Python’s Requests Library (Guide)

Python's Requests Library (Guide)

by Alex Ronquillo Feb 28, 2024 intermediate web-dev

Watch Now This tutorial has a related video course created by the Real Python team. Watch it together with the written tutorial to deepen your understanding: Making HTTP Requests With Python

The Requests library is the de facto standard for making HTTP requests in Python. It abstracts the complexities of making requests behind a beautiful, simple API so that you can focus on interacting with services and consuming data in your application.

Throughout this tutorial, you’ll see some of the most useful features that Requests has to offer as well as ways to customize and optimize those features for different situations that you may come across. You’ll also learn how to use Requests in an efficient way as well as how to prevent requests to external services from slowing down your application.

In this tutorial, you’ll learn how to:

  • Make requests using the most common HTTP methods
  • Customize your requests’ headers and data using the query string and message body
  • Inspect data from your requests and responses
  • Make authenticated requests
  • Configure your requests to help prevent your application from backing up or slowing down

For the best experience working through this tutorial, you should have basic general knowledge of HTTP. That said, you still may be able to follow along fine without it.

In the upcoming sections, you’ll see how you can install and use requests in your application. If you want to play with the code examples that you’ll see in this tutorial, as well as some additional ones, then you can download the code examples and work with them locally:

Take the Quiz: Test your knowledge with our interactive “HTTP Requests With the "requests" Library” quiz. You’ll receive a score upon completion to help you track your learning progress:


Interactive Quiz

HTTP Requests With the "requests" Library

Test your understanding of the Python "requests" library for making HTTP requests and interacting with web services.

Getting Started With Python’s Requests Library

Even though the Requests library is a common staple for many Python developers, it’s not included in Python’s standard library. There are good reasons for that decision, primarily that the library can continue to evolve more freely as a self-standing project.

Because Requests is a third-party library, you need to install it before you can use it in your code. As a good practice, you should install external packages into a virtual environment, but you may choose to install requests into your global environment if you’re planning to use it across multiple projects.

Whether you’re working in a virtual environment or not, you’ll need to install requests:

Shell
$ python -m pip install requests

Once pip has finished installing requests, you can use it in your application. Importing requests looks like this:

Python
import requests

Now that you’re all set up, it’s time to begin your journey through Requests. Your first goal will be learning how to make a GET request.

The GET Request

HTTP methods, such as GET and POST, determine which action you’re trying to perform when making an HTTP request. Besides GET and POST, there are several other common methods that you’ll use later in this tutorial.

One of the most common HTTP methods is GET. The GET method indicates that you’re trying to get or retrieve data from a specified resource. To make a GET request using Requests, you can invoke requests.get().

To test this out, you can make a GET request to GitHub’s REST API by calling get() with the following URL:

Python
>>> import requests
>>> requests.get("https://api.github.com")
<Response [200]>

Congratulations! You’ve made your first request. Now you’ll dive a little deeper into the response of that request.

The Response

A Response is a powerful object for inspecting the results of the request. Make that same request again, but this time store the return value in a variable so that you can get a closer look at its attributes and behaviors:

Python
>>> import requests
>>> response = requests.get("https://api.github.com")

In this example, you’ve captured the return value of get(), which is an instance of Response, and stored it in a variable called response. You can now use response to see a lot of information about the results of your GET request.

Status Codes

The first bit of information that you can gather from Response is the status code. A status code informs you of the status of the request.

For example, a 200 OK status means that your request was successful, whereas a 404 NOT FOUND status means that the resource you were looking for wasn’t found. There are many other possible status codes as well to give you specific insights into what happened with your request.

By accessing .status_code, you can see the status code that the server returned:

Python
>>> response.status_code
200

.status_code returned 200, which means that your request was successful and the server responded with the data that you were requesting.

Sometimes, you might want to use this information to make decisions in your code:

Python
if response.status_code == 200:
    print("Success!")
elif response.status_code == 404:
    print("Not Found.")

With this logic, if the server returns a 200 status code, then your program will print Success!. If the result is a 404, then your program will print Not Found.

Requests goes one step further in simplifying this process for you. If you use a Response instance in a conditional expression, then it’ll evaluate to True if the status code was smaller than 400, and False otherwise.

Therefore, you can simplify the last example by rewriting the if statement:

Python
if response:
    print("Success!")
else:
    raise Exception(f"Non-success status code: {response.status_code}")

In the code snippet above, you implicitly check whether the .status_code of response is between 200 and 399. If it’s not, then you raise an exception that includes the non-success status code in an f-string.

