I tried the sample provided within the documentation of the requests library for python.
With async.map(rs)
, I get the response codes, but I want to get the content of each page requested. This, for example, does not work:
out = async.map(rs) print out[0].content
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Answer
Note
The below answer is not applicable to requests v0.13.0+. The asynchronous functionality was moved to grequests after this question was written. However, you could just replace requests
with grequests
below and it should work.
I’ve left this answer as is to reflect the original question which was about using requests < v0.13.0.
To do multiple tasks with async.map
asynchronously you have to:
- Define a function for what you want to do with each object (your task)
- Add that function as an event hook in your request
- Call
async.map
on a list of all the requests / actions
Example:
from requests import async # If using requests > v0.13.0, use # from grequests import async urls = [ 'http://python-requests.org', 'http://httpbin.org', 'http://python-guide.org', 'http://kennethreitz.com' ] # A simple task to do to each response object def do_something(response): print response.url # A list to hold our things to do via async async_list = [] for u in urls: # The "hooks = {..." part is where you define what you want to do # # Note the lack of parentheses following do_something, this is # because the response will be used as the first argument automatically action_item = async.get(u, hooks = {'response' : do_something}) # Add the task to our list of things to do via async async_list.append(action_item) # Do our list of things to do via async async.map(async_list)