API:Client code/Evaluations/wikitools
Wikitools is a small library that facilitates interaction with the MediaWiki API. There are methods available for easily making changes to or getting information about pages, categories, users, and the wiki itself.
Particularly notable and useful aspects of wikitools include:
- Very efficient usage of API calls
- Packaged for Windows as well as for Fedora and through PyPI
- The documentation that exists is clearly written and easily understandable
- Code is usefully commented and impressively readable
In-depth evaluation
editEasy to install
edit- Installation instructions are correct and easy to find
Instructions are easy to find in README. Could also include directions wih pip. Does not mention incompatibility with Python 3 (Patch/pull request submitted: https://github.com/alexz-enwp/wikitools/pull/11)
- Library is packaged for installation through appropriate package library (PyPI, CPAN, npm, Maven, rubygems, etc.)
Packaged for PyPI: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/wikitools
- Platinum standard: library is packaged for and made available through Linux distributions
Packaged for Fedora (rpm), but not for Debian. Also packaged as a Windows .exe.
Easy to understand
edit- Well designed--makes all intended API calls available with the intended level of abstraction with no redundancies
With endpoint (Wiki
object) and parameters (appropriate APIRequest.params
), all calls are available. Higher-level methods are available as well (e.g. many of the methods in page.py).
- Platinum standard: makes the Wikidata API available
If the Wikidata endpoint is used for APIRequest and then query() is called on the resulting APIRequest object, yes. For example
from wikitools import wiki, api
wikidata = wiki.Wiki('https://www.wikidata.org/w/api.php')
params = {'action': 'wbsearchentities', 'search': 'abc', 'language': 'en'}
request = api.APIRequest(wikidata, params)
result = request.query()
print result
- Well documented
- Code is commented and readable
- Code is nicely commented and looks like Python.
- Documentation is comprehensive, accurate, and easy to find
- Documentation is here: https://code.google.com/p/python-wikitools/wiki/Documentation. Documentation is only linked to from
api.py
. Documentation only covers theapi
module in depth, but is very clear and thorough for that module. Documentation appears accurate.
- Deprecated functions are clearly marked as such
- n/a
- Platinum standard: Documentation is understandable by a novice programmer
- This would be a if the documentation were more complete. The documentation that exists is easily understandable by an advanced beginner, with useful code samples in the README.
- Code uses idioms appropriate to the language the library is written in
Easy to use
edit- Has functioning, simple, and well-written code samples for common tasks
- Demonstrates queries
- Demonstrates edits
- From README:
from wikitools import wiki
from wikitools import category
site = wiki.Wiki("http://my.wikisite.org/w/api.php")
site.login("username", "password")
# Create object for "Category:Foo"
cat = category.Category(site, "Foo")
# iterate through all the pages in ns 0
for article in cat.getAllMembersGen(namespaces=[0]):
# edit each page
article.edit(prependtext="{{template}}\n")
- Documentation specifies a slight difference in creating an
APIRequest
object for writing to the wiki: pass inwrite=true
. There are a variety of methods for making changes to the wiki, but there is no example for using, e.g.,APIRequest.query()
to make edits directly.
- Handles API complications or idiosyncrasies so the user doesn't have to
- Login/logout
- Cookies
- Tokens
- Query continuations
- Requests via https, including certificate validation
- Will retrieve data if the endpoint begins with https, but uses
urllib2
and doesn't check for certificate validity
- Courteous API usage is promoted through code samples and smart defaults
- gzip compression is used by default
- Examples show how to create and use a meaningful and unique user-agent header (see https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User-agent_policy)
- Wiki.setUserAgent can be used to set a user agent, but the library/sample gives no guidance on what it should contain
- Platinum standard: generates a unique user-agent string given name/email address/repository location
- When logged in, the username is automatically included in the user agent. However, there is nothing comparable for a logged-out user.
- Efficient usage of API calls
- Nicely done. The API is called once to get information about Page and Wiki objects when they are created, and API calls are generally combined as much as possible. For example, only one combined API call is made to retrieve data on a list of pages.
- Can be used with the most recent stable version of the language it is written in (e.g. Python 3 compatible)
Python 2 only (2.5+)
Easy to debug
edit- Contains unit tests for the longest and most frequently modified functions in the library
- Platinum standard: Unit tests for many code paths exist and are maintained
- Terrible hacks/instances of extreme cleverness are clearly marked as such in comments
Good example here:
def resultCombine(type, old, new):
"""Experimental-ish result-combiner thing
If the result isn't something from action=query,
this will just explode, but that shouldn't happen hopefully?
"""
- Documentation links to the relevant section/subpage of the API documentation
README links to API. The Page.edit docstring links to the associated API module documentation page.
Easy to improve
edit- Library maintainers are responsive and courteous, and foster a thoughtful and inclusive community of developers and users
Library maintainer is not very responsive (via GitHub) as of June 2014, but existing wikitools-related comment threads are largely courteous and helpful.
- Platinum standard: Project sets clear expectations for conduct for spaces where project-related interactions occur (mailing list, IRC, repository, issue tracker). It should:
- State desired attitudes and behaviors
- Provide examples of unwelcome and harassing behavior
- Specify how these expectations will be enforced
- Pull requests are either accepted or rejected with reason within 3 weeks (Platinum standard: 3 business days)
Still no response on https://github.com/alexz-enwp/wikitools/pull/11.
- Issues/bugs are responded to in some manner within 3 weeks (Platinum standard: 3 business days) (but not necessarily fixed)
About half of the issues in the last year have received a response within 1 week; most of the others received no response from maintainers.
- The library is updated and a new version is released within 3 weeks (Platinum standard: 3 business days) when breaking changes are made to the API
gettoken
is still used for action=block
; it was removed from in May 2013. No breaking changes have affected the library since then, however.
- Platinum standard: library maintainers contact MediaWiki API maintainers with feedback on the API's design and function
Contributions from Mr.Z-man include: [1], [2], [3]
- Library specifies the license it is released under
GPL 3
Suggested TODOs
edit- Code-related
- Remove use of
gettoken
when usingaction=block
[4] - For security and clarity, use
requests
instead ofurllib2
to handle http requests[5] - Add compatibility with Python 3[6]
- Add unit tests for the longest and most frequently modified functions[7]
- Process-related
- Improve documentation:[8]
- Add directions to install with
pip
to the README - Expand the documentation to modules besides
api
, including links to the relevant API subpages
- Add directions to install with
- Add to the code samples:
- an example of using
APIRequest.query()
to make edits - usage of
Wiki.setUserAgent
- an example of using
- Decide and communicate the intended level of responsiveness (either enabling a faster response to comments/pull requests/issues, or noting the maintenance/development status in the README).[9] If you are interested in wikitools being listed as a gold standard library, active maintenance and prompt responses are important--even if a given issue is too big to fix immediately or a patch too complex to review quickly.
If these issues are addressed, wikitools will meet the gold standard and will be listed as such on API:Client code.