Keep in mind that this method is not verifying that the status code is equal to 200. The reason for this is that other status codes within the 200 to 399 range, such as 204 NO CONTENT and 304 NOT MODIFIED, are also considered successful in the sense that they provide some workable response.

For example, the status code 204 tells you that the response was successful, but there’s no content to return in the message body.

So, make sure you use this convenient shorthand only if you want to know if the request was generally successful. Then, if necessary, you’ll need to handle the response appropriately based on the status code.

Let’s say you don’t want to check the response’s status code in an if statement. Instead, you want to use Request’s built-in capacities to raise an exception if the request was unsuccessful. You can do this using .raise_for_status():

Python raise_error.py
import requests
from requests.exceptions import HTTPError

URLS = ["https://api.github.com", "https://api.github.com/invalid"]

for url in URLS:
    try:
        response = requests.get(url)
        response.raise_for_status()
    except HTTPError as http_err:
        print(f"HTTP error occurred: {http_err}")
    except Exception as err:
        print(f"Other error occurred: {err}")
    else:
        print("Success!")

If you invoke .raise_for_status(), then Requests will raise an HTTPError for status codes between 400 and 600. If the status code indicates a successful request, then the program will proceed without raising that exception.

Now, you know a lot about how to deal with the status code of the response that you got back from the server. However, when you make a GET request, you rarely only care about the status code of the response. Usually, you want to see more. Next, you’ll see how to view the actual data that the server sent back in the body of the response.

Content

The response of a GET request often has some valuable information, known as a payload, in the message body. Using the attributes and methods of Response, you can view the payload in a variety of different formats.

To see the response’s content in bytes, you use .content:

Python
>>> import requests

>>> response = requests.get("https://api.github.com")
>>> response.content
b'{"current_user_url":"https://api.github.com/user", ...}'

>>> type(response.content)
<class 'bytes'>

While .content gives you access to the raw bytes of the response payload, you’ll often want to convert them into a string using a character encoding such as UTF-8. response will do that for you when you access .text:

Python
>>> response.text
'{"current_user_url":"https://api.github.com/user", ...}'

>>> type(response.text)
<class 'str'>

Because the decoding of bytes to a str requires an encoding scheme, Requests will try to guess the encoding based on the response’s headers if you don’t specify one. You can provide an explicit encoding by setting .encoding before accessing .text:

Python
>>> response.encoding = "utf-8"  # Optional: Requests infers this.
>>> response.text
'{"current_user_url":"https://api.github.com/user", ...}'

If you take a look at the response, then you’ll see that it’s actually serialized JSON content. To get a dictionary, you could take the str that you retrieved from .text and deserialize it using json.loads(). However, a simpler way to accomplish this task is to use .json():

Python
>>> response.json()
{'current_user_url': 'https://api.github.com/user', ...}

>>> type(response.json())
<class 'dict'>

The type of the return value of .json() is a dictionary, so you can access values in the object by key:

Python
>>> response_dict = response.json()
>>> response_dict["emojis_url"]
'https://api.github.com/emojis'

You can do a lot with status codes and message bodies. But, if you need more information, like metadata about the response itself, then you’ll need to look at the response’s headers.

Headers

The response headers can give you useful information, such as the content type of the response payload and a time limit on how long to cache the response. To view these headers, access .headers:

Python
>>> import requests

>>> response = requests.get("https://api.github.com")
>>> response.headers
{'Server': 'GitHub.com',
...
'X-GitHub-Request-Id': 'AE83:3F40:2151C46:438A840:65C38178'}

.headers returns a dictionary-like object, allowing you to access header values by key. For example, to see the content type of the response payload, you can access "Content-Type":

Python
>>> response.headers["Content-Type"]
'application/json; charset=utf-8'

There’s something special about this dictionary-like headers object, though. The HTTP specification defines headers as case-insensitive, which means that you’re able to access these headers without worrying about their capitalization:

Python
>>> response.headers["content-type"]
'application/json; charset=utf-8'

Whether you use the key "content-type" or "Content-Type", you’ll get the same value.

Now that you’ve seen the most useful attributes and methods of Response in action, you already have a good overview of Requests’ basic usage. You can get content from the Internet and work with the response that you receive.

But there’s more to the Internet than plain and straightforward URLs. In the next section, you’ll take a step back and see how your responses change when you customize your GET requests to account for query string parameters.

