This script will connect to the Steam API to retrieve information about users/games/groups.
To install, git clone the repository or download the archive from GitHub.
Then, run python setup.py install
to have the package installed. You can also
get the latest release by using pip install steamwebapi
.
Currently, to use steamwebapi you must supply a Steam API key. There are two
ways to do that currently. First, you can set an environment variable called
STEAM_API_KEY
to your specific key value and the steamwebapi will use that.
Otherwise, when instantiating an steam interface object you can pass
steam_api_key
in with the API key as its value. For example:
steamuserinfo = ISteamUser(steam_api_key='YOURAPIKEY')
The following example will assume that JSON data is being returned, and you want access to the data as returned by Valve.
from steamwebapi.api import ISteamUser, IPlayerService, ISteamUserStats
steamuserinfo = ISteamUser()
steamid = steamuserinfo.resolve_vanity_url("profileURL")['response']['steamid']
usersummary = steamuserinfo.get_player_summaries(steamid)['response']['players'][0]
The Steam Web API has multiple inferfaces (e.g., ISteamUser, IPlayerService)
that provide different functions. After instantiating one of the interfaces
the functions can be called with the appropriate paramenters. Each function
returns a string of either json, xml, or vdf (valve data format). This can be
set by the DEFAULTFORMAT
variable or changed in the paramters of the
function: steamuserinfo.resolve_vanity_url("profileURL", format="xml")
.
Alternatively, there is a helper function available to build a "user profile". At the moment, to use the profile module the STEAM_API_KEY environment variable must be set.
from steamwebapi import profiles
user_profile = profiles.get_user_profile("VanityURLOrSteamID")
print(vars(user_profile))
- Python
- 3.5.*
- 3.4.*
- 3.3.*
- 3.2.*
- 2.7.*
- 2.6.*