The module provides handy URL class for URL parsing and changing.
Url is constructed from str
:
>>> from yarl import URL
>>> url = URL('https://www.python.org/~guido?arg=1#frag')
>>> url
URL('https://www.python.org/~guido?arg=1#frag')
All url parts: scheme, user, password, host, port, path, query and fragment are accessible by properties:
>>> url.scheme
'https'
>>> url.host
'www.python.org'
>>> url.path
'/~guido'
>>> url.query_string
'arg=1'
>>> url.query
<MultiDictProxy('arg': '1')>
>>> url.fragment
'frag'
All url manipulations produce a new url object:
>>> url = URL('https://www.python.org')
>>> url / 'foo' / 'bar'
URL('https://www.python.org/foo/bar')
>>> url / 'foo' % {'bar': 'baz'}
URL('https://www.python.org/foo?bar=baz')
Strings passed to constructor and modification methods are automatically encoded giving canonical representation as result:
>>> url = URL('https://www.python.org/шлях')
>>> url
URL('https://www.python.org/%D1%88%D0%BB%D1%8F%D1%85')
Regular properties are percent-decoded, use raw_
versions for
getting encoded strings:
>>> url.path
'/шлях'
>>> url.raw_path
'/%D1%88%D0%BB%D1%8F%D1%85'
Human readable representation of URL is available as .human_repr()
:
>>> url.human_repr()
'https://www.python.org/шлях'
For full documentation please read https://yarl.aio-libs.org.
$ pip install yarl
The library is Python 3 only!
PyPI contains binary wheels for Linux, Windows and MacOS. If you want to install
yarl
on another operating system where wheels are not provided,
the tarball will be used to compile the library from
the source code. It requires a C compiler and and Python headers installed.
To skip the compilation you must explicitly opt-in by using a PEP 517
configuration setting pure-python
, or setting the YARL_NO_EXTENSIONS
environment variable to a non-empty value, e.g.:
$ pip install yarl --config-settings=pure-python=false
Please note that the pure-Python (uncompiled) version is much slower. However, PyPy always uses a pure-Python implementation, and, as such, it is unaffected by this variable.
YARL requires multidict and propcache libraries.
The documentation is located at https://yarl.aio-libs.org.
There is no standard for boolean representation of boolean values.
Some systems prefer true
/false
, others like yes
/no
, on
/off
,
Y
/N
, 1
/0
, etc.
yarl
cannot make an unambiguous decision on how to serialize bool
values because
it is specific to how the end-user's application is built and would be different for
different apps. The library doesn't accept booleans in the API; a user should convert
bools into strings using own preferred translation protocol.
furl (https://pypi.python.org/pypi/furl)
The library has rich functionality but the
furl
object is mutable.I'm afraid to pass this object into foreign code: who knows if the code will modify my url in a terrible way while I just want to send URL with handy helpers for accessing URL properties.
furl
has other non-obvious tricky things but the main objection is mutability.URLObject (https://pypi.python.org/pypi/URLObject)
URLObject is immutable, that's pretty good.
Every URL change generates a new URL object.
But the library doesn't do any decode/encode transformations leaving the end user to cope with these gory details.
The project is hosted on GitHub
Please file an issue on the bug tracker if you have found a bug or have some suggestion in order to improve the library.
aio-libs google group: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/aio-libs
Feel free to post your questions and ideas here.
The yarl
package is written by Andrew Svetlov.
It's Apache 2 licensed and freely available.