Query String Parameters

One common way to customize a GET request is to pass values through query string parameters in the URL. To do this using get(), you pass data to params. For example, you can use GitHub’s repository search API to look for popular Python repositories:

Python search_popular_repos.py
import requests

# Search GitHub's repositories for popular Python projects
response = requests.get(
    "https://api.github.com/search/repositories",
    params={"q": "language:python", "sort": "stars", "order": "desc"},
)

# Inspect some attributes of the first three repositories
json_response = response.json()
popular_repositories = json_response["items"]
for repo in popular_repositories[:3]:
    print(f"Name: {repo['name']}")
    print(f"Description: {repo['description']}")
    print(f"Stars: {repo['stargazers_count']}")
    print()

By passing a dictionary to the params parameter of get(), you’re able to modify the results that come back from the search API.

You can pass params to get() in the form of a dictionary, as you’ve just done, or as a list of tuples:

Python
>>> import requests

>>> requests.get(
...     "https://api.github.com/search/repositories",
...     [("q", "language:python"), ("sort", "stars"), ("order", "desc")],
... )
<Response [200]>

You can even pass the values as bytes:

Python
>>> requests.get(
...     "https://api.github.com/search/repositories",
...     params=b"q=language:python&sort=stars&order=desc",
... )
<Response [200]>

Query strings are useful for parameterizing GET requests. Another way to customize your requests is by adding or modifying the headers that you send.

Request Headers

To customize headers, you pass a dictionary of HTTP headers to get() using the headers parameter. For example, you can change your previous search request to highlight matching search terms in the results by specifying the text-match media type in the Accept header:

Python text_matches.py
import requests

response = requests.get(
    "https://api.github.com/search/repositories",
    params={"q": '"real python"'},
    headers={"Accept": "application/vnd.github.text-match+json"},
)

# View the new `text-matches` list which provides information
# about your search term within the results
json_response = response.json()
first_repository = json_response["items"][0]
print(first_repository["text_matches"][0]["matches"])

The Accept header tells the server what content types your application can handle. In this case, since you’re expecting the matching search terms to be highlighted, you’re using the header value application/vnd.github.text-match+json, which is a proprietary GitHub Accept header where the content is a special JSON format.

If you run this code, then you’ll get a result similar to the one shown below:

Shell
$ python text_matches.py
[{'text': 'Real Python', 'indices': [23, 34]}]

Before you learn more ways to customize requests, you’ll broaden your horizons by exploring other HTTP methods.

Other HTTP Methods

Aside from GET, other popular HTTP methods include POST, PUT, DELETE, HEAD, PATCH, and OPTIONS. For each of these HTTP methods, Requests provides a function, with a similar signature to get().

You’ll notice that Requests provides an intuitive interface to all the mentioned HTTP methods:

Python
>>> import requests

>>> requests.get("https://httpbin.org/get")
<Response [200]>
>>> requests.post("https://httpbin.org/post", data={"key": "value"})
<Response [200]>
>>> requests.put("https://httpbin.org/put", data={"key": "value"})
<Response [200]>
>>> requests.delete("https://httpbin.org/delete")
<Response [200]>
>>> requests.head("https://httpbin.org/get")
<Response [200]>
>>> requests.patch("https://httpbin.org/patch", data={"key": "value"})
<Response [200]>
>>> requests.options("https://httpbin.org/get")
<Response [200]>

In the example code above, you called each function to make a request to the httpbin service using the corresponding HTTP method.

You can inspect the responses in the same way as you did before:

Python
>>> response = requests.head("https://httpbin.org/get")
>>> response.headers["Content-Type"]
'application/json'

>>> response = requests.delete("https://httpbin.org/delete")
>>> json_response = response.json()
>>> json_response["args"]
{}

Headers, response bodies, status codes, and more are returned in the Response for each method.

Next you’ll take a closer look at the POST, PUT, and PATCH methods and learn how they differ from the other request types.

The Message Body

According to the HTTP specification, POST, PUT, and the less common PATCH requests pass their data through the message body rather than through parameters in the query string. Using Requests, you’ll pass the payload to the corresponding function’s data parameter.

data takes a dictionary, a list of tuples, bytes, or a file-like object. You’ll want to adapt the data that send in the body of your request to the specific needs of the service that you’re interacting with.

