timetric 1.3
Client library for Timetric (http://timetric.com/)
A client for Timetric (http://timetric.com).
Requirements (easy-installable, listed as prereqs in setup.py):
- httplib2
- python-dateutil
- simplejson
Optionally, if you want to use OAuth authentication:
- oauth
This is not listed as a prereq, so it won't be installed by default.
Authentication setup
You'll provide authentication information to the TimetricClient in a config dict. Timetric supports two types of authentication: OAuth and API tokens. You can choose a method using the 'authtype' key to the config dict. The value of this key can be 'oauth' or 'apitoken'; if not given it defaults to 'oauth'.
If an API token is being used, there must be keys for:
- 'apitoken_key'
- 'apitoken_secret'
If OAuth is being used, there must also be keys for:
- 'consumer_key'
- 'consumer_secret'
and if you have already done the necessary key exchange, then this can also contain:
- 'access_key'
- 'access_token'
OAuth setup
The first time you use the OAuth protocol, you'll need to do some key exchange with Timetric to set up your tokens.
>>> import timetric# You need a config dict with at minimum your secret and key from Timetric # (see the "Applications" pane of the settings page). In a real app you'll # want to make this config persistant (the shelve module is a lightweight # place to start) because the library will store OAuth authentication # information back to this config. >>> conf = {'authtype':'oauth', ... 'consumer_key: 'XXX', ... 'consumer_secret': 'XXX'} >>> client = timetric.TimetricClient(conf)
# The first time through you'll need to authorize your key with Timetric # by sending the user to an authorization request page. >> token = client.get_request_token() >>> import webbrowser >>> webbrowser.open(client.get_authorize_url(token))
# Once the user has authorized at that page, you can continue. >>> access_token = client.get_access_token(token)
# You can now re-authorize to use this token: >>> conf.update({'oauth_key':access_token.key, ... 'oauth_secret':access_token.secret}) >>> client = timetric.TimetricClient(conf)
API token setup
>>> import timetric# Having got your config dict from somewhere: >>> conf = {'authtype':'apitoken', ... 'apitoken_key': 'XXX', .. 'apitoken-secret': 'XXX'}
# you initialize the timetric client: >>> client = timetric.TimetricClient(conf)
Usage
# There's no API method to get a list of a particular
# user's series, so you need to somehow "know" the series ID.
>>> series = client.series('p-DpewL0TO-iBE4nMBCTsQ')
# Get the latest value
>>> series.latest()
(1236707269.0, 2.0)
# Iterate over the whole dataset
>>> for (timestamp, value) in series:
... print timestamp, value
1236463646.39 3.0
1236486562.94 5.0
1236493503.37 6.0
# Update given a single value
>>> series.update(14)
# Update given an iterable of (time, value) pairs
>>> import time
>>> data = [(time.time() - 100, 11), (time.time() + 100, 15)]
>>> series.update(data)
# Update given a file of CSV data
>>> series.update(open('/tmp/data.csv'))
# Clear all the data out of the series
>>> series.delete()
| File | Type | Py Version | Uploaded on | Size | # downloads |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| timetric-1.3.tar.gz (md5) | Source | 2009-06-11 | 7KB | 412 | |
- Author: Jacob Kaplan-Moss
- Home Page: http://github.com/jacobian/timetric
- Categories
- Package Index Owner: jacobian
- DOAP record: timetric-1.3.xml
