You can read the documentation at readthedocs.
Wunderlist's official API is out. I have all of the new calls implemented, but some core changes need to be made to support their revision system. They have likely taken down the old API, so for the time being this library does not work. I'm not providing an ETA because I have too many projects which are more interesting/important, and frankly maintaining this library is about as tedious and boring as a liberal arts school poetry slam.
from datetime import datetime from wunderpy import Wunderlist w = Wunderlist() w.login("username", "password") w.update_lists() # you have to run this first, before you do anything else w.add_list("test") # make a new list called "test" due = datetime.now().isoformat() w.add_task("test wunderpy", list_title="test", note="a note", due_date=due, starred=True) # add a task to it w.complete_task("test wunderpy", "test") # complete it w.delete_task("test wunderpy", "test") # and delete it w.delete_list("test") # and delete the list
Chances are, you're looking for information on how to use the API. I'm in the process of documenting everything in wunderpy. Information on the API, as well as the classes provided by wunderpy are documented with sphinx.
To generate the documentation:
cd docs make html # other options are available # look in the docs/build/html dir for the documentation
I'm working on writing tests for everything.
If you want to run said tests, make sure you have tox installed. After that, all you have to do is run tox.
By default, it will not run any tests for the API calls, as they take around 30 seconds to run. If you want to run those tests, you can either store your email and password in the WUNDERPY_EMAIL and WUNDERPY_PASSWORD env vars, or you can create an ini file like this:
[login] email = test@email.web password = password
Then you would run tox -- --tc-file your_config.ini.
First off, I can't thank you enough. This is my first open source project that receives even a small amount of attention, so I'm a bit new to all of this. I don't have many guidelines, just make sure your code passes PEP8, and try to have pull requests merge to the develop branch. I like to follow something akin to the gitflow branching model, so merging to develop makes that a lot easier.
- Fix python 3 support
- Bugfixes
- Client
- Add TaskList and Task classes
- Add filtering methods
- Add tests for new classes and most Wunderlist functionality
- CLI
- Add --today and --week options
- Only display incomplete tasks by default, add --show-complete option.
- Add a CLI interface
- Ensure session headers are included in all requests
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2013 bsmt
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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