Skip to content

Command-line interface to PyPI Stats API to get download stats for Python packages

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

hugovk/pypistats

Repository files navigation

pypistats

PyPI version Supported Python versions PyPI downloads Azure Pipelines status GitHub Actions status codecov Licence DOI Code style: Black

Python interface to PyPI Stats API to get aggregate download statistics on Python packages on the Python Package Index without having to execute queries directly against Google BigQuery.

Data is available for the last 180 days. (For longer time periods, pypinfo can help, you'll need an API key and get free quota.)

Installation

From PyPI

python3 -m pip install --upgrade pypistats

From source

git clone https://github.com/hugovk/pypistats
cd pypistats
python3 -m pip install .

Example command-line use

Run pypistats with a subcommand (corresponding to PyPI Stats endpoints), then options for that subcommand.

Top-level help:

$ pypistats --help
usage: pypistats [-h] [-V]
                 {recent,overall,python_major,python_minor,system} ...

positional arguments:
  {recent,overall,python_major,python_minor,system}

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -V, --version         show program's version number and exit

Help for a subcommand:

$ pypistats recent --help
usage: pypistats recent [-h] [-p {day,week,month}]
                        [-f {html,json,pretty,md,markdown,rst,tsv}] [-j]
                        [-v]
                        package

Retrieve the aggregate download quantities for the last day/week/month

positional arguments:
  package

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -p {day,week,month}, --period {day,week,month}
  -f {html,json,pretty,md,markdown,rst,tsv}, --format {html,json,pretty,md,markdown,rst,tsv}
                        The format of output (default: pretty)
  -j, --json            Shortcut for "-f json" (default: False)
  -v, --verbose         Print debug messages to stderr (default: False)

Get recent downloads:

$ pypistats recent pillow
┌───────────┬────────────┬────────────┐
│  last_day │ last_month │  last_week │
├───────────┼────────────┼────────────┤
│ 3,419,597 │ 91,237,125 │ 21,259,217 │
└───────────┴────────────┴────────────┘

Help for another subcommand:

$ pypistats python_minor --help
usage: pypistats python_minor [-h] [-V VERSION]
                              [-f {html,json,pretty,md,markdown,rst,tsv}]
                              [-j] [-sd yyyy-mm[-dd]|name]
                              [-ed yyyy-mm[-dd]|name] [-m yyyy-mm|name] [-l]
                              [-t] [-d] [--monthly] [-c {yes,no,auto}] [-v]
                              package

Retrieve the aggregate daily download time series by Python minor version
number

positional arguments:
  package

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -V VERSION, --version VERSION
                        eg. 2.7 or 3.6 (default: None)
  -f {html,json,pretty,md,markdown,rst,tsv}, --format {html,json,pretty,md,markdown,rst,tsv}
                        The format of output (default: pretty)
  -j, --json            Shortcut for "-f json" (default: False)
  -sd yyyy-mm[-dd]|name, --start-date yyyy-mm[-dd]|name
                        Start date (default: None)
  -ed yyyy-mm[-dd]|name, --end-date yyyy-mm[-dd]|name
                        End date (default: None)
  -m yyyy-mm|name, --month yyyy-mm|name
                        Shortcut for -sd & -ed for a single month (default:
                        None)
  -l, --last-month      Shortcut for -sd & -ed for last month (default: False)
  -t, --this-month      Shortcut for -sd for this month (default: False)
  -d, --daily           Show daily downloads (default: False)
  --monthly             Show monthly downloads (default: False)
  -c {yes,no,auto}, --color {yes,no,auto}
                        Color terminal output (default: auto)
  -v, --verbose         Print debug messages to stderr (default: False)

Get version downloads:

$ pypistats python_minor pillow --last-month
┌──────────┬─────────┬────────────┐
│ category │ percent │  downloads │
├──────────┼─────────┼────────────┤
│ 3.8      │  18.37% │ 16,161,117 │
│ 3.10     │  17.47% │ 15,373,666 │
│ 3.7      │  16.70% │ 14,691,371 │
│ 3.11     │  15.49% │ 13,630,259 │
│ 3.9      │  13.19% │ 11,605,389 │
│ 3.6      │   9.68% │  8,519,789 │
│ null     │   4.64% │  4,085,994 │
│ 3.12     │   3.26% │  2,871,386 │
│ 2.7      │   0.95% │    837,638 │
│ 3.5      │   0.25% │    216,308 │
│ 3.13     │   0.00% │      2,830 │
│ 3.4      │   0.00% │      1,237 │
│ 3.3      │   0.00% │        109 │
│ 3.1      │   0.00% │          3 │
│ 3.2      │   0.00% │          2 │
│ Total    │         │ 87,997,098 │
└──────────┴─────────┴────────────┘

Date range: 2024-02-01 - 2024-02-29

You can format in Markdown, ready for pasting in GitHub issues and PRs:

category percent downloads
3.8 18.37% 16,161,117
3.10 17.47% 15,373,666
3.7 16.70% 14,691,371
3.11 15.49% 13,630,259
3.9 13.19% 11,605,389
3.6 9.68% 8,519,789
null 4.64% 4,085,994
3.12 3.26% 2,871,386
2.7 0.95% 837,638
3.5 0.25% 216,308
3.13 0.00% 2,830
3.4 0.00% 1,237
3.3 0.00% 109
3.1 0.00% 3
3.2 0.00% 2
Total 87,997,098

