Client library for the Modern Treasury API
Project description
Modern Treasury Python API Library
Migration Guide
We've made some major improvements to how you pass arguments to methods which will require migrating your existing code.
If you want to migrate to the new patterns incrementally you can do so by installing
v0.5.0
. This release contains both the new and old patterns with a backwards compatibility layer.You can find a guide to migrating in this document.
The Modern Treasury Python library provides convenient access to the Modern Treasury REST API from any Python 3.7+ application. It includes type definitions for all request params and response fields, and offers both synchronous and asynchronous clients powered by httpx.
Documentation
The API documentation can be found here.
Installation
pip install modern-treasury
Usage
from modern_treasury import ModernTreasury
modern_treasury = ModernTreasury(
# defaults to os.environ.get("MODERN_TREASURY_API_KEY")
api_key="my api key",
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
external_account = modern_treasury.external_accounts.create(
counterparty_id="123",
name="my bank",
)
print(external_account.id)
While you can provide an api_key
keyword argument, we recommend using python-dotenv
and adding MODERN_TREASURY_API_KEY="my api key"
to your .env
file so that your API Key is not stored in source control.
Async Usage
Simply import AsyncModernTreasury
instead of ModernTreasury
and use await
with each API call:
from modern_treasury import AsyncModernTreasury
modern_treasury = AsyncModernTreasury(
# defaults to os.environ.get("MODERN_TREASURY_API_KEY")
api_key="my api key",
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
async def main():
external_account = await modern_treasury.external_accounts.create(
counterparty_id="123",
name="my bank",
)
print(external_account.id)
asyncio.run(main())
Functionality between the synchronous and asynchronous clients are otherwise identical.
Using Types
Nested request parameters are TypedDicts, while responses are Pydantic models. This helps provide autocomplete and documentation within your editor.
If you would like to see type errors in VS Code to help catch bugs earlier, set python.analysis.typeCheckingMode
to "basic"
.
Pagination
List methods in the Modern Treasury API are paginated.
This library provides auto-paginating iterators with each list response, so you do not have to request successive pages manually:
import modern_treasury
modern_treasury = ModernTreasury(
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
all_external_accounts = []
# Automatically fetches more pages as needed.
for external_account in modern_treasury.external_accounts.list():
# Do something with external_account here
all_external_accounts.append(external_account)
return all_external_accounts
Or, asynchronously:
import asyncio
import modern_treasury
modern_treasury = AsyncModernTreasury(
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
async def main() -> None:
all_external_accounts = []
# Iterate through items across all pages, issuing requests as needed.
async for external_account in modern_treasury.external_accounts.list():
all_external_accounts.append(external_account)
print(all_external_accounts)
asyncio.run(main())
Alternatively, you can use the .has_next_page()
, .next_page_info()
, or .get_next_page()
methods for more granular control working with pages:
first_page = await modern_treasury.external_accounts.list()
if first_page.has_next_page():
print(f"will fetch next page using these details: {first_page.next_page_info()}")
next_page = await first_page.get_next_page()
print(f"number of items we just fetched: {len(next_page.items)}")
# Remove `await` for non-async usage.
Or just work directly with the returned data:
first_page = await modern_treasury.external_accounts.list()
print(f"next page cursor: {first_page.after_cursor}") # => "next page cursor: ..."
for external_account in first_page.items:
print(external_account.id)
# Remove `await` for non-async usage.
Nested params
Nested parameters are dictionaries, typed using TypedDict
, for example:
from modern_treasury import ModernTreasury
modern_treasury = ModernTreasury(
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
modern_treasury.external_accounts.create(
foo={
"bar": True
},
)
File Uploads
Request parameters that correspond to file uploads can be passed as bytes
or a tuple of (filename, contents, media type)
.
from pathlib import Path
from modern_treasury import ModernTreasury
modern_treasury = ModernTreasury(
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
contents = Path("my/file.txt").read_bytes()
modern_treasury.documents.create(
"counterparties",
"24c6b7a3-02...",
file=contents,
)
The async client uses the exact same interface. This example uses aiofiles
to asynchronously read the file contents but you can use whatever method you would like.
import aiofiles
from modern_treasury import ModernTreasury
modern_treasury = ModernTreasury(
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
async with aiofiles.open("pytest.ini", mode="rb") as f:
contents = await f.read()
await modern_treasury.documents.create(
"counterparties",
"24c6b7a3-02...",
file=contents,
)
Handling errors
When the library is unable to connect to the API (e.g., due to network connection problems or a timeout), a subclass of modern_treasury.APIConnectionError
is raised.
When the API returns a non-success status code (i.e., 4xx or 5xx
response), a subclass of modern_treasury.APIStatusError
will be raised, containing status_code
and response
properties.
All errors inherit from modern_treasury.APIError
.
from modern_treasury import ModernTreasury
modern_treasury = ModernTreasury(
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
try:
modern_treasury.external_accounts.create(
counterparty_id="missing",
)
except modern_treasury.APIConnectionError as e:
print("The server could not be reached")
print(e.__cause__) # an underlying Exception, likely raised within httpx.
except modern_treasury.RateLimitError as e:
print("A 429 status code was received; we should back off a bit.")
except modern_treasury.APIStatusError as e:
print("Another non-200-range status code was received")
print(e.status_code)
print(e.response)
Error codes are as followed:
Status Code | Error Type |
---|---|
400 | BadRequestError |
401 | AuthenticationError |
403 | PermissionDeniedError |
404 | NotFoundError |
422 | UnprocessableEntityError |
429 | RateLimitError |
>=500 | InternalServerError |
N/A | APIConnectionError |
Retries
Certain errors will be automatically retried 2 times by default, with a short exponential backoff. Connection errors (for example, due to a network connectivity problem), 409 Conflict, 429 Rate Limit, and >=500 Internal errors will all be retried by default.
