Mastodonplus.py/docs/index.rst
2017-06-15 23:13:34 +02:00

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Mastodon.py
===========
.. py:module:: mastodon
.. py:class: Mastodon
.. code-block:: python
from mastodon import Mastodon
# Register app - only once!
'''
Mastodon.create_app(
'pytooterapp',
api_base_url = 'https://mastodon.social',
to_file = 'pytooter_clientcred.secret'
)
'''
# Log in - either every time, or use persisted
'''
mastodon = Mastodon(client_id = 'pytooter_clientcred.secret')
mastodon.log_in(
'my_login_email@example.com',
'incrediblygoodpassword',
api_base_url = 'https://mastodon.social',
to_file = 'pytooter_usercred.secret'
)
'''
# Create actual API instance
mastodon = Mastodon(
client_id = 'pytooter_clientcred.secret',
access_token = 'pytooter_usercred.secret',
api_base_url = 'https://mastodon.social'
)
mastodon.toot('Tooting from python using #mastodonpy !')
`Mastodon`_ is an ostatus based twitter-like federated social
network node. It has an API that allows you to interact with its
every aspect. This is a simple python wrapper for that api, provided
as a single python module. By default, it talks to the
`Mastodon flagship instance`_, but it can be set to talk to any
node running Mastodon.
A note about rate limits
------------------------
Mastodons API rate limits per IP. By default, the limit is 150 requests per 5 minute
time slot. This can differ from instance to instance and is subject to change.
Mastodon.py has three modes for dealing with rate limiting that you can pass to
the constructor, "throw", "wait" and "pace", "wait" being the default.
In "throw" mode, Mastodon.py makes no attempt to stick to rate limits. When
a request hits the rate limit, it simply throws a MastodonRateLimitError. This is
for applications that need to handle all rate limiting themselves (i.e. interactive apps),
or applications wanting to use Mastodon.py in a multi-threaded context ("wait" and "pace"
modes are not thread safe).
In "wait" mode, once a request hits the rate limit, Mastodon.py will wait until
the rate limit resets and then try again, until the request succeeds or an error
is encountered. This mode is for applications that would rather just not worry about rate limits
much, don't poll the api all that often, and are okay with a call sometimes just taking
a while.
In "pace" mode, Mastodon.py will delay each new request after the first one such that,
if requests were to continue at the same rate, only a certain fraction (set in the
constructor as ratelimit_pacefactor) of the rate limit will be used up. The fraction can
be (and by default, is) greater than one. If the rate limit is hit, "pace" behaves like
"wait". This mode is probably the most advanced one and allows you to just poll in
a loop without ever sleeping at all yourself. It is for applications that would rather
just pretend there is no such thing as a rate limit and are fine with sometimes not
being very interactive.
A note about IDs
----------------
Mastodons API uses IDs in several places: User IDs, Toot IDs, ...
While debugging, it might be tempting to copy-paste in IDs from the
web interface into your code. This will not work, as the IDs on the web
interface and in the URLs are not the same as the IDs used internally
in the API, so don't do that.
Return values
-------------
Unless otherwise specified, all data is returned as python
dictionaries, matching the JSON format used by the API.
