Microsoft Azure Maps Search Client Library for Python
Project description
Azure Maps Search Package client library for Python
This package contains a Python SDK for Azure Maps Services for Search. Read more about Azure Maps Services here
Source code | API reference documentation | Product documentation
Disclaimer
Azure SDK Python packages support for Python 2.7 has ended 01 January 2022. For more information and questions, please refer to https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-python/issues/20691
Getting started
Prerequisites
- Python 3.6 or later is required to use this package.
- An Azure subscription and an Azure Maps account.
- A deployed Maps Services resource. You can create the resource via Azure Portal or Azure CLI.
If you use Azure CLI, replace <resource-group-name>
and <account-name>
of your choice, and select a proper pricing tier based on your needs via the <sku-name>
parameter. Please refer to this page for more details.
az maps account create --resource-group <resource-group-name> --account-name <account-name> --sku <sku-name>
Install the package
Install the Azure Maps Service Search SDK.
pip install azure-maps-search
Create and Authenticate the MapsSearchClient
To create a client object to access the Azure Maps Search API, you will need a credential object. Azure Maps Search client also support two ways to authenticate.
1. Authenticate with a Subscription Key Credential
You can authenticate with your Azure Maps Subscription Key.
Once the Azure Maps Subscription Key is created, set the value of the key as environment variable: AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_KEY
.
Then pass an AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_KEY
as the credential
parameter into an instance of AzureKeyCredential.
from azure.core.credentials import AzureKeyCredential
from azure.maps.search import MapsSearchClient
credential = AzureKeyCredential(os.environ.get("AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_KEY"))
search_client = MapsSearchClient(
credential=credential,
)
2. Authenticate with an Azure Active Directory credential
You can authenticate with Azure Active Directory (AAD) token credential using the Azure Identity library. Authentication by using AAD requires some initial setup:
- Install azure-identity
- Register a new AAD application
- Grant access to Azure Maps by assigning the suitable role to your service principal. Please refer to the Manage authentication page.
After setup, you can choose which type of credential from azure.identity
to use.
As an example, DefaultAzureCredential
can be used to authenticate the client:
Next, set the values of the client ID, tenant ID, and client secret of the AAD application as environment variables:
AZURE_CLIENT_ID
, AZURE_TENANT_ID
, AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET
You will also need to specify the Azure Maps resource you intend to use by specifying the clientId
in the client options. The Azure Maps resource client id can be found in the Authentication sections in the Azure Maps resource. Please refer to the documentation on how to find it.
from azure.maps.search import MapsSearchClient
from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
search_client = MapsSearchClient(credential=credential)
Key concepts
The Azure Maps Search client library for Python allows you to interact with each of the components through the use of a dedicated client object.
Sync Clients
MapsSearchClient
is the primary client for developers using the Azure Maps Search client library for Python.
Once you initialized a MapsSearchClient
class, you can explore the methods on this client object to understand the different features of the Azure Maps Search service that you can access.
Async Clients
This library includes a complete async API supported on Python 3.5+. To use it, you must first install an async transport, such as aiohttp. See azure-core documentation for more information.
Async clients and credentials should be closed when they're no longer needed. These
objects are async context managers and define async close
methods.
Examples
The following sections provide several code snippets covering some of the most common Azure Maps Search tasks, including:
-
Make a Reverse Address Search to translate coordinate location to street address
-
Translate coordinate location into a human understandable cross street
Request latitude and longitude coordinates for an address
You can use an authenticated client to convert an address into latitude and longitude coordinates. This process is also called geocoding. In addition to returning the coordinates, the response will also return detailed address properties such as street, postal code, municipality, and country/region information.
from azure.maps.search import MapsSearchClient
search_result = client.search_address("400 Broad, Seattle");
Search for an address or Point of Interest
You can use Fuzzy Search to search an address or a point of interest (POI). The following examples demostrate how to search for pizza
over the scope of a specific country (France
, in this example).
from azure.maps.search import MapsSearchClient
fuzzy_search_result = client.fuzzy_search(query: "pizza", country_filter: "fr" );
result_address = fuzzy_search_result.results[0].address
Make a Reverse Address Search to translate coordinate location to street address
You can translate coordinates into human readable street addresses. This process is also called reverse geocoding. This is often used for applications that consume GPS feeds and want to discover addresses at specific coordinate points.
from azure.maps.search import MapsSearchClient
coordinates=(47.60323, -122.33028)
reverse_search_result = client.reverse_search_address(coordinates=coordinates);
result_summary = reverse_search_result.summary
Translate coordinate location into a human understandable cross street
Translate coordinate location into a human understandable cross street by using Search Address Reverse Cross Street API. Most often, this is needed in tracking applications that receive a GPS feed from a device or asset, and wish to know where the coordinate is located.
from azure.maps.search import MapsSearchClient
coordinates=(47.60323, -122.33028)
reverse_search_result = client.reverse_search_cross_street_address(coordinates=coordinates);
result_address = reverse_search_result.results[0].address
Get async fuzzy search batch with param and batchid
This sample demonstrates how to perform fuzzy search by location and lat/lon with async batch method. This function is accepting both search_queries
and batch_id
and returning an AsyncLRO
object. The batch_id
here can be use to retrieve the LRO object later which last 14 days.
