This is a collection of common utility functions and classes that we at the Caltech Library have found useful in our other Python projects.
- Introduction
- Installation
- Usage
- Getting help
- Contributing
- License
- Authors and history
- Acknowledgments
This repository does not constitute a single program; instead, it contains a collection of modules with utility functions and classes that we have found ourselves using repeatedly in other Python projects.
The instructions below assume you have a Python interpreter installed on your computer; if that's not the case, please first install Python version 3 and familiarize yourself with running Python programs on your system.
On Linux, macOS, and Windows operating systems, you should be able to install commonpy
with pip
. To install commonpy
from the Python package repository (PyPI), run the following command:
python3 -m pip install commonpy
As an alternative to getting it from PyPI, you can use pip
to install commonpy
directly from GitHub, like this:
python3 -m pip install git+https://github.com/caltechlibrary/commonpy.git
The basic approach to using this package is to import the modules and functions you need. For example:
from commonpy.file_utils import readable
if readable('/path/to/some/file'):
# do something
The following subsections describe the different modules available.
The data_structures
module provides miscellaneous data classes.
Class | Purpose |
---|---|
CaseFoldDict |
A version of dict that compares keys in a case-insensitive manner |
CaseFoldSet |
A version of set that compares keys in a case-insensitive manner |
The data_utils
module provides a number of miscellaneous simple functions for some common operations on data of various kinds.
Function | Purpose |
---|---|
expanded_range(string) |
Given a string of the form "X-Y", returns the list of integers it represents |
flattened(thing) |
Takes a list or dictionary and returns a recursively flattened version |
ordinal(integer) |
Returns a string with the number followed by "st", "nd, "rd", or "th" |
parsed_datetime(string) |
Returns a date object representing the given date string |
pluralized(word, n, include_num) |
Returns a plural version of word if n > 1 |
sliced(list, n) |
Yields n number of slices from the list |
timestamp() |
Returns a string for an easily-readable form of the current time and date |
unique(list) |
Takes a list and return a version without duplicates |
The file_utils
module provides a number of miscellaneous simple functions for some common operations on files and directories.
Function | Purpose |
---|---|
alt_extension(file, ext) |
Returns file with the extension replaced by ext |
copy_file(src, dst) |
Copies file from src to dst |
delete_existing(file) |
Deletes the given file |
filename_basename(file) |
Returns file without any extensions |
filename_extension(file) |
Returns the extension of filename file |
files_in_directory(dir, ext, recursive) |
|
filtered_by_extensions(list, endings) |
|
nonempty(file) |
Returns True if file file is not empty |
open_file(file) |
Opens the file by calling the equivalent of "open" on this system |
open_url(url) |
Opens the url in the user's default web browser |
readable(dest) |
Returns True if file or directory dest is accessible and readable |
relative(file) |
Returns a path string for file relative to the current directory |
rename_existing(file) |
Renames file to file.bak |
writable(dest) |
Returns True if file or directory dest can be written |
The interrupt
module includes wait(...)
, a replacement for sleep(...)
that is interruptible and works with multiple threads. It also provides methods to cause an interruption (including doing it by issuing a ^C to the program), check whether an interruption occurred, and other related operations.
Function | Purpose |
---|---|
config_interrupt(callback, raise_ex, signal) |
Sets up a callback function |
interrupt() |
Interrupts any wait in progress |
interrupted() |
Returns True if an interruption has been called |
raise_for_interrupts() |
Raises an exception if interrupt() has been invoked |
reset_interrupts() |
Resets the interruption flag |
wait(duration) |
Waits for duration in an interruptible fashion |
The module_utils
collection of functions is useful for working with paths related to a running module, for example to find internal data files that might be needed for normal operation.
Function | Purpose |
---|---|
config_path(module_name) |
Returns the path to local config data directory for the module |
datadir_path(module_name) |
Returns the path to the /data subdirectory of the module |
desktop_path() |
Returns the path to the user's Desktop directory on this system |
installation_path(module_name) |
Returns the path to module's installation directory |
module_path(module_name) |
Returns the path to the installed module |
Function config_path(...)
is useful to use in conjunction with Python's configparser
module. It returns ~/.config/modulename/
on Unix-like systems.
The network_utils
module provides several functions that are useful when performing network operations.
