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    Simple file download.

    Pythonista
    file download
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    • lukaskollmer
      lukaskollmer last edited by lukaskollmer

      You can use urllib.urlretrieve:

      import urllib
      urllib.urlretrieve("http://www.example.com/songs/mp3.mp3", "mp3.mp3")
      

      This will download the file and return a File object which points to the downloaded file on disk

      NickAtNight 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • NickAtNight
        NickAtNight last edited by

        And I can replace the hard code with a input()

        filein = input("Enter the URL address of file to get:")
        fileout = input("Enter the file name:")

        filein = filepath + filename
        fileout = filename

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • NickAtNight
          NickAtNight @lukaskollmer last edited by

          Ok, I will have to try that. @lukaskollmer

          How about this:
          If I navigate to the file in Safari.
          I can run a script.
          Using APPEX will give me the URL

          import appex
          
          r = appex.get_url()
          
          print(r)
          

          Now I just need to put that url into the command.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • NickAtNight
            NickAtNight last edited by

            Latest version,

            • Uses APPEX.
              -- If running as a script, gets the file name from APPEX.
              -- So navigate to file and invoke script.
              -- No checking for the appropriate type of file.

            • If not run as a script
              -- Allow manual entry of entire file path.
              -- Alterbative is to use the dummy test url

            • I suppose I should make a 'download' directory and put the files in there, just below the root.

            import console
            import dialogs
            import appex
            import os.path
            import urllib.request, urllib

            test = appex.is_running_extension()

            if test == True:
            filein = appex.get_url()
            else:
            myrun = dialogs.alert('Manual entry?', '','Enter manual URL',"Dummy")
            if myrun == 1:
            filein = input("Enter the URL address of file to get:")

            else:
            	filein = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/grrrr/py/741ba0500bc49e8f6268f02d23e461649e8d457b/scripts/buffer.py"
            

            fileparse = urllib.parse.urlparse(filein)
            filepath,filename = os.path.split(fileparse.path)

            fin = urllib.request.urlopen(filein)

            fout = open(filename,'w')

            fout.truncate()

            bytemyfile = fin.read()
            myfile = bytemyfile.decode("utf-8")
            fout.write(myfile)
            print (myfile)

            fin.close()
            fout.close()

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • NickAtNight
              NickAtNight last edited by

              Revised version.

              Makes a Downliad file in Documents.
              Puts download file there

              import console
              import dialogs
              import appex
              import os.path
              import urllib.request, urllib

              #Make a downloads directory
              os.chdir(os.path.expanduser('~'))
              os.chdir(os.path.join(os.getcwd(),'Documents'))

              test = os.path.isdir('Downloads')
              print(test)

              if test == False:
              print('Downloads created')
              os.makedirs('Downloads')
              else:
              print('Downloads exists')

              print('Change dir to Downloads')

              os.chdir(os.path.join(os.getcwd(),'Downloads'))

              #Test if running as extenstion
              test = appex.is_running_extension()

              if test == True:
              filein = appex.get_url()
              else:
              myrun = dialogs.alert('Manual entry?', '','Enter manual URL',"Dummy")

              if myrun == 1:
              filein = input("Enter the URL address of file to get:")

              else:
              filein = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/grrrr/py/741ba0500bc49e8f6268f02d23e461649e8d457b/scripts/buffer.py"

              fileparse = urllib.parse.urlparse(filein)
              filepath,filename = os.path.split(fileparse.path)

              fin = urllib.request.urlopen(filein)

              fout = open(filename,'w')

              fout.truncate()

              bytemyfile = fin.read()
              myfile = bytemyfile.decode("utf-8")
              fout.write(myfile)
              print (myfile)

              fin.close()
              fout.close()

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • NickAtNight
                NickAtNight last edited by

                Well, that works modestly well. It downloaded both sample files for this Google code jam problem.

                link text

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • NickAtNight
                  NickAtNight last edited by

                  Well, not working on github.com

                  Getting coding error

                  Traceback (most recent call last):
                  File "/private/var/mobile/Containers/Shared/AppGroup/78B1F70D-7DE8-4840-87C8-F5C1D01E9EF5/Pythonista3/Documents/LPTHW/FileDownload.py", line 49, in <module>
                  fout.write(myfile)
                  UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character '\xb7' in position 1367: ordinal not in range(128)

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • JonB
                    JonB last edited by JonB

                    You are better off using requests than urllib. It is easier to work with, and it handles decoding of the charset for you (otherwise, you need to check what encoding the website uses, and decode based in that). Also, you are better off using 'wb' to open your file, and write the bytes directly, rather than trying to mess with encodings at all.

                    Here is a 2 liner to save a file:

                    with open(destpath,'wb') as file:
                    		file.write(requests.get(url).content)
                    

                    See https://gist.github.com/jsbain/fcb3f42932dde9b0ff6c122893d1b230 for how this is used in an app extension that can be run from safari, to save a file to pythonista.

                    By the way, to post code in the forums, please type three backticks before you paste, on a separate line, and theee backticks after:

                    ```
                    your code here
                    ```
                    

                    Backticks on ios are a pain, you have to long press the single quote, and select the option on the left. I like to create a keyboard shortcut in settings, which replaces ,,, with ``` for this purpose.

                    NickAtNight 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • NickAtNight
                      NickAtNight last edited by

                      Backticks?

                      Ok, let's give it a try.

                      Here is a simple working version of your suggestion.

                      I like the 'wb' switch.

                      import requests
                      
                      print()
                      
                      destpath = 'ex24file.txt'
                      url = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/grrrr/py/741ba0500bc49e8f6268f02d23e461649e8d457b/scripts/buffer.py"
                      
                      with open(destpath,'wb') as file:
                      	file.write(requests.get(url).content)
                      
                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • NickAtNight
                        NickAtNight @JonB last edited by

                        Well that works pretty good @JonB.

                        I just learned how to transfer up a GIST.

                        First test:
                        https://gist.github.com/NickAtNight500

                        How do we download a ZIP file?

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • NickAtNight
                          NickAtNight last edited by

                          Tagging this discussion for future reference. link text

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • TutorialDoctor
                            TutorialDoctor last edited by TutorialDoctor

                            Found this bit of code on github inside of a game made with Pythonista.

                            urllib.request.urlretrieve('https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=0B3zm9_2zdxHnQUJweTVtMU1GdDQ', 'notsonice.m4a')

                            It downloads a file from their Google Drive account into the directory the script that runs this code is.

                            lachlantula 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • lukaskollmer
                              lukaskollmer last edited by

                              @TutorialDoctor Isn't that basically what I already proposed?

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                              • TutorialDoctor
                                TutorialDoctor last edited by

                                Eeek. Yup.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • NickAtNight
                                  NickAtNight last edited by

                                  So what is the difference between request and urllib.request?

                                  Same library, just different collections?

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • abcabc
                                    abcabc last edited by

                                    http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2018026/what-are-the-differences-between-the-urllib-urllib2-and-requests-module

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • lachlantula
                                      lachlantula @TutorialDoctor last edited by

                                      @TutorialDoctor Hahaha, looks like you found my game I made as a joke between me and my friend:P

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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