maps_search_client = MapsSearchClient(credential=AzureKeyCredential(subscription_key))
async with maps_search_client:
result = await maps_search_client.begin_fuzzy_search_batch(
search_queries=[
"350 5th Ave, New York, NY 10118&limit=1",
"400 Broad St, Seattle, WA 98109&limit=6"
]
)
batch_id = result.batch_id
The method begin_fuzzy_search_batch()
also accepts batch_id
as the parameter. The batch_id
here can be use to retrieve the LRO object later which last 14 days.
maps_search_client = MapsSearchClient(credential=AzureKeyCredential(subscription_key))
async with maps_search_client:
result = await maps_search_client.begin_fuzzy_search_batch(
batch_id=batch_id
)
result = result.response
Fail to get fuzzy search batch sync
This sample demonstrates how to check if there are failures in search of fuzzy_search_batch.
maps_search_client = MapsSearchClient(credential=AzureKeyCredential(subscription_key))
result = maps_search_client.fuzzy_search_batch(
search_queries=[
"350 5th Ave, New York, NY 10118&limit=1",
"400 Broad St, Seattle, WA 98109&lim"
]
)
for item in result.items:
count = 0
if item.response.error is not None:
count = count+1
print(f"Error: {item.response.error.message}")
print(f"There are total of {count} search queries failed.")
Search inside Geometry
This sample demonstrates how to perform search inside geometry by given target such as pizza
and multiple different geometry as input with GeoJson object.
maps_search_client = MapsSearchClient(credential=AzureKeyCredential(subscription_key))
geo_json_obj1 = {
"type": "FeatureCollection",
"features": [
{
"type": "Feature",
"geometry": {
"type": "Polygon",
"coordinates": [[
[-122.143035,47.653536],
[-122.187164,47.617556],
[-122.114981,47.570599],
[-122.132756,47.654009],
[-122.143035,47.653536]
]]
},
"properties": {}
},
{
"type": "Feature",
"geometry": {
"type": "Point",
"coordinates": [-122.126986,47.639754]
},
"properties": {
"subType": "Circle",
"radius": 100
}
}
]
}
result1 = maps_search_client.search_inside_geometry(
query="pizza",
geometry=geo_json_obj1
)
print("Search inside geometry with standard GeoJson object as input, FeatureCollection:")
print(result1)
Working with exist library for Search
This sample demonstrates how to working with other existing packages such as shapely
to perform search inside geometry by given target such as pizza
.
maps_search_client = MapsSearchClient(credential=AzureKeyCredential(subscription_key))
from shapely.geometry import Polygon
geo_interface_obj = Polygon([
[-122.43576049804686, 37.7524152343544],
[-122.43301391601562, 37.70660472542312],
[-122.36434936523438, 37.712059855877314],
[-122.43576049804686, 37.7524152343544]
])
result3 = maps_search_client.search_inside_geometry(
query="pizza",
geometry=geo_interface_obj
)
print("Search inside geometry with Polygon from third party library `shapely` with geo_interface as result 3:")
print(result2)
Troubleshooting
General
Maps Search clients raise exceptions defined in Azure Core.
This list can be used for reference to catch thrown exceptions. To get the specific error code of the exception, use the error_code
attribute, i.e, exception.error_code
.
Logging
This library uses the standard logging library for logging. Basic information about HTTP sessions (URLs, headers, etc.) is logged at INFO level.
Detailed DEBUG level logging, including request/response bodies and unredacted headers, can be enabled on a client with the logging_enable
argument:
import sys
import logging
from azure.maps.search import MapsSearchClient
# Create a logger for the 'azure.maps.search' SDK
logger = logging.getLogger('azure.maps.search')
logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
# Configure a console output
handler = logging.StreamHandler(stream=sys.stdout)
logger.addHandler(handler)
Similarly, logging_enable
can enable detailed logging for a single operation,
even when it isn't enabled for the client:
service_client.get_service_stats(logging_enable=True)
Additional
Still running into issues? If you encounter any bugs or have suggestions, please file an issue in the Issues section of the project.
Next steps
More sample code
Get started with our Maps Search samples (Async Version samples).
Several Azure Maps Search Python SDK samples are available to you in the SDK's GitHub repository. These samples provide example code for additional scenarios commonly encountered while working with Maps Search
set AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_KEY="<RealSubscriptionKey>"
pip install azure-maps-search --pre
python samples/sample_authentication.py
python sample/sample_fuzzy_search.py
python samples/sample_get_point_of_interest_categories.py
python samples/sample_reverse_search_address.py
python samples/sample_reverse_search_cross_street_address.py
python samples/sample_search_nearby_point_of_interest.py
python samples/sample_search_point_of_interest_category.py
python samples/sample_search_point_of_interest.py
python samples/sample_search_structured_address.py
Notes:
--pre
flag can be optionally added, it is to include pre-release and development versions forpip install
. By default,pip
only finds stable versions.
Further detail please refer to Samples Introduction
Additional documentation
For more extensive documentation on Azure Maps Search, see the Azure Maps Search documentation on docs.microsoft.com.
Contributing
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.microsoft.com.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
Release History
1.0.0b1 (2022-09-06)
- Initial Release
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