Skip to main content

Wrapper for Google's Python API.

Project description

googleapiutils2

Utilities for Google's v2 Python API. Currently supports sections of the following resources:

  • Drive: DriveResource, FilesResource, PermissionsResource, RepliesResource, ...
  • Sheets: SpreadsheetsResource, ValuesResource, ...
  • Geocoding

Quickstart 🚀

This project requires Python ^3.10 to run.

Several dependencies are needed, namely the aforesaid Google Python API, but also Google's oauth library, and requests. Pre-bundled for ease of use are the fairly monolithic google-api-stubs, which greatly improves the usage experience.

via poetry

Install poetry, then run

poetry install

And you're done.

Overview 📖

The library was written to be consistent with Google's own Python API - just a little easier to use. Most Drive and Sheets operations are supported using explicit parameters. But most functions thereof take a **kwargs parameter (used for parameter forwarding) to allow for the more granular usage of the underlying API.

A note on IDs: anytime a resource ID is needed, one can be provide the actual resource ID, or the URL to the resource. If a URL is provided, this mapping is cached for future use.

Authentication 🔑

Before using a Drive or Sheets object, one must first authenticate. This is done via the google.oauth2 library, creating a Credentials object.

Custom Credentials

The library supports two methods of authentication:

  • via a Google service account (recommended, see more here)
  • via OAuth2 (see more here)

With a service account, one can programmatically access resources without user input. This is by far the easiest route, but requires a bit of setup.

If one's not using a service account, the library will attempt to open a browser window to authenticate using the provided credentials. This authentication is cached for future usage (though it does expire on some interval) - so an valid token path is required.

See the get_oauth2_creds function for more information.

Default Credentials

To expedite development, all credentials-based objects will default to using a service account by way of the following discovery scheme:

  • If ./auth/credentials.json exists, use that credentials file.
  • If the GOOGLE_API_CREDENTIALS environment variable is set, use the credentials file pointed to by the variable.

Drive 📁

Example: copy a file to a folder.

from googleapiutils2 import Drive
drive = Drive()

filename = "Heyy"

file = drive.get(filename, parents=[FOLDER_URL])
if file is not None:
    drive.delete(file["id"])

file = drive.copy(file_id=FILE_ID, to_filename=filename, to_folder_id=FOLDER_URL)

What the above does is:

  • Get the OAuth2 credentials using the default discvoery scheme (JSON object representing the requisite credentials, see here for more information).
  • create a Drive object thereupon.
  • Get the file with the given name, and delete it if it exists.
  • Copy the file with the given ID to the given folder, and return the new file.

Sheets 📊

Example: update a range of cells in a sheet.

sheets = Sheets()

Sheet1 = SheetsValueRange(sheets, SHEET_ID, sheet_name="Sheet1")

rows = [
    {
        "Heyy": "99",
    }
]
Sheet1[2:3, ...].update(rows)

What the above does is:

  • Get the OAuth2 credentials using the default discvoery scheme (JSON object representing the requisite credentials, see here for more information).
  • create a Sheets object thereupon.
  • Create a SheetsValueRange object, which is a wrapper around the spreadsheets.values API.
  • Update the range Sheet1!A2:B3 with the given rows.

Note the slicing syntax, which will feel quite familiar for any user of Numpy or Pandas.

SheetSlice

A SheetsValueRange object can be sliced in a similar manner to that of a Numpy array. The syntax is as follows:

slc = Sheet[rows, cols]

Wherein rows and cols are either integers, slices of integers (stride is not supported), strings (in A1 notation), or ellipses (...).

Note that Google's implementation of A1 notation is 1-indexed; 0 is invalid (e.g., 1 maps to A, 2 to B, etc.)

ix = SheetSlice["Sheet1", 1:3, 2:4] #  "Sheet1!B2:D4"
ix = SheetSlice["Sheet1", "A1:B2"]  #  "Sheet1!A1:B2"
ix = SheetSlice[1:3, 2:4]           #  "Sheet1!B2:D4"
ix = SheetSlice["A1:B2"]            #  "Sheet1!A1:B2"
ix = SheetSlice[..., 1:3]           #  "Sheet1!A1:Z3"

values = {
    SheetSlice["A1:B2"]: [
        ["Heyy", "99"],
        ["Heyy", "99"],
    ],
} # "Sheet1!A1:B2" = [["Heyy", "99"], ["Heyy", "99"]]

A SheetSlice can also be used as a key into a SheetsValueRange, or a dictionary (to use in updating a sheet's range via .update(), for example). Further, a SheetsValueRange can be sliced in a similar manner to that of a SheetSlice.

Sheet1[2:3, ...].update(rows)
...

Why "2" 🤔

Don't ask :3

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

googleapiutils2-0.11.6.tar.gz (31.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

googleapiutils2-0.11.6-py3-none-any.whl (33.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file googleapiutils2-0.11.6.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: googleapiutils2-0.11.6.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 31.0 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.7.0 CPython/3.12.0 Darwin/23.2.0

File hashes

Hashes for googleapiutils2-0.11.6.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 bda3c17a35d1cb0d9c708d4472e1be796ebdee40d3991b6774daf5a3f12c68e8
MD5 4b7e8ccd102990b08473f783a9478efa
BLAKE2b-256 a8c52033a24071569cacc808ffedb5e4fb1f5c454a9fad9d6d9b41521e0d2b4d

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file googleapiutils2-0.11.6-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for googleapiutils2-0.11.6-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 fcfa7cc615ee10cbd61065ce283ccf0c9d234e23de3e18fa6a70e17ea8ee92d3
MD5 afaf64183a4b3eb9c017a1b26cf32de2
BLAKE2b-256 8f8a09a0b19c0de722a89d8c121b79bc30fb4a2a0930ed30d240758d5f400b3e

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page