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Rapidly develop your API clients using decorators and annotations

Project description

Github PyPi Python CI

Rapid Api Client

Library to rapidly develop API clients in Python, based on Pydantic and Httpx, using almost only decorators and annotations.

✨ Main features:

  • ✏️ You don't write any code, you only declare the endpoints using decorators and annotations.
  • 🚚 Support Pydantic to automatically parse and validate reponses (and also for posting content).
  • 🏗️ Does not reimplement the low-level http-related logic, it simply uses httpx.AsyncClient like you would do and you can customize it.
  • ⚡️ Asynchronous, because httpx and asyncio are just amazingly fast.

🙏 This project is inspired by FastAPI, I always wanted a library to create an API client that is as simple as FastAPI for handling the server-side part.

Usage

Install the project

pip install rapid-api-client

Declare your API endpoints using decorators and annotations, the method does not need any code, it will be generated by the decorator, just write ... or pass or whatever, it won't be called anyway 🙈.

class GithubIssuesApi(RapidApi):

    @get("/repos/{owner}/{repo}/issues", response_class=TypeAdapter(List[Issue]))
    async def list_issues(self, owner: Annotated[str, Path()], repo: Annotated[str, Path()]): ...

    @get("/repos/{owner}/{repo}/releases", response_class=TypeAdapter(List[Release]))
    async def list_issues(self, owner: Annotated[str, Path()], repo: Annotated[str, Path()]): ...

Use it

    api = GithubIssuesApi(client)
    issues = await api.list_issues("essembeh", "rapid-api-client", state="closed")
    for issue in issues:
        print(f"Issue: {issue.title} [{issue.url}]")

Features

Http method

Any HTTP method can be used with http decorator

class MyApi(RapidApi)

    @http("GET", "/anything")
    async def get(self): ...

    @http("POST", "/anything")
    async def post(self): ...

    @http("DELETE", "/anything")
    async def delete(self): ...

Convenient decorators are available like get, post, delete, put, patch

class MyApi(RapidApi)

    @get("/anything")
    async def get(self): ...

    @post("/anything")
    async def post(self): ...

    @delete("/anything")
    async ef delete(self): ...

Response class

By default methods return a httpx.Response object and the http return code is not tested (you have to call resp.raise_for_status() if you need to ensure the response is OK).

But you can also specify a class so that the response is parsed, you can use:

  • httpx.Response to get the response itself, this is the default behavior
  • str to get the response.text
  • bytes to get the response.content
  • Any Pydantic model class (subclass of BaseModel), the json will be automatically validated
  • Any Pydantic-xml model class (subclass of BaseXmlModel), the xml will be automatically validated
  • Any TypeAdapter to parse the json, see pydantic doc

Note: When response_class is given (and is not httpx.Response), the raise_for_status() is always called to ensure the http response is OK

class User(BaseModel): ...

class MyApi(RapidApi)

    # this method return a httpx.Response
    @get("/user/me")
    async def get_user_resp(self): ...

    # this method returns a User class
    @get("/user/me", response_class=User)
    async def get_user(self): ...

Path parameters

Like fastapi you can use your method arguments to build the api path to call.

class MyApi(RapidApi)

    @get("/user/{user_id}")
    async def get_user(self, user_id: Annotated[int, Path()]): ...

    # Path parameters dans have a default value
    @get("/user/{user_id}")
    async def get_user(self, user_id: Annotated[int, Path()] = 1): ...

Query parameters

You can add query parameters to your request using the Query annotation.

class MyApi(RapidApi)

    @get("/issues")
    async def get_issues(self, sort: Annotated[str, Query()]): ...

    # Query parameters can have a default value
    @get("/issues")
    async def get_issues_default(self, sort: Annotated[str, Query()] = "date"): ...

    # Query parameters can have an alias to change the key in the http request
    @get("/issues")
    async def get_issues_alias(self, sort: Annotated[str, Query(alias="sort-by")] = "date"): ...

Header parameter

You can add headers to your request using the Header annotation.

class MyApi(RapidApi)

    @get("/issues")
    async def get_issues(self, version: Annotated[str, Header()]): ...

    # Headers can have a default value
    @get("/issues")
    async def get_issues(self, version: Annotated[str, Header()] = "1"): ...

    # Headers can have an alias to change the key in the http request
    @get("/issues")
    async def get_issues(self, version: Annotated[str, Header(alias="X-API-Version")] = "1"): ...

Body parameter

You can send a body with your request using the Body annotation.

This body can be

  • a raw object with Body
  • a Pydantic object with PydanticBody
  • one or more files with FileBody
class MyApi(RapidApi)

   # send a string in request content
   @post("/string")
   async def message(self, body: Annotated[str, Body()]): ...

   # send a string in request content
   @post("/model")
   async def model(self, body: Annotated[MyPydanticClass, PydanticBody()]): ...

   # send a multiple files
   @post("/files")
   async def model(self, report: Annotated[bytes, FileBody()], image: Annotated[bytes, FileBody()]): ...

Xml Support

Xml is also supported is you use Pydantic-Xml, either for responses with response_class or for POST/PUT content with PydanticXmlBody.

class ResponseXmlRootModel(BaseXmlModel): ...

class MyApi(RapidApi)

   # parse response xml content
   @get("/get", response_class=ResponseXmlRootModel)
   async def get_xml(self): ...

   # serialize xml model automatically
   @post("/post")
   async def post_xml(self, body: Annotated[ResponseXmlRootModel, PydanticXmlBody()]): ...

Examples

See example directory for some examples

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