For example, if your request’s content type is application/x-www-form-urlencoded, then you can send the form data as a dictionary:

Python
>>> import requests

>>> requests.post("https://httpbin.org/post", data={"key": "value"})
<Response [200]>

You can also send that same data as a list of tuples:

Python
>>> requests.post("https://httpbin.org/post", data=[("key", "value")])
<Response [200]>

If, however, you need to send JSON data, then you can use the json parameter. When you pass JSON data via json, Requests will serialize your data and add the correct Content-Type header for you.

Like you learned earlier, the httpbin service accepts test requests and responds with data about the requests. For instance, you can use it to inspect a basic POST request:

Python
>>> response = requests.post("https://httpbin.org/post", json={"key": "value"})
>>> json_response = response.json()
>>> json_response["data"]
'{"key": "value"}'
>>> json_response["headers"]["Content-Type"]
'application/json'

You can see from the response that the server received your request data and headers as you sent them. Requests also provides this information to you in the form of a PreparedRequest that you’ll inspect in more detail in the next section.

Request Inspection

When you make a request, the Requests library prepares the request before actually sending it to the destination server. Request preparation includes things like validating headers and serializing JSON content.

You can view the PreparedRequest object by accessing .request on a Response object:

Python
>>> import requests

>>> response = requests.post("https://httpbin.org/post", json={"key":"value"})

>>> response.request.headers["Content-Type"]
'application/json'
>>> response.request.url
'https://httpbin.org/post'
>>> response.request.body
b'{"key": "value"}'

Inspecting PreparedRequest gives you access to all kinds of information about the request being made, such as payload, URL, headers, authentication, and more.

So far, you’ve made a lot of different kinds of requests, but they’ve all had one thing in common: they’re unauthenticated requests to public APIs. Many services you may come across will want you to authenticate in some way.

Authentication

Authentication helps a service understand who you are. Typically, you provide your credentials to a server by passing data through the Authorization header or a custom header defined by the service. All the functions of Requests that you’ve seen to this point provide a parameter called auth, which allows you to pass your credentials:

Python
>>> import requests

>>> response = requests.get(
...     "https://httpbin.org/basic-auth/user/passwd",
...     auth=("user", "passwd")
... )

>>> response.status_code
200
>>> response.request.headers["Authorization"]
'Basic dXNlcjpwYXNzd2Q='

The request succeeds if the credentials that you pass in the tuple to auth are valid.

When you pass your credentials in a tuple to the auth parameter, Requests applies the credentials using HTTP’s Basic access authentication scheme under the hood.

You may wonder where the string Basic dXNlcjpwYXNzd2Q= that Requests set as the value for your Authorization header comes from. In short, it’s a Base64-encoded string of the username and password with the prefix "Basic ":

  1. First, Requests combines the username and password that you provided, putting a colon in between them. So for the username "user" and password "passwd", this becomes "user:passwd".

  2. Then, Requests encodes this string in Base64 using base64.b64encode(). The encoding converts the "user:passwd" string to "dXNlcjpwYXNzd2Q=".

  3. Finally, Requests adds "Basic " in front of this Base64 string.

This is how the final value for the Authorization header becomes Basic dXNlcjpwYXNzd2Q= in the example shown above.

HTTP Basic authentication isn’t very secure, because you can decode the username and password from the Base64 string. That’s why it’s important to always send these requests over HTTPS, which provides an additional layer of security by encrypting the entire HTTP request.

You could make the same request by passing explicit Basic authentication credentials using HTTPBasicAuth:

Python
>>> from requests.auth import HTTPBasicAuth
>>> requests.get(
...     "https://httpbin.org/basic-auth/user/passwd",
...     auth=HTTPBasicAuth("user", "passwd")
... )
<Response [200]>

Though you don’t need to be explicit for Basic authentication, you may want to authenticate using another method. Requests provides other methods of authentication out of the box, such as HTTPDigestAuth and HTTPProxyAuth.

A real-world example of an API that requires authentication is GitHub’s authenticated user API. This endpoint provides information about the authenticated user’s profile.

If you try to make a request without credentials, then you’ll see that the status code is 401 Unauthorized:

Python
>>> requests.get("https://api.github.com/user")
<Response [401]>

If you don’t provide authentication credentials when accessing a service that requires them, then you’ll get an HTTP error code as a response.

To make a request to GitHub’s authenticated user API, you first need to generate a personal access token with the read:user scope. Then you can pass this token as the second element in a tuple to get():

Python
>>> import requests

>>> token = "<YOUR_GITHUB_PA_TOKEN>"
>>> response = requests.get(
...     "https://api.github.com/user",
...     auth=("", token)
... )
>>> response.status_code
200

Like you learned previously, this approach passes the credentials to HTTPBasicAuth, which expects a username and a password and sends the credentials as a Base64-encoded string with the prefix "Basic ":

Python
>>> response.request.headers["Authorization"]
'Basic OmdocF92dkd...WpremM0SGRuUGY='

This works, but it’s not the right way to authenticate with a Bearer token—and using an empty string input for the superfluous username is awkward.