Function | Purpose |
---|---|
download(url, local_dest) |
Download a file |
download_file(url, local_dest) |
Download a file without raising exceptions |
hostname(url) |
Returns the hostname portion of a URL |
net(...) |
See below |
netlock(url) |
Returns the hostname, port number (if any), and login info (if any) |
network(...) |
See below |
network_available() |
Returns True if external hosts are reacheable over the network |
on_localhost(url) |
Returns True if the address of url points to the local host |
scheme(url) |
Returns the protocol portion of the url; e.g., "https" |
The network
and net
functions in the network_utils
module implements a fairly high-level network operation interface that internally handles timeouts, rate limits, polling, HTTP/2, and more. The function signatures are identical to this:
network(method, url, client = None, handle_rate = True, polling = False, **kwargs)
The difference between the two functions is their behavior with respect to exceptions. The function network
returns only a response
object, and raises an exception if any error occurs. The net
function returns two values: response, error
and does not raise exceptions except in the case of bad arguments; instead, any exceptions are returned as the error
value in the list of return values. This allows the caller to inspect the response
object even in cases where exceptions are raised.
The response
object returned by both net
and network
is the response from the get or post HTTP call. This object comes from the Python HTTPX module used by
The method
parameter value must be a string chosen from the list of known HTTP methods: "get"
, "post"
, "head"
, "options"
, "put"
, "delete"
, or "patch"
.
The url
parameter value must be the URL to which the HTTP method will be applied.
If keyword client
is not None
, it's assumed to be a HTTPX Client object to use for the network call. Settings such as timeouts should be done by the caller creating appropriately-configured Client objects.
If keyword handle_rate
is True
, both functions will automatically pause and retry if it receives an HTTP code 429 ("too many requests") from the server. If False
, it will return the exception CommonPy.exceptions.RateLimitExceeded
instead.
If keyword polling
is True
, certain statuses like 404 are ignored and the response is returned; otherwise, they are considered errors. The behavior when True
is useful in situations where a URL does not exist until something is ready at the server, and the caller is repeatedly checking the URL. It is up to the caller to implement the polling schedule and call this function (with polling = True
) as needed.
Additional keyword arguments understood by HTTPX can be passed to both network
and net
.
Both methods always pass the argument allow_redirects = True
to the underlying Python HTTPX library network calls.
The functions download(url, local_destination)
and download_file(url, local_destination)
download a file at the given url
, writing it to the file specified by the parameter local_destination
. The former version of the function will raise exceptions in case of problems; the latter version simply return True
or False
depending on the success of the download.
Function | Purpose |
---|---|
antiformat(s) |
Quote instances of { and } in s so it can be passed to format. |
print_boxed(msg) |
Print a message with a box around it using pure ASCII characters. |
Function | Purpose |
---|---|
system_profile() |
Returns a string describing the system running this Python program. |
The CommonPy module defines a number of exceptions that it may return. (Most of the exceptions are potentially thrown by net
, discussed above.)
Exception | Meaning |
---|---|
CommonPyException |
Base class for CommonPy exceptions |
ArgumentError |
The function call was given invalid or unexpected arguments |
AuthenticationFailure |
Problem obtaining or using authentication credentials |
InternalError |
Unrecoverable problem involving CommonPy itself |
Interrupted |
The user elected to cancel/quit the program |
NetworkFailure |
Unrecoverable problem involving net |
NoContent |
No content found at the given location |
RateLimitExceeded |
The service flagged reports that its rate limits have been exceeded |
ServiceFailure |
Unrecoverable problem involving a remote service |
If you find an issue, please submit it in the GitHub issue tracker for this repository.
We would be happy to receive your help and participation with enhancing CommonPy! Please visit the guidelines for contributing for some tips on getting started.
If you plan on doing any development on CommonPy, you may want to install the package dependencies listed in requirements-dev.txt
, e.g., using a command such as the following. This will install dependencies necessary to run pytest
.
python3 -m pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
Software produced by the Caltech Library is Copyright (C) 2020-2023, Caltech. This software is freely distributed under a BSD/MIT type license. Please see the LICENSE file for more information.
Mike Hucka started this collection of utilities sometime in 2018.
This work was funded by the California Institute of Technology Library.
The vector artwork of a toolbox, used as the icon for this repository, was created by priyanka from the Noun Project. It is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY 3.0 license.
CommonPy makes use of numerous open-source packages, without which it would have been effectively impossible to develop CommonPy with the resources we had. I want to acknowledge this debt. In alphabetical order, the packages are:
- boltons – package of miscellaneous Python utilities
- dateparser – parse dates in almost any string format
- deprecation – a library to handle deprecation of code in your Python packages
- h2 – HTTP/2 support library used by HTTPX
- httpx – Python HTTP client library that supports HTTP/2
- humanize – make numbers more easily readable by humans
- ipdb – the IPython debugger
- pytest – testing framework for Python
- pytest-mock – wrapper around the
mock
package for use withpytest
- python_dateutil – date utilities
- PyYAML – Python YAML parser
- pywin32 – Windows APIs for Python
- sidetrack – simple debug logging/tracing package
- tldextract – module to parse domains from URLs
- twine – package for publishing Python packages to PyPI
- validator-collection – collection of Python functions for validating data