Skip to main content

A Fusion server that will transform your py3o.template into final LibreOffice documents

Project description

Introduction

py3o.fusion is a web server that provides a simple but important service: transform your py3o.template LibreOffice templates into final LibreOffice documents.

This is intended to avoid direct dependencies in your own applications. This also opens up the py3o ecosystem to other programming languages than Python.

Using it

You can use any language. Here is an example using python requests:

# you'll need to install requests to make this example work
# pip install --upgrade requests
# should do the trick
import requests
import json

# point the client to your own py3o.fusion server
url = 'http://localhost:8765/form'

# target formats you want... can be ODT, PDF, DOC, DOCX
targetformats = ["ODT", "PDF", "DOC", "DOCX"]


class MyEncoder1(json.JSONEncoder):
    def default(self, obj):
        if isinstance(obj, Item):
            obj = obj._asdict()
        else:
            obj = super(MyEncoder1, self).default(obj)

        return obj


class Item(object):
    def _asdict(self):
        return self.__dict__


items = list()

item1 = Item()
item1.val1 = 'Item1 Value1'
item1.val2 = 'Item1 Value2'
item1.val3 = 'Item1 Value3'
item1.Currency = 'EUR'
item1.Amount = '12345.35'
item1.InvoiceRef = '#1234'
items.append(item1)

for i in xrange(1000):
    item = Item()
    item.val1 = 'Item%s Value1' % i
    item.val2 = 'Item%s Value2' % i
    item.val3 = 'Item%s Value3' % i
    item.Currency = 'EUR'
    item.Amount = '6666.77'
    item.InvoiceRef = 'Reference #%04d' % i
    items.append(item)

document = Item()
document.total = '9999999999999.999'

data = dict(items=items, document=document)

data_s = json.dumps(data, cls=MyEncoder1)

for targetformat in targetformats:
    # open the files you need
    files = {
        'tmpl_file': open('templates/py3o_example_template.odt', 'rb'),
        'img_logo': open('images/new_logo.png', 'rb'),
    }

    # fusion API needs those 3 keys
    fields = {
        "targetformat": targetformat,
        "datadict": data_s,
        "image_mapping": json.dumps({"img_logo": "logo"}),
    }

    # and it needs to receive a POST with fields and files
    r = requests.post(url, data=fields, files=files)

    # TODO: handle error codes
    if r.status_code == 400:
        # server says we have a problem...
        # let's give the info back to our human friend
        print r.json()

    else:
        chunk_size = 1024
        # fusion server will stream an ODT file content back
        ext = targetformat.lower()
        with open('request_out.%s' % ext, 'wb') as fd:
            for chunk in r.iter_content(chunk_size):
                fd.write(chunk)

    files['tmpl_file'].close()
    files['img_logo'].close()

And voila. You have a file called out.odt that contains the final odt fusionned with your datadictionnary.

For the full source code + template file and images just download them from our repo

If you just want to test it rapidly you can also point your browser to the server http://localhost:8765/form and fill the form manually.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distributions

py3o.fusion-0.1.zip (267.5 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

py3o.fusion-0.1.tar.gz (257.6 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Built Distributions

py3o.fusion-0.1-py2.7.egg (269.8 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

py3o.fusion-0.1-py2-none-any.whl (265.2 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Python 2

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