User dicts
~~~~~~~~~~
.. code-block:: python
mastodon.account(<numerical id>)
# Returns the following dictionary:
{
'id': # Same as <numerical id>
'username': # The username (what you @ them with)
'acct': # The user's account name as username@domain (@domain omitted for local users)
'display_name': # The user's display name
'locked': # Denotes whether the account can be followed without a follow request
'following_count': # How many people they follow
'followers_count': # How many followers they have
'statuses_count': # How many statuses they have
'note': # Their bio
'url': # Their URL; usually 'https://mastodon.social/users/<acct>'
'avatar': # URL for their avatar
'header': # URL for their header image
}
Toot dicts
~~~~~~~~~~
.. code-block:: python
mastodon.toot("Hello from Python")
# Returns the following dictionary:
{
'id': # Numerical id of this toot
'uri': # Descriptor for the toot
# EG 'tag:mastodon.social,2016-11-25:objectId=<id>:objectType=Status'
'url': # URL of the toot
'account': # Account dict for the account which posted the status
'in_reply_to_id': # Numerical id of the toot this toot is in response to
'in_reply_to_account_id': # Numerical id of the account this toot is in response to
'reblog': # Denotes whether the toot is a reblog
'content': # Content of the toot, as HTML: '<p>Hello from Python</p>'
'created_at': # Creation time
'reblogs_count': # Number of reblogs
'favourites_count': # Number of favourites
'reblogged': # Denotes whether the logged in user has boosted this toot
'favourited': # Denotes whether the logged in user has favourited this toot
'sensitive': # Denotes whether media attachments to the toot are marked sensitive
'spoiler_text': # Warning text that should be displayed before the toot content
'visibility': # Toot visibility ('public', 'unlisted', 'private', or 'direct')
'mentions': # A list of account dicts mentioned in the toot
'media_attachments': # list of media dicts of attached files. Only present
# when there are attached files.
'tags': # A list of hashtag dicts used in the toot
'application': # Application dict for the client used to post the toot
'language': # The (autodetected or otherwise set server side) language of the toot.
'muted': # oolean denoting whether the user has muted this status by way of conversation muting.
}
Relationship dicts
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. code-block:: python
mastodon.account_follow(<numerical id>)
# Returns the following dictionary:
{
'id': # Numerical id (same one as <numerical id>)
'following': # Boolean denoting whether the logged-in user follows the specified user
'followed_by': # Boolean denoting whether the specified user follows the logged-in user
'blocking': # Boolean denoting whether the logged-in user has blocked the specified user
'muting': # Boolean denoting whether the logged-in user has muted the specified user
'requested': # Boolean denoting whether the logged-in user has sent the specified user a follow request
'domain_blocking': # Boolean denoting whether the logged-in user has blocked the specified users domain
}
Notification dicts
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. code-block:: python
mastodon.notifications()[0]
# Returns the following dictionary:
{
'id': # id of the notification.
'type': # "mention", "reblog", "favourite" or "follow".
'created_at': # The time the notification was created.
'account': # User dict of the user from whom the notification originates.
'status': # In case of "mention", the mentioning status.
# In case of reblog / favourite, the reblogged / favourited status.
}
Context dicts
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. code-block:: python
mastodon.status_context(<numerical id>)
# Returns the following dictionary:
{
'ancestors': # A list of toot dicts
'descendants': # A list of toot dicts
}
Media dicts
~~~~~~~~~~~
.. code-block:: python
mastodon.media_post("image.jpg", "image/jpeg")
# Returns the following dictionary:
{
'id': # The ID of the attachment.
'type': # Media type: 'image', 'video' or 'gifv'
'url': # The URL for the image in the local cache
'remote_url': # The remote URL for the media (if the image is from a remote instance)
'preview_url': # The URL for the media preview
'text_url': # The display text for the media (what shows up in toots)
'meta': # Dictionary of two image metadata dicts (see below), 'original' and 'small' (preview)
}
# Metadata dicts:
{
'width': # Width of the image in pixels
'height': # Height of the image in pixels
'aspect': # Aspect ratio of the image as a floating point number
'size': # Textual representation of the image size in pixels, e.g. '800x600'
}
Card dicts
~~~~~~~~~~
.. code-block:: python
mastodon.status_card(<numerical id>):
# Returns the folowing dictionary
{
'url': # The URL of the card.
'title': # The title of the card.
'description': # The description of the card.
'type': # Embed type: 'link', 'photo', 'video', or 'rich'
'image': # (optional) The image associated with the card.