You can use the max_retries
option to configure or disable this:
from modern_treasury import ModernTreasury
# Configure the default for all requests:
modern_treasury = ModernTreasury(
# default is 2
max_retries=0,
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
# Or, configure per-request:
modern_treasury.with_options(max_retries=5).external_accounts.list()
Timeouts
Requests time out after 60 seconds by default. You can configure this with a timeout
option,
which accepts a float or an httpx.Timeout
:
from modern_treasury import ModernTreasury
# Configure the default for all requests:
modern_treasury = ModernTreasury(
# default is 60s
timeout=20.0,
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
# More granular control:
modern_treasury = ModernTreasury(
timeout=httpx.Timeout(60.0, read=5.0, write=10.0, connect=2.0),
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
# Override per-request:
modern_treasury.with_options(timeout=5 * 1000).external_accounts.list(
party_name="my bank",
)
On timeout, an APITimeoutError
is thrown.
Note that requests which time out will be retried twice by default.
Advanced: Configuring custom URLs, proxies, and transports
You can configure the following keyword arguments when instantiating the client:
import httpx
from modern_treasury import ModernTreasury
modern_treasury = ModernTreasury(
# Use a custom base URL
base_url="http://my.test.server.example.com:8083",
proxies="http://my.test.proxy.example.com",
transport=httpx.HTTPTransport(local_address="0.0.0.0"),
organization_id="my-organization-ID",
)
See the httpx documentation for information about the proxies
and transport
keyword arguments.
Migration guide
This section outlines the features that were deprecated in v0.5.0
, and subsequently removed in v0.6.0
and how to migrate your code.
Breaking changes
TypedDict → keyword arguments
The way you pass arguments to methods has been changed from a single TypedDict
to individual arguments. For example, this snippet:
account = await client.external_accounts.create(
{
"name": "my bank",
"counterparty_id": "123",
}
)
Now becomes:
account = await client.external_accounts.create(
name="my bank",
counterparty_id="123",
)
Migrating
The easiest way to make your code compatible with this change is to add **{
, for example:
- account = await client.external_accounts.create({
- "name": "my bank",
- "counterparty_id": "123",
- })
+ account = await client.external_accounts.create(**{
+ "name": "my bank",
+ "counterparty_id": "123",
+ })
However, it is highly recommended to completely switch to explicit keyword arguments:
- account = await client.external_accounts.create({
- "name": "my bank",
- "counterparty_id": "123",
- })
+ account = await client.external_accounts.create(
+ name='my bank',
+ counterparty_id='123',
+ )
Named path arguments
All but the last path parameter must now be passed as named arguments instead of positional arguments, for example, for a method that calls the endpoint /api/{itemizable_type}/{itemizable_id}/line_items/{id}
you would've been able to call the method like this:
line_item = await client.line_items.retrieve(
"itemizable_type",
"itemizable_id",
"my_line_id",
)
But now you must call the method like this:
line_item = await client.line_items.retrieve(
"my_line_id",
itemizable_id="itemizable_id",
itemizable_type="itemizable_type",
)
If you have type checking enabled in your IDE it will tell you which parts of your code need to be updated.
Request options
You used to be able to set request options on a per-method basis, now you can only set them on the client. There are two methods that you can use to make this easy, with_options
and copy
.
If you need to make multiple requests with changed options, you can use .copy()
to get a new client object with those options. This can be useful if you need to set a custom header for multiple requests, for example:
copied = client.copy(default_headers={"X-My-Header": "Foo"})
account = await copied.external_accounts.create(
name="my bank",
counterparty_id="123",
)
await copied.cards.provision(card.token, digital_wallet="GOOGLE_PAY")
If you just need to override one of the client options for one request, you can use .with_options()
, for example:
await client.with_options(timeout=None).external_accounts.create(
name="my bank",
counterparty_id="123",
)
It should be noted that the .with_options()
method is simply an alias to .copy()
, you can use them interchangeably.
You can pass nearly every argument that is supported by the Client __init__
method to the .copy()
method, except for proxies
and transport
.
copied = client.copy(
api_key="...",
timeout=httpx.Timeout(read=10),
max_retries=5,
default_headers={
"X-My-Header": "value",
},
default_query={
"my_default_param": "value",
},
)
New features
Pass custom headers
If you need to add additional headers to a request you can easily do so with the extra_headers
argument:
account = await client.external_accounts.create(
name="my bank",
counterparty_id="123",
extra_headers={
"X-Foo": "my header",
},
)
Pass custom JSON properties
You can add additional properties to the JSON request body that are not included directly in the method definition through the extra_body
argument. This can be useful when there are in new properties in the API that are in beta and aren't in the SDK yet.
account = await client.external_accounts.create(
name="my bank",
counterparty_id="123",
extra_body={
"special_prop": "foo",
},
)
# sends this to the API:
# {"name": "my bank", "counterparty_id": "123", "special_prop": "foo"}
Pass custom query parameters
You can add additional query parameters that aren't specified in the method definition through the extra_query
argument. This can be useful when there are any new/beta query parameters that are not yet in the SDK.
account = await client.external_accounts.create(
name="my bank",
counterparty_id="123",
extra_query={
"special_param": "bar",
},
)
# makes the request to this URL:
# https://app.moderntreasury.com/api/external_accounts?special_param=bar
Status
This package is in beta. Its internals and interfaces are not stable and subject to change without a major semver bump; please reach out if you rely on any undocumented behavior.
We are keen for your feedback; please email us at sdk-feedback@moderntreasury.com or open an issue with questions, bugs, or suggestions.
Requirements
Python 3.7 or higher.
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