With Requests, you can supply your own authentication mechanism to fix that. To try this out, create a subclass of AuthBase and implement .__call__():

Python custom_token_auth.py
from requests.auth import AuthBase

class TokenAuth(AuthBase):
    """Implements a token authentication scheme."""

    def __init__(self, token):
        self.token = token

    def __call__(self, request):
        """Attach an API token to the Authorization header."""
        request.headers["Authorization"] = f"Bearer {self.token}"
        return request

Here, your custom TokenAuth mechanism receives a token, then includes that token in the Authorization header of your request, also setting the recommended "Bearer " prefix to the string.

You can now use this custom token authentication to make your call to GitHub’s authenticated user API:

Python
>>> import requests
>>> from custom_token_auth import TokenAuth

>>> token = "<YOUR_GITHUB_PA_TOKEN>"
>>> response = requests.get(
...     "https://api.github.com/user",
...     auth=TokenAuth(token)
... )

>>> response.status_code
200
>>> response.request.headers["Authorization"]
'Bearer ghp_b...Tx'

Your custom TokenAuth created a well-formatted string for the Authorization header. You can now use this more intuitive way of interacting with a token-based authentication scheme such as the one that parts of GitHub’s API require.

Bad authentication mechanisms can lead to security vulnerabilities. Unless a service requires a custom authentication mechanism for some reason, you’ll always want to use a tried-and-true auth scheme like the built-in Basic authentication or OAuth, for example through Requests-OAuthlib.

While you’re thinking about security, consider dealing with SSL certificates using Requests.

SSL Certificate Verification

Anytime the data that you’re trying to send or receive is sensitive, security is important. The way that you communicate with secure sites over HTTP is by establishing an encrypted connection using SSL, which means that verifying the target server’s SSL certificate is critical.

The good news is that Requests does this for you by default. However, there are some cases where you might want to change this behavior.

If you want to disable SSL certificate verification, then you pass False to the verify parameter of the request function:

Python
>>> import requests

>>> requests.get("https://api.github.com", verify=False)
InsecureRequestWarning: Unverified HTTPS request is being made to host
⮑ 'api.github.com'. Adding certificate verification is strongly advised.
⮑ See: https://urllib3.readthedocs.io/en/latest/advanced-usage.html#tls-warnings
⮑  warnings.warn(
<Response [200]>

Requests even warns you when you’re making an insecure request to help you keep your data safe!

Now that you know how to make all sorts of HTTP requests using Requests, authenticated or not, you may wonder about how you can make sure that your program works as quickly as possible.

In the next section, you’ll learn about a few ways that you can improve performance with the help of Requests.

Performance

When using Requests, especially in a production application environment, it’s important to consider performance implications. Features like timeout control, sessions, and retry limits can help you keep your application running smoothly.

Timeouts

When you make an inline request to an external service, your system will need to wait for the response before moving on. If your application waits too long for that response, requests to your service could back up, your user experience could suffer, or your background jobs could hang.

By default, Requests will wait indefinitely on the response, so you should almost always specify a timeout duration to prevent these issues from happening. To set the request’s timeout, use the timeout parameter. timeout can be an integer or float representing the number of seconds to wait on a response before timing out:

Python
>>> requests.get("https://api.github.com", timeout=1)
<Response [200]>
>>> requests.get("https://api.github.com", timeout=3.05)
<Response [200]>

In the first request, the request will time out after 1 second. In the second request, the request will time out after 3.05 seconds.

You can also pass a tuple to timeout with the following two elements:

  1. Connect timeout: The time it allows for the client to establish a connection to the server
  2. Read timeout: The time it’ll wait on a response once your client has established a connection

Both of these elements should be numbers, and can be of type int or float:

Python
>>> requests.get("https://api.github.com", timeout=(3.05, 5))
<Response [200]>

If the request establishes a connection within 3.05 seconds and receives data within 5 seconds of the connection being established, then the response will be returned as it was before. If the request times out, then the function will raise a Timeout exception:

Python timeout_catcher.py
import requests
from requests.exceptions import Timeout

try:
    response = requests.get("https://api.github.com", timeout=(3.05, 5))
except Timeout:
    print("The request timed out")
else:
    print("The request did not time out")

Your program can catch the Timeout exception and respond accordingly.

