Python ONEm SDK


Keywords
sdk, onem, python
License
MIT
Install
pip install ONEmSDK==0.8.0

Documentation

ONEm Python SDK

ONEm Python SDK is a library that helps in communication between your web app and the ONEm platform. It guides the developer to build JSON responses which are compliant with the JSON schema ONEm platform works by.

Installation

$ pip install onemsdk

Version history

See HISTORY.md file.

Usage example

In order to serve a selectable menu like the one below, the application has to respond to ONEm platform with a JSON having a certain structure.

The menu:

#MY-FIRST-APP MENU
A First item
B Second item
C Third item
--Reply A-C

The menu, as any other screen the user receives, has a simple structure, very similar with with a web page:

  • the first line is called header ("#MY-FIRST-APP MENU")
  • it continues with a body (containing the selectable options)
  • the last line is called footer ("--Reply A-C").

The JSON that generates this menu:

{
  "content_type": "menu",
  "content": {
    "type": "menu",
    "body": [
      {
        "type": "option",
        "description": "First item",
        "method": "GET",
        "path": "/callback-url/item1"
      },
      {
        "type": "option",
        "description": "Second item",
        "method": "GET",
        "path": "/callback-url/item2"
      },
      {
        "type": "option",
        "description": "Third item",
        "method": "POST",
        "path": "/callback-url/item3"
      }
    ],
    "header": "my menu",
    "footer": "Reply A-C"
  }
}

Working with JSONs is not as fast and clear as using simple Python objects or HTML. Here is where the ONEm SDK comes into play.

Before starting to write code please make sure you have an account on the ONEm developer portal and registered an app. We will assume your app is called my-first-app.

Create a menu with Python objects

from onemsdk.schema.v1 import Response, Menu, MenuItem


def handle_request_with_objects(request):

    menu_items = [
        MenuItem(description='First item',
                 method='GET',
                 path='/callback-url/item1'),
        MenuItem(description='Second item',
                 method='GET',
                 path='/callback-url/item2'),
        MenuItem(description='Third item',
                 method='POST',
                 path='/callback-url/item3')
    ]

    menu = Menu(header='menu', footer='Reply A-C', body=menu_items)

    # Wrap the Menu object into a Response object compatible with the JSON schema
    response = Response(content=menu)

    # Jsonify the response and send it the over the wire
    return response.json()

Create a menu with HTML

1. Create <appdir>/static/menu.html file:

<section>
  <header>menu</header>
  <ul>
    <li>
      <a href="/callback-url/item1" method="GET">First item</a>
    </li>
    <li>
      <a href="/callback-url/item2" method="GET">Second item</a>
    </li>
    <li>
      <a href="/callback-url/item3" method="POST">Third item</a>
    </li>
  </ul>
  <footer>Reply A-C</footer>
</section>

2. In your request handler:

from onemsdk.parser import load_html
from onemsdk.schema.v1 import Response


def handle_request_with_html(request):
    ...
    # Turn the HTML into a Python tag object
    root_tag = load_html(html_file="<appdir>/static/menu.html")

    # Turn the tag object into a Response object compatible with the JSON schema
    response = Response.from_tag(root_tag)

    # Jsonify the response and send it the over the wire
    return response.json()

ONEm SDK supports Jinja2 and Django template engines, as HTML is not a good fit for dynamic content.

Setting a directory with static files is recommended when using HTML or Jinja2 files. After doing that, all the files can be referred relative to the static directory. The place to do that is the entry file of your web application:

import onemsdk

...
onemsdk.config.set_static_dir('./static')
...

Create a menu with Jinja2 template

1. Create <appdir>/static/menu.jinja2 file:

<section>
  <header>{{ header }}</header>
  <ul>
    {% for item in items %}
    <li>
      <a href="{{ item['href'] }}" 
         method="{{ item['method'] }}">
          {{ item['description'] }}
      </a>
    </li>
    {% endfor %}
  </ul>
  <footer>{{ footer }}</footer>
</section>

2. In your request handler:

from onemsdk.schema.v1 import Response
from onemsdk.parser import load_template


def handle_request_with_template(request):
    ...
    data = {
        'header': 'menu',
        'footer': 'Reply A-C',
        'items': [
            {
                'method': 'GET', 
                'href': '/callback-url/item1', 
                'description': 'First item'
            },
            {
                'method': 'GET', 
                'href': '/callback-url/item2', 
                'description': 'Second item'
            },
            {
                'method': 'POST', 
                'href': '/callback-url/item3', 
                'description': 'Third item'
            },
        ]
    }
    
    # Turn the HTML template into Python object
    # Static directory is set, so write only the name of the Jinja2 file 
    root_tag = load_template(template_file="menu.jinja2", **data)

    # Turn the tag object into a Response object compatible with the JSON schema
    response = Response.from_tag(root_tag)

    # Jsonify the response and send it the over the wire
    return response.json()

Using Django templates

1. Add the middleware, ideally last in your settings.MIDDLEWARE chain

MIDDLEWARE = [
    ...,
    'onemsdk.contrib.django.HtmlToOnemResponseMiddleware',
]

2. Use Django templates with the ONEm supported tags.

from django.views.generic import TemplateView

class MyMenuView(TemplateView):
    template_name = 'my_menu.html'

    def get_context_data(self):
        items = Item.objects.all()  # some items
        return {'items': items}
<section>
    <header>My Menu</header>
    <ul>
        {% for item in items %}
            <li>
                <a href="{{ item.get_absolute_url }}">
                    {{ item.description }}
                </a>
            </li>
        {% endfor %}
    </ul>
    <footer>My Footer</footer>
</section>