.. _quickstart: Quickstart ========== .. module:: requests.models Eager to get started? This page gives a good introduction in how to get started with Requests. This assumes you already have Requests installed. If you do not, head over to the :ref:`Installation ` section. First, make sure that: * Requests is :ref:`installed ` * Requests is :ref:`up-to-date ` Let's get started with some simple examples. Make a Request -------------- Making a request with Requests is very simple. Begin by importing the Requests module:: >>> import requests Now, let's try to get a webpage. For this example, let's get GitHub's public timeline :: >>> r = requests.get('https://github.com/timeline.json') Now, we have a :class:`Response` object called ``r``. We can get all the information we need from this object. Requests' simple API means that all forms of HTTP request are as obvious. For example, this is how you make an HTTP POST request:: >>> r = requests.post("http://httpbin.org/post") Nice, right? What about the other HTTP request types: PUT, DELETE, HEAD and OPTIONS? These are all just as simple:: >>> r = requests.put("http://httpbin.org/put") >>> r = requests.delete("http://httpbin.org/delete") >>> r = requests.head("http://httpbin.org/get") >>> r = requests.options("http://httpbin.org/get") That's all well and good, but it's also only the start of what Requests can do. Passing Parameters In URLs -------------------------- You often want to send some sort of data in the URL's query string. If you were constructing the URL by hand, this data would be given as key/value pairs in the URL after a question mark, e.g. ``httpbin.org/get?key=val``. Requests allows you to provide these arguments as a dictionary, using the ``params`` keyword argument. As an example, if you wanted to pass ``key1=value1`` and ``key2=value2`` to ``httpbin.org/get``, you would use the following code:: >>> payload = {'key1': 'value1', 'key2': 'value2'} >>> r = requests.get("http://httpbin.org/get", params=payload) You can see that the URL has been correctly encoded by printing the URL:: >>> print r.url http://httpbin.org/get?key2=value2&key1=value1 Note that any dictionary key whose value is ``None`` will not be added to the URL's query string. Response Content ---------------- We can read the content of the server's response. Consider the GitHub timeline again:: >>> import requests >>> r = requests.get('https://github.com/timeline.json') >>> r.text u'[{"repository":{"open_issues":0,"url":"https://github.com/... Requests will automatically decode content from the server. Most unicode charsets are seamlessly decoded. When you make a request, Requests makes educated guesses about the encoding of the response based on the HTTP headers. The text encoding guessed by Requests is used when you access ``r.text``. You can find out what encoding Requests is using, and change it, using the ``r.encoding`` property:: >>> r.encoding 'utf-8' >>> r.encoding = 'ISO-8859-1' If you change the encoding, Requests will use the new value of ``r.encoding`` whenever you call ``r.text``. Requests will also use custom encodings in the event that you need them. If you have created your own encoding and registered it with the ``codecs`` module, you can simply use the codec name as the value of ``r.encoding`` and Requests will handle the decoding for you. Binary Response Content ----------------------- You can also access the response body as bytes, for non-text requests:: >>> r.content b'[{"repository":{"open_issues":0,"url":"https://github.com/... The ``gzip`` and ``deflate`` transfer-encodings are automatically decoded for you. For example, to create an image from binary data returned by a request, you can use the following code:: >>> from PIL import Image >>> from StringIO import StringIO >>> i = Image.open(StringIO(r.content)) JSON Response Content --------------------- There's also a builtin JSON decoder, in case you're dealing with JSON data:: >>> import requests >>> r = requests.get('https://github.com/timeline.json') >>> r.json() [{u'repository': {u'open_issues': 0, u'url': 'https://github.com/... In case the JSON decoding fails, ``r.json`` raises an exception. For example, if the response gets a 401 (Unauthorized), attempting ``r.json`` raises ``ValueError: No JSON object could be decoded`` Raw Response Content -------------------- In the rare case that you'd like to get the raw socket response from the server, you can access ``r.raw``. If you want to do this, make sure you set ``stream=True`` in your initial request. Once you do, you can do this:: >>> r = requests.get('https://github.com/timeline.json', stream=True) >>> r.raw >>> r.raw.read(10) '\x1f\x8b\x08\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x03' Custom Headers -------------- If you'd like to add HTTP headers to a request, simply pass in a ``dict`` to the ``headers`` parameter. For example, we didn't specify our content-type in the previous example:: >>> import json >>> url = 'https://api.github.com/some/endpoint' >>> payload = {'some': 'data'} >>> headers = {'content-type': 'application/json'} >>> r = requests.post(url, data=json.dumps(payload), headers=headers) More complicated POST requests ------------------------------ Typically, you want to send some form-encoded data — much like an HTML form. To do this, simply pass a dictionary to the ``data`` argument. Your dictionary of data will automatically be form-encoded when the request is made:: >>> payload = {'key1': 'value1', 'key2': 'value2'} >>> r = requests.post("http://httpbin.org/post", data=payload) >>> print r.text { ... "form": { "key2": "value2", "key1": "value1" }, ... } There are many times that you want to send data that is not form-encoded. If you pass in a ``string`` instead of a ``dict``, that data will be posted directly. For example, the GitHub API v3 accepts JSON-Encoded POST/PATCH data:: >>> import json >>> url = 'https://api.github.com/some/endpoint' >>> payload = {'some': 'data'} >>> r = requests.post(url, data=json.dumps(payload)) POST a Multipart-Encoded File ----------------------------- Requests makes it simple to upload Multipart-encoded files:: >>> url = 'http://httpbin.org/post' >>> files = {'file': open('report.xls', 'rb')} >>> r = requests.post(url, files=files) >>> r.text { ... "files": { "file": "" }, ... } You can set the filename explicitly:: >>> url = 'http://httpbin.org/post' >>> files = {'file': ('report.xls', open('report.xls', 'rb'))} >>> r = requests.post(url, files=files) >>> r.text { ... "files": { "file": "" }, ... } If you want, you can send strings to be received as files:: >>> url = 'http://httpbin.org/post' >>> files = {'file': ('report.csv', 'some,data,to,send\nanother,row,to,send\n')} >>> r = requests.post(url, files=files) >>> r.text { ... "files": { "file": "some,data,to,send\\nanother,row,to,send\\n" }, ... } Response Status Codes --------------------- We can check the response status code:: >>> r = requests.get('http://httpbin.org/get') >>> r.status_code 200 Requests also comes with a built-in status code lookup object for easy reference:: >>> r.status_code == requests.codes.ok True If we made a bad request (a 4XX client error or 5XX server error response), we can raise it with :class:`Response.raise_for_status()`:: >>> bad_r = requests.get('http://httpbin.org/status/404') >>> bad_r.status_code 404 >>> bad_r.raise_for_status() Traceback (most recent call last): File "requests/models.py", line 832, in raise_for_status raise http_error requests.exceptions.HTTPError: 404 Client Error But, since our ``status_code`` for ``r`` was ``200``, when we call ``raise_for_status()`` we get:: >>> r.raise_for_status() None All is well. Response Headers ---------------- We can view the server's response headers using a Python dictionary:: >>> r.headers { 'content-encoding': 'gzip', 'transfer-encoding': 'chunked', 'connection': 'close', 'server': 'nginx/1.0.4', 'x-runtime': '148ms', 'etag': '"e1ca502697e5c9317743dc078f67693f"', 'content-type': 'application/json' } The dictionary is special, though: it's made just for HTTP headers. According to `RFC 2616 `_, HTTP Headers are case-insensitive. So, we can access the headers using any capitalization we want:: >>> r.headers['Content-Type'] 'application/json' >>> r.headers.get('content-type') 'application/json' Cookies ------- If a response contains some Cookies, you can get quick access to them:: >>> url = 'http://example.com/some/cookie/setting/url' >>> r = requests.get(url) >>> r.cookies['example_cookie_name'] 'example_cookie_value' To send your own cookies to the server, you can use the ``cookies`` parameter:: >>> url = 'http://httpbin.org/cookies' >>> cookies = dict(cookies_are='working') >>> r = requests.get(url, cookies=cookies) >>> r.text '{"cookies": {"cookies_are": "working"}}' Redirection and History ----------------------- Requests will automatically perform location redirection while using the GET and OPTIONS verbs. GitHub redirects all HTTP requests to HTTPS. We can use the ``history`` method of the Response object to track redirection. Let's see what GitHub does:: >>> r = requests.get('http://github.com') >>> r.url 'https://github.com/' >>> r.status_code 200 >>> r.history [] The :class:`Response.history` list contains the :class:`Request` objects that were created in order to complete the request. The list is sorted from the oldest to the most recent request. If you're using GET or OPTIONS, you can disable redirection handling with the ``allow_redirects`` parameter:: >>> r = requests.get('http://github.com', allow_redirects=False) >>> r.status_code 301 >>> r.history [] If you're using POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE or HEAD, you can enable redirection as well:: >>> r = requests.post('http://github.com', allow_redirects=True) >>> r.url 'https://github.com/' >>> r.history [] Timeouts -------- You can tell Requests to stop waiting for a response after a given number of seconds with the ``timeout`` parameter:: >>> requests.get('http://github.com', timeout=0.001) Traceback (most recent call last): File "", line 1, in requests.exceptions.Timeout: HTTPConnectionPool(host='github.com', port=80): Request timed out. (timeout=0.001) .. admonition:: Note ``timeout`` is not a time limit on the entire response download; rather, an exception is raised if the server has not issued a response for ``timeout`` seconds (more precisely, if no bytes have been received on the underlying socket for ``timeout`` seconds). Errors and Exceptions --------------------- In the event of a network problem (e.g. DNS failure, refused connection, etc), Requests will raise a :class:`~requests.exceptions.ConnectionError` exception. In the event of the rare invalid HTTP response, Requests will raise an :class:`~requests.exceptions.HTTPError` exception. If a request times out, a :class:`~requests.exceptions.Timeout` exception is raised. If a request exceeds the configured number of maximum redirections, a :class:`~requests.exceptions.TooManyRedirects` exception is raised. All exceptions that Requests explicitly raises inherit from :class:`requests.exceptions.RequestException`. ----------------------- Ready for more? Check out the :ref:`advanced ` section.