I've made a Python wrapper for Stack Exchange API. ## About A lightweight Python wrapper for [StackExchange API](http://api.stackexchange.com/) v2.1. Built with [Requests](http://docs.python-requests.org/). Why yet another SE API Python wrapper? (I'm aware of http://stackapps.com/questions/3417/stack-py-a-python-module-for-accessing-the-stack-exchange-2-1-api and http://stackapps.com/questions/198/py-stackexchange-an-api-wrapper-for-python.) For me there where two key things: * make commands as straightforward as possible, * make easy to harvest a lot of pages. First, because I wanted to use commands directly from [the documentation](http://api.stackexchange.com/docs), e.g.: se = SEAPI.SEAPI() se.fetch("users/{ids}/comments/{toid}", ids=[29407, 23354], toid=22656, sort="creation", order="desc", site="stackoverflow") Second arose from practical reason - I wanted to plot [Map of all SE sites (except the 3 biggest)](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/157976/map-of-all-se-sites-except-the-3-biggest), see also [Tag Graph Map of StackExchang wiki at GitHub](https://github.com/stared/tag-graph-map-of-stackexchange/wiki), using e.g.: se.fetch(users, site="cogsci") to easily get `user_id`, `account_id` and `reputation`. ### License An open license [CC BY 3.0](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/). No warranty etc. ### Download From GitHub: https://github.com/stared/se-api-py. Do you want to raise an issue or contribute? Great! ### Contact `[email protected]` ## Code ### General philosophy of usage * se.fetch\[_one\](command, **parameters) * parameters as in the documentation * in the command, "{something}" and "{somethings}" are treated as placeholders for an int/str or a list of int/str, respectively ### Examples import SEAPI se = SEAPI.SEAPI() some_users = se.fetch_one("users/{ids}", ids=[1,3,7,9,13], site="stackoverflow") all_user = se.fetch("users", site="academia") Alternatively, you can initialize SEAPI with default options, typically - site name, e.g. so = SEAPI.SEAPI(site="stackoverflow") some_questions = so.fetch("questions", page_limit=10) # except for very small sites, you want to set page limit some_sorted_posts = so.fetch_one("posts", order="desc", sort="votes") # for sorting sometimes asking for more that one results in "throttle violation" If you want to diagnose a problem, or avoid it: so.last_call # lookup at the last command sent so.last_status # check the last response status slow_food = so.fetch("tags", min_delay=0.5) # or set delay (by default it's 0.05) ## Remark I'm a beginner, so all remarks with respect to the code quality, good practices, etc are welcome!