Date range: 2024-02-01 - 2024-02-29

These are equivalent (in May 2019):

pypistats python_major pip --last-month
pypistats python_major pip --month april
pypistats python_major pip --month apr
pypistats python_major pip --month 2019-04

And:

pypistats python_major pip --start-date december --end-date january
pypistats python_major pip --start-date dec      --end-date jan
pypistats python_major pip --start-date 2018-12  --end-date 2019-01

Example programmatic use

Return values are from the JSON responses documented in the API: https://pypistats.org/api/

import pypistats
from pprint import pprint

# Call the API
print(pypistats.recent("pillow"))
print(pypistats.recent("pillow", "day", format="markdown"))
print(pypistats.recent("pillow", "week", format="rst"))
print(pypistats.recent("pillow", "month", format="html"))
pprint(pypistats.recent("pillow", "week", format="json"))
print(pypistats.recent("pillow", "day"))

print(pypistats.overall("pillow"))
print(pypistats.overall("pillow", mirrors=True, format="markdown"))
print(pypistats.overall("pillow", mirrors=False, format="rst"))
print(pypistats.overall("pillow", mirrors=True, format="html"))
pprint(pypistats.overall("pillow", mirrors=False, format="json"))

print(pypistats.python_major("pillow"))
print(pypistats.python_major("pillow", version=2, format="markdown"))
print(pypistats.python_major("pillow", version=3, format="rst"))
print(pypistats.python_major("pillow", version="2", format="html"))
pprint(pypistats.python_major("pillow", version="3", format="json"))

print(pypistats.python_minor("pillow"))
print(pypistats.python_minor("pillow", version=2.7, format="markdown"))
print(pypistats.python_minor("pillow", version="2.7", format="rst"))
print(pypistats.python_minor("pillow", version=3.7, format="html"))
pprint(pypistats.python_minor("pillow", version="3.7", format="json"))

print(pypistats.system("pillow"))
print(pypistats.system("pillow", os="darwin", format="markdown"))
print(pypistats.system("pillow", os="linux", format="rst"))
print(pypistats.system("pillow", os="darwin", format="html"))
pprint(pypistats.system("pillow", os="linux", format="json"))

NumPy and pandas

To use with either NumPy or pandas, make sure they are first installed, or:

pip install --upgrade "pypistats[numpy]"
pip install --upgrade "pypistats[pandas]"
pip install --upgrade "pypistats[numpy,pandas]"

Return data in a NumPy array for further processing:

import pypistats
numpy_array = pypistats.overall("pyvista", total=True, format="numpy")
print(type(numpy_array))
# <class 'numpy.ndarray'>
print(numpy_array)
# [['with_mirrors' '2019-09-20' '2.23%' 1204]
#  ['without_mirrors' '2019-09-20' '2.08%' 1122]
#  ['with_mirrors' '2019-09-19' '0.92%' 496]
#  ...
#  ['with_mirrors' '2019-10-26' '0.02%' 13]
#  ['without_mirrors' '2019-10-26' '0.02%' 12]
#  ['Total' None None 54041]]

Or in a pandas DataFrame:

import pypistats
pandas_dataframe = pypistats.overall("pyvista", total=True, format="pandas")
print(type(pandas_dataframe))
# <class 'pandas.core.frame.DataFrame'>
print(pandas_dataframe)
#             category        date percent  downloads
# 0       with_mirrors  2019-09-20   2.23%       1204
# 1    without_mirrors  2019-09-20   2.08%       1122
# 2       with_mirrors  2019-09-19   0.92%        496
# 3       with_mirrors  2019-08-22   0.90%        489
# 4    without_mirrors  2019-09-19   0.86%        466
# ..               ...         ...     ...        ...
# 354  without_mirrors  2019-11-03   0.03%         15
# 355  without_mirrors  2019-11-16   0.03%         15
# 356     with_mirrors  2019-10-26   0.02%         13
# 357  without_mirrors  2019-10-26   0.02%         12
# 358            Total        None    None      54041
#
# [359 rows x 4 columns]

For example, create charts with pandas:

# Show overall downloads over time, excluding mirrors
import pypistats
data = pypistats.overall("pillow", total=True, format="pandas")
data = data.groupby("category").get_group("without_mirrors").sort_values("date")

chart = data.plot(x="date", y="downloads", figsize=(10, 2))
chart.figure.show()
chart.figure.savefig("overall.png")  # alternatively

overall.png

# Show Python 3 downloads over time
import pypistats
data = pypistats.python_major("pillow", total=True, format="pandas")
data = data.groupby("category").get_group(3).sort_values("date")

chart = data.plot(x="date", y="downloads", figsize=(10, 2))
chart.figure.show()
chart.figure.savefig("python3.png")  # alternatively

python3.png

See also

Related projects