Does urllib2
support DELETE or PUT method? If yes provide with any example please. I need to use piston API.
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Akshay Patil
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Pol
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5 Answers
77
you can do it with httplib:
import httplib
conn = httplib.HTTPConnection('www.foo.com')
conn.request('PUT', '/myurl', body)
resp = conn.getresponse()
content = resp.read()
also, check out this question. the accepted answer shows a way to add other methods to urllib2:
import urllib2
opener = urllib2.build_opener(urllib2.HTTPHandler)
request = urllib2.Request('http://example.org', data='your_put_data')
request.add_header('Content-Type', 'your/contenttype')
request.get_method = lambda: 'PUT'
url = opener.open(request)

Community
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Corey Goldberg
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It's you! Thanks for the examples using windows monitoring via wmi in Python, those were a great help for me :) – Anders Dec 22 '10 at 17:26
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1Nice.. httplib does not support authentication? – Pol Dec 22 '10 at 17:38
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1authentication with urllib2 in case of: `request.add_header( 'Authorization', b'Basic ' + 'user:password'.encode('base64').replace('\n','') )` – NeronLeVelu Jun 02 '17 at 06:50
14
Correction for Raj's answer:
import urllib2
class RequestWithMethod(urllib2.Request):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self._method = kwargs.pop('method', None)
urllib2.Request.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
def get_method(self):
return self._method if self._method else super(RequestWithMethod, self).get_method()

Dave
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2it would be shorter to use `self._method = kwargs.pop('method', None)` – Charles Duffy Oct 31 '11 at 22:24
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2The use of super gives me a _TypeError_. Instead I used `urllib2.Request.get_method(self)` – Bran Handley Aug 21 '12 at 16:04
11
Found following code from https://gist.github.com/kehr/0c282b14bfa35155deff34d3d27f8307 and it worked for me (Python 2.7.5):
import urllib2
request = urllib2.Request(uri, data=data)
request.get_method = lambda: 'DELETE'
response = urllib2.urlopen(request)

Ali Sadik Kumlali
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7
You can subclass the urllib2.Request object and override the method when you instantiate the class.
import urllib2
class RequestWithMethod(urllib2.Request):
def __init__(self, method, *args, **kwargs):
self._method = method
urllib2.Request.__init__(*args, **kwargs)
def get_method(self):
return self._method
Courtesy of Benjamin Smedberg

Raj
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1
You can define a subclass of the Request
object, and call it as follows:
import urllib2
class RequestWithMethod(urllib2.Request):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self._method = kwargs.pop('method', None)
urllib2.Request.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
def get_method(self):
return self._method if self._method else super(RequestWithMethod, self).get_method()
def put_request(url, data):
opener = urllib2.build_opener(urllib2.HTTPHandler)
request = RequestWithMethod(url, method='PUT', data=data)
return opener.open(request)
def delete_request(url):
opener = urllib2.build_opener(urllib2.HTTPHandler)
request = RequestWithMethod(url, method='DELETE')
return opener.open(request)
(This is similar to the above answers, but shows usage.)

Wilfred Hughes
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