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GitHub - discogs/discogs_client: DEPRECATED - Official Python Client for the Discogs API

This repository is no longer maintained. You can still use a REST client like Requests or other third-party Python library to access the Discogs REST API.

This is the official Discogs API client for Python. It enables you to query the Discogs database for information on artists, releases, labels, users, Marketplace listings, and more. It also supports OAuth 1.0a authorization, which allows you to change user data such as profile information, collections and wantlists, inventory, and orders.

Install the client from PyPI using your favorite package manager.

$ pip install discogs_client
Instantiating the client object
>>> import discogs_client
>>> d = discogs_client.Client('ExampleApplication/0.1')

There are a couple of different authorization methods you can choose from depending on your requirements.

This method will allow your application to make requests on behalf of any user who logs in.

For this, specify your app's consumer key and secret:

>>> d.set_consumer_key('key-here', 'secret-here')
>>> # Or you can do this when you instantiate the Client

Then go through the OAuth 1.0a process. In a web app, we'd specify a callback_url. In this example, we'll use the OOB flow.

>>> d.get_authorize_url()
('request-token', 'request-secret', 'authorize-url-here')

The client will hang on to the access token and secret, but in a web app, you'd want to persist those and pass them into a new Client instance on the next request.

Next, visit the authorize URL, authenticate as a Discogs user, and get the verifier:

>>> d.get_access_token('verifier-here')
('access-token-here', 'access-secret-here')

Now you can make requests on behalf of the user.

>>> me = d.identity()
>>> "I'm {0} ({1}) from {2}.".format(me.name, me.username, me.location)
u"I'm Joe Bloggs (example) from Portland, Oregon."
>>> len(me.wantlist)
3
>>> me.wantlist.add(d.release(5))
>>> len(me.wantlist)
4
User-token authentication

This is one of the simplest ways to authenticate and become able to perform requests requiring authentication, such as search (see below). The downside is that you'll be limited to the information only your user account can see (i.e., no requests on behalf of other users).

For this, you'll need to generate a user-token from your developer settings on the Discogs website.

>>> d = discogs_client.Client('ExampleApplication/0.1', user_token="my_user_token")

Use methods on the client to fetch objects. You can search for objects:

>>> results = d.search('Stockholm By Night', type='release')
>>> results.pages
1
>>> artist = results[0].artists[0]
>>> artist.name
u'Persuader, The'

Or fetch them by ID:

>>> artist.id
1
>>> artist == d.artist(1)
True

You can drill down as far as you like.

>>> releases = d.search('Bit Shifter', type='artist')[0].releases[1].\
...     versions[0].labels[0].releases
>>> len(releases)
134

Query for an artist using the artist's name:

>>> artist = d.artist(956139)
>>> print artist
<Artist "...">
>>> 'name' in artist.data.keys()
True

Get a list of Artists representing this artist's aliases:

Get a list of Releases by this artist by page number:

>>> artist.releases.page(1)
[...]

Query for a release using its Discogs ID:

>>> release = d.release(221824)

Get the title of this Release:

Get a list of all Artists associated with this Release:

>>> release.artists
[<Artist "...">]

Get the tracklist for this Release:

>>> release.tracklist
[...]

Get the MasterRelease for this Release:

>>> release.master
<MasterRelease "...">

Get a list of all Labels for this Release:

Query for a master release using its Discogs ID:

>>> master_release = d.master(120735)

Get the key Release for this MasterRelease:

>>> master_release.main_release
<Release "...">

Get the title of this MasterRelease:

>>> master_release.title
u'...'
>>> master_release.title == master_release.main_release.title
True

Get a list of Releases representing other versions of this MasterRelease by page number:

>>> master_release.versions.page(1)
[...]

Get the tracklist for this MasterRelease:

>>> master_release.tracklist
[...]

Query for a label using the label's name:

>>> label = d.label(6170)

Get a list of Releases from this Label by page number:

>>> label.releases.page(1)
[...]

Get a list of Labels representing sublabels associated with this Label:

>>> label.sublabels
[...]

Get the Label's parent label, if it exists:

>>> label.parent_label
<Label "Warp Records Limited">
  1. Fork this repo
  2. Create a feature branch
  3. Open a pull-request

Check the included documentation, or just spin up a REPL and use dir() on things :)


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