault-tolerant scalability.
  • 6
    Node.js

    Node.js

    Node.js

    As an asynchronous event-driven JavaScript runtime, Node.js is designed to build scalable network applications. Upon each connection, the callback is fired, but if there is no work to be done, Node.js will sleep. This is in contrast to today's more common concurrency model, in which OS threads are employed. Thread-based networking is relatively inefficient and very difficult to use. Furthermore, users of Node.js are free from worries of dead-locking the process, since there are no locks. Almost no function in Node.js directly performs I/O, so the process never blocks except when the I/O is performed using synchronous methods of Node.js standard library. Because nothing blocks, scalable systems are very reasonable to develop in Node.js. Node.js is similar in design to, and influenced by, systems like Ruby's Event Machine and Python's Twisted. Node.js takes the event model a bit further. It presents an event loop as a runtime construct instead of as a library.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 7
    PHP

    PHP

    PHP

    Fast, flexible and pragmatic, PHP powers everything from your blog to the most popular websites in the world. The PHP development team announces the immediate availability of PHP 8.0.20. When using the PHP.net website, there is even no need to get to a search box to access the content you would like to see quickly. You can use short PHP.net URLs to access pages directly.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 8
    Ruby

    Ruby

    Ruby Language

    Wondering why Ruby is so popular? Its fans call it a beautiful, artful language. And yet, they say it’s handy and practical. Since its public release in 1995, Ruby has drawn devoted coders worldwide. In 2006, Ruby achieved mass acceptance. With active user groups formed in the world’s major cities and Ruby-related conferences filled to capacity. Ruby-Talk, the primary mailing list for discussion of the Ruby language, climbed to an average of 200 messages per day in 2006. It has dropped in recent years as the size of the community pushed discussion from one central list into many smaller groups. Ruby is ranked among the top 10 on most of the indices that measure the growth and popularity of programming languages worldwide (such as the TIOBE index). Much of the growth is attributed to the popularity of software written in Ruby, particularly the Ruby on Rails web framework.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 9
    TypeScript

    TypeScript

    TypeScript

    TypeScript adds additional syntax to JavaScript to support a tighter integration with your editor. Catch errors early in your editor. TypeScript code converts to JavaScript, which runs anywhere JavaScript runs: In a browser, on Node.js or Deno and in your apps. TypeScript understands JavaScript and uses type inference to give you great tooling without additional code. TypeScript was used by 78% of the 2020 State of JS respondents, with 93% saying they would use it again. The most common kinds of errors that programmers write can be described as type errors: a certain kind of value was used where a different kind of value was expected. This could be due to simple typos, a failure to understand the API surface of a library, incorrect assumptions about runtime behavior, or other errors.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 10
    R

    R

    The R Foundation

    R is a language and environment for statistical computing and graphics. It is a GNU project which is similar to the S language and environment which was developed at Bell Laboratories (formerly AT&T, now Lucent Technologies) by John Chambers and colleagues. R can be considered as a different implementation of S. There are some important differences, but much code written for S runs unaltered under R. R provides a wide variety of statistical (linear and nonlinear modelling, classical statistical tests, time-series analysis, classification, clustering, …) and graphical techniques, and is highly extensible. The S language is often the vehicle of choice for research in statistical methodology, and R provides an Open Source route to participation in that activity. One of R’s strengths is the ease with which well-designed publication-quality plots can be produced, including mathematical symbols and formulae where needed.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 11
    Puppeteer

    Puppeteer

    Puppeteer

    Most things that you can do manually in the browser can be done using Puppeteer! Puppeteer-core is intended to be a lightweight version of Puppeteer for launching an existing browser installation or for connecting to a remote one. Be sure that the version of puppeteer-core you install is compatible with the browser you intend to connect to. Puppeteer will be familiar to people using other browser testing frameworks. You create an instance of Browser, open pages, and then manipulate them with Puppeteer's API. By default, Puppeteer downloads and uses a specific version of Chromium so its API is guaranteed to work out of the box. To use Puppeteer with a different version of Chrome or Chromium, pass in the executable's path when creating a Browser instance.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 12
    JavaScript

    JavaScript

    JavaScript

    JavaScript is a scripting language and programming language for the web that enables developers to build dynamic elements on the web. Over 97% of the websites in the world use client-side JavaScript. JavaScript is one of the most important scripting languages on the web. Strings in JavaScript are contained within a pair of either single quotation marks '' or double quotation marks "". Both quotes represent Strings but be sure to choose one and STICK WITH IT. If you start with a single quote, you need to end with a single quote. There are pros and cons to using both IE single quotes tend to make it easier to write HTML within Javascript as you don’t have to escape the line with a double quote. Let’s say you’re trying to use quotation marks inside a string. You’ll need to use opposite quotation marks inside and outside of JavaScript single or double quotes.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 13
    LlamaIndex

    LlamaIndex

    LlamaIndex

    LlamaIndex is a “data framework” to help you build LLM apps. Connect semi-structured data from API's like Slack, Salesforce, Notion, etc. LlamaIndex is a simple, flexible data framework for connecting custom data sources to large language models. LlamaIndex provides the key tools to augment your LLM applications with data. Connect your existing data sources and data formats (API's, PDF's, documents, SQL, etc.) to use with a large language model application. Store and index your data for different use cases. Integrate with downstream vector store and database providers. LlamaIndex provides a query interface that accepts any input prompt over your data and returns a knowledge-augmented response. Connect unstructured sources such as documents, raw text files, PDF's, videos, images, etc. Easily integrate structured data sources from Excel, SQL, etc. Provides ways to structure your data (indices, graphs) so that this data can be easily used with LLMs.
  • 14
    GraphQL

    GraphQL

    The GraphQL Foundation

    GraphQL is a query language for APIs and a runtime for fulfilling those queries with your existing data. GraphQL provides a complete and understandable description of the data in your API, gives clients the power to ask for exactly what they need and nothing more, makes it easier to evolve APIs over time, and enables powerful developer tools. Send a GraphQL query to your API and get exactly what you need, nothing more and nothing less. GraphQL queries always return predictable results. Apps using GraphQL are fast and stable because they control the data they get, not the server. GraphQL queries access not just the properties of one resource but also smoothly follow references between them. While typical REST APIs require loading from multiple URLs, GraphQL APIs get all the data your app needs in a single request. Apps using GraphQL can be quick even on slow mobile network connections.
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