# OEmbed data (all optional):
'author_name': # Name of the embedded contents author
'author_url': # URL pointing to the embedded contents author
'description': # Description of the embedded content
'width': # Width of the embedded object
'height': # Height of the embedded object
'html': # HTML string of the embed
'provider_name': # Name of the provider from which the embed originates
'provider_url': # URL pointing to the embeds provider
}
Instance dicts
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. code-block:: python
mastodon.instance()
# Returns the folowing dictionary
{
'description': # A brief instance description set by the admin
'email': # The admin contact e-mail
'title': # The instances title
'uri': # The instances URL
'version': # The instances mastodon version
}
App registration and user authentication
----------------------------------------
Before you can use the mastodon API, you have to register your
application (which gets you a client key and client secret)
and then log in (which gets you an access token). These functions
allow you to do those things.
For convenience, once you have a client id, secret and access token,
you can simply pass them to the constructor of the class, too!
Note that while it is perfectly reasonable to log back in whenever
your app starts, registering a new application on every
startup is not, so don't do that - instead, register an application
once, and then persist your client id and secret. Convenience
methods for this are provided.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.create_app
.. automethod:: Mastodon.__init__
.. automethod:: Mastodon.log_in
.. automethod:: Mastodon.auth_request_url
Reading data: Instances
-----------------------
This function allows you to fetch information associated with the
current instance.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.instance
Reading data: Timelines
-----------------------
This function allows you to access the timelines a logged in
user could see, as well as hashtag timelines and the public timeline.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.timeline
.. automethod:: Mastodon.timeline_home
.. automethod:: Mastodon.timeline_local
.. automethod:: Mastodon.timeline_public
.. automethod:: Mastodon.timeline_hashtag
Reading data: Statuses
----------------------
These functions allow you to get information about single statuses.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status_context
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status_reblogged_by
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status_favourited_by
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status_card
Reading data: Notifications
---------------------------
This function allows you to get information about a users notifications.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.notifications
Reading data: Accounts
----------------------
These functions allow you to get information about accounts and
their relationships.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_verify_credentials
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_statuses
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_following
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_followers
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_relationships
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_search
Reading data: Follows
---------------------
.. automethod:: Mastodon.follows
Reading data: Favourites
------------------------
.. automethod:: Mastodon.favourites
Reading data: Follow requests
-----------------------------
.. automethod:: Mastodon.follow_requests
Reading data: Searching
-----------------------
.. automethod:: Mastodon.search
Reading data: Mutes and blocks
------------------------------
These functions allow you to get information about accounts that are
muted or blocked by the logged in user.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.mutes
.. automethod:: Mastodon.blocks
Reading data: Reports
------------------------------
.. automethod:: Mastodon.reports
Reading data: Domain blocks
---------------------------
.. automethod:: Mastodon.domain_blocks
Writing data: Statuses
----------------------
These functions allow you to post statuses to Mastodon and to
interact with already posted statuses.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status_post
.. automethod:: Mastodon.toot
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status_reblog
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status_unreblog
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status_favourite
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status_unfavourite
.. automethod:: Mastodon.status_delete
Writing data: Accounts
----------------------
These functions allow you to interact with other accounts: To (un)follow and
(un)block.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_follow
.. automethod:: Mastodon.follows
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_unfollow
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_block
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_unblock
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_mute
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_unmute
.. automethod:: Mastodon.account_update_credentials
Writing data: Follow requests
-----------------------------
These functions allow you to accept or reject incoming follow requests.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.follow_request_authorize
.. automethod:: Mastodon.follow_request_reject
Writing data: Media
-------------------
This function allows you to upload media to Mastodon. The returned
media IDs (Up to 4 at the same time) can then be used with post_status
to attach media to statuses.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.media_post
Writing data: Reports
---------------------
.. automethod:: Mastodon.report
Writing data: Domain blocks
---------------------------
These methods allow you to block and unblock all statuses from a domain
for the logged-in user.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.domain_block
.. automethod:: Mastodon.domain_unblock
Streaming
---------
These functions allow access to the streaming API.
.. automethod:: Mastodon.user_stream
.. automethod:: Mastodon.public_stream
.. automethod:: Mastodon.hashtag_stream
.. _Mastodon: https://github.com/tootsuite/mastodon
.. _Mastodon flagship instance: http://mastodon.social/
.. _Mastodon api docs: https://github.com/tootsuite/documentation/