pyusps -- Python bindings for the USPS Ecommerce APIs
Project description
Description
pyusps is a pythonic wrapper for the USPS Ecommerce APIs. Currently, only the Address Information API is supported.
Installation
Install using pip:
pip install pyusps
or easy_install:
easy_install pyusps
Address Information API
This API is avaiable via the pyusps.address_information.verify function. It takes in the user ID given to you by the USPS and a variable length list of addresses to verify.
Requests
Each address is a dict containing the following required keys:
- address:
The street address
- city:
The city
- state:
The state
- zip_code:
The zip code in one the following formats: xxxxx, xxxxx-xxxx, or xxxxxxxxx
Only one of state or zip_code is needed.
The following keys are optional:
- firm_name:
The company name, e.g., XYZ Corp. Although the API documentation says this field is required, tests show that it isn’t.
- address_extended:
An apartment, suite number, etc
- urbanization:
For Puerto Rico addresses only
Responses
The response will either be a dict, if a single address was requested, or a list of dicts, if multiple addresses were requested. Each address will always contain the following keys:
- address:
The street address
- city:
The city
- state:
The state
- zip5:
The first five numbers of the zip code
- zip4:
The last four numbers of the zip code
Each address can optionally contain the following keys:
- firm_name:
The company name, e.g., XYZ Corp.
- address_extended:
An apartment, suite number, etc
- urbanization:
For Puerto Rico addresses only
- returntext:
Additional information about the address, usually a warning, e.g., “The address you entered was found but more information is needed (such as an apartment, suite, or box number) to match to a specific address.”
firm_name, address_extended and urbanization will return the value requested if the API does not find a match.
For multiple addresses, the order in which the addresses were specified in the request is preserved in the response.
Errors
A ValueError will be raised if there’s a general error, e.g., invalid user id, or if a single address request generates an error. Except for a general error, multiple addresses requests do not raise errors. Instead, if one of the addresses generates an error, the ValueError object is returned along with the rest of the results.
Examples
Single address request:
from pyusps import address_information addr = dict([ ('address', '6406 Ivy Lane'), ('city', 'Greenbelt'), ('state', 'MD'), ]) address_information.verify('foo_id', addr) dict([ ('address', '6406 IVY LN'), ('city', 'GREENBELT'), ('state', 'MD'), ('zip5', '20770'), ('zip4', '1441'), ])
Mutiple addresses request:
from pyusps import address_information addrs = [ dict([ ('address', '6406 Ivy Lane'), ('city', 'Greenbelt'), ('state', 'MD'), ]), dict([ ('address', '8 Wildwood Drive'), ('city', 'Old Lyme'), ('state', 'CT'), ]), ] address_information.verify('foo_id', *addrs) [ dict([ ('address', '6406 IVY LN'), ('city', 'GREENBELT'), ('state', 'MD'), ('zip5', '20770'), ('zip4', '1441'), ]), dict([ ('address', '8 WILDWOOD DR'), ('city', 'OLD LYME'), ('state', 'CT'), ('zip5', '06371'), ('zip4', '1844'), ]), ]
Mutiple addresses error:
from pyusps import address_information addrs = [ dict([ ('address', '6406 Ivy Lane'), ('city', 'Greenbelt'), ('state', 'MD'), ]), dict([ ('address', '8 Wildwood Drive'), ('city', 'Old Lyme'), ('state', 'NJ'), ]), ] address_information.verify('foo_id', *addrs) [ dict([ ('address', '6406 IVY LN'), ('city', 'GREENBELT'), ('state', 'MD'), ('zip5', '20770'), ('zip4', '1441'), ]), ValueError('-2147219400: Invalid City. '), ]
Reference
For more information on the Address Information API visit https://www.usps.com/webtools/htm/Address-Information-v3-1a.htm
Developing
External dependencies
libxml2-dev
libxslt1-dev
build-essential
python-dev
python-setuptools
python-virtualenv
Setup
To start developing run the following commands from the project’s base directory. You can download the source from https://github.com/thelinuxkid/pyusps:
# I like to install the virtual environment in its own # hidden repo but you don't have to virtualenv .virtual # I leave the magic to Ruby developers (.virtual/bin/activate) # but you don't have to agree with me .virtual/bin/python setup.py develop # Install the testing dependecies. Pip doesn't seem to handle # extras_require yet: https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/7. # So, use easy_install. # At this point, pyusps will already be in easy-install.pth. # So easy_install will not attempt to download it .virtual/bin/easy_install pyusps[test]
If you like to use ipython you can install it with the dev requirement:
.virtual/bin/easy_install pyusps[dev]
Testing
To run the unit-tests run the following command from the project’s base directory:
.virtual/bin/nosetests
Project details
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