public
Description: Makes http fun! Also, makes consuming restful web services dead easy.
Homepage:
Clone URL: git://github.com/jnunemaker/httparty.git
Click here to lend your support to: httparty and make a donation at www.pledgie.com !
commit  9b423a22c9ebcfefa93db3e668ead5e92dc0bfea
tree    c7f147b132670c1d8fa2ce7c66bf0d9dbcdfa77b
parent  3a8ad1da073c5ae61a2687a250cb17bc04f9c7c9
README.txt
= httparty

== DESCRIPTION:

Makes http fun again!

== FEATURES/PROBLEMS:

* Easy get, post, put, delete requests
* Basic http authentication
* Default request query string parameters (ie: for api keys that are needed on each request)
* Automatic parsing of JSON and XML into ruby hashes

== SYNOPSIS:

The following is a simple example of wrapping Twitter's API for posting updates.

  class Twitter
    include HTTParty
    base_uri 'twitter.com'
    basic_auth 'username', 'password'
  end

  Twitter.post('/statuses/update.json', :query => {:status => "It's an HTTParty and everyone is invited!"})

That is really it! The object returned is a ruby hash that is decoded from Twitter's json response. JSON parsing is used 
because of the .json extension in the path of the request. You can also explicitly set a format (see the examples). 

That works and all but what if you don't want to embed your username and password in the class? Below is an example to 
fix that:

  class Twitter
    include HTTParty
    base_uri 'twitter.com'
  
    def initialize(user, pass)
      self.class.basic_auth user, pass
    end
  
    def post(text)
      self.class.post('/statuses/update.json', :query => {:status => text})
    end
  end
  
  Twitter.new('username', 'password').post("It's an HTTParty and everyone is invited!")

== REQUIREMENTS:

* Active Support >= 2.1

== INSTALL:

* sudo gem install httparty