Parse and format link headers according to RFC 5988 "Web Linking"
Project description
Parse and format link headers according to RFC 5988 “Web Linking”.
Usage (assuming a suitable headers object in the environment):
>>> headers['Link'] = str(LinkHeader([Link("http://example.com/foo", rel="self"), ... Link("http://example.com", rel="up")])) >>> headers['Link'] '<http://example.com/foo>; rel=self, <http://example.com>; rel=up' >>> parse(headers['Link']) LinkHeader([Link('http://example.com/foo', rel='self'), Link('http://example.com', rel='up')])
Blank and missing values roundtrip correctly:
>>> format_link(parse('</s/1>; obs; if="core.s"; foo=""')) '<</s/1>; obs; if=core.s; foo="">'
Conversions to and from json-friendly list-based structures are also provided:
>>> parse(headers['Link']).to_py() [['http://example.com/foo', [['rel', 'self']]], ['http://example.com', [['rel', 'up']]]] >>> str(LinkHeader([['http://example.com/foo', [['rel', 'self']]], ... ['http://example.com', [['rel', 'up']]]])) '<http://example.com/foo>; rel=self, <http://example.com>; rel=up'
Project details
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
LinkHeader-0.4.3.tar.gz
(4.2 kB
view hashes)