The Session Object

Until now, you’ve been dealing with high-level requests APIs such as get() and post(). These functions are abstractions of what’s going on when you make your requests. They hide implementation details, such as how connections are managed, so that you don’t have to worry about them.

Underneath those abstractions is a class called Session. If you need to fine-tune your control over how requests are being made or improve the performance of your requests, you may need to use a Session instance directly.

Sessions are used to persist parameters across requests. For example, if you want to use the same authentication across multiple requests, then you can use a session:

Python persist_info_with_session.py
 1import requests
 2from custom_token_auth import TokenAuth
 3
 4TOKEN = "<YOUR_GITHUB_PA_TOKEN>"
 5
 6with requests.Session() as session:
 7    session.auth = TokenAuth(TOKEN)
 8
 9    first_response = session.get("https://api.github.com/user")
10    second_response = session.get("https://api.github.com/user")
11
12print(first_response.headers)
13print(second_response.json())

In this code example, you use a context manager to ensure that the session releases the resources when it doesn’t need them anymore.

In line 7, you log in using your custom TokenAuth. You only need to log in once per session, and then you can make multiple authenticated requests. Requests will persist the credentials while the session exists.

You then make two requests to the authenticated user API in lines 9 and 10 using session.get() instead of get().

The primary performance optimization of sessions comes in the form of persistent connections. When your app makes a connection to a server using a Session, it keeps that connection around in a connection pool. When your app wants to connect to the same server again, it’ll reuse a connection from the pool rather than establishing a new one.

Max Retries

When a request fails, you may want your application to retry the same request. However, Requests won’t do this for you by default. To apply this functionality, you need to implement a custom transport adapter.

Transport adapters let you define a set of configurations for each service that you’re interacting with. For example, say you want all requests to https://api.github.com to retry two times before finally raising a RetryError. You’d build a transport adapter, set its max_retries parameter, and mount it to an existing Session:

Python retry_twice.py
import requests
from requests.adapters import HTTPAdapter
from requests.exceptions import RetryError

github_adapter = HTTPAdapter(max_retries=2)

session = requests.Session()

session.mount("https://api.github.com", github_adapter)

try:
    response = session.get("https://api.github.com/")
except RetryError as err:
    print(f"Error: {err}")
finally:
    session.close()

In this example, you’ve set up your session so that it’ll retry a maximum of two times when your request to GitHub’s API doesn’t work as expected.

When you mount the HTTPAdapter—in this case, github_adapter—to session, then session will adhere to its configuration for each request to https://api.github.com.

If you want to play around with code that builds on top of this example, and you’d like to inspect when the retries happen, then you’re in luck. You can download the materials of this tutorial and take a look at retry_thrice.py:

The code in this file improves on the example shown above by using the underlying urllib3.util.Retry to further customize the retry functionality. It also adds logging to display debugging output, which gives you a chance to monitor when Python attempted the retries.

Requests comes packaged with intuitive implementations for timeouts, transport adapters, and sessions that can help you keep your code efficient and your application resilient.

Conclusion

Nice work, you’ve made it to the end of the tutorial, and you’ve come a long way in increasing your knowledge about Python’s powerful Requests library.

In this tutorial, you’ve learned how to:

  • Make requests using a variety of different HTTP methods such as GET, POST, and PUT
  • Customize your requests by modifying headers, authentication, query strings, and message bodies
  • Inspect the data you send to the server and the data the server sends back to you
  • Work with SSL certificate verification
  • Use Requests effectively with max_retries, timeout, sessions, and transport adapters

Because you learned how to use Requests, you’re equipped to explore the wide world of web services and build awesome applications using the fascinating data they provide.

Take the Quiz: Test your knowledge with our interactive “HTTP Requests With the "requests" Library” quiz. You’ll receive a score upon completion to help you track your learning progress:


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HTTP Requests With the "requests" Library

Test your understanding of the Python "requests" library for making HTTP requests and interacting with web services.

Watch Now This tutorial has a related video course created by the Real Python team. Watch it together with the written tutorial to deepen your understanding: Making HTTP Requests With Python

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About Alex Ronquillo

Alex Ronquillo is a Software Engineer at thelab. He’s an avid Pythonista who is also passionate about writing and game development.

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Related Topics: intermediate web-dev

Recommended Video Course: Making HTTP Requests With Python