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/путь')
>>> url
URL('https://www.python.org/%D0%BF%D1%83%D1%82%D1%8C')
Regular properties are percent-decoded, use raw_
versions for
getting encoded strings:
>>> url.path
'/путь'
>>> url.raw_path
'/%D0%BF%D1%83%D1%82%D1%8C'
Human readable representation of URL is available as .human_repr()
:
>>> url.human_repr()
'https://www.python.org/путь'
For full documentation please read https://yarl.readthedocs.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 (like Alpine Linux, which is not
manylinux-compliant because of the missing glibc and therefore, cannot be
used with our wheels) the 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 setting the YARL_NO_EXTENSIONS environment variable to a non-empty value, e.g.:
$ YARL_NO_EXTENSIONS=1 pip install yarl
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 library.
The documentation is located at https://yarl.readthedocs.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.
The library uses Azure Pipelines for Continuous Integration.
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.