An API client for data.magnet.cl
- Obtain values for multiple currencies in CLP
- Django >=2.2
- Python >=3.6
Install django-magnet-data with pip:
pip install django-magnet-data
Add magnet_data
to your INSTALLED_APPS
:
INSTALLED_APPS =(
...
"magnet_data",
...
)
Magnet data handles the value of 4 currencies: CLP
, USD
, EUR
, and CLF
. Currently the api can only return the values of this currencies in CLP
.
Values are returned as decimal.Decimal
To get the value of a non CLP
currency for a given date in CLP
:
import datetime
from magnet_data.magnet_data_client import MagnetDataClient
magnet_data_client = MagnetDataClient()
currencies = magnet_data_client.currencies
clf_to_clp_converter = currencies.get_pair(currencies.CLF, currencies.CLP)
# same as
clf_to_clp_converter = currencies.get_pair(
base_currency=currencies.CLF,
counter_currency=currencies.CLP
)
# get the current value
clf_in_clp = clf_to_clp_converter.now()
# get the latest value
last_known_clf_in_clp = clf_to_clp_converter.latest()
# get the value for a given date
date = datetime.date(2022, 7, 5)
clf_in_clp_on_july_fifth = clf_to_clp_converter.on_date(date=date)
# get a dict of values values for a month where the key is a datetime.date
clf_in_clp_on_july = clf_to_clp_converter.on_month(2022, 7)
If you require a currency attribute in your models it can be done with
CurrencyAcronyms
:
from django.db import models
from magnet_data.currencies.enums import CurrencyAcronyms
class MyModel(models.Model):
currency = models.CharField(
_("currency"),
max_length=5,
choices=CurrencyAcronyms.django_model_choices,
)
Magnet data handles Chilean holidays, but is built to handle other countries (is just that it does not store values for other countries).
Countries are specified by country code taken from: ISO 3166 country codes.
To check if a date is a holiday in a given country:
import datetime
from magnet_data.magnet_data_client import MagnetDataClient
magnet_data_client = MagnetDataClient()
holidays = magnet_data_client.holidays
holidays.is_workday(datetime.date(2023, 1, 2), holidays.CL) # False
holidays.is_workday(datetime.date(2023, 1, 3), holidays.CL) # True
# get the next date that will be a business day. This returns datetime.date(2023, 1, 3)
holidays.get_next_business_day(
country_code=holidays.CL,
from_date=datetime.date(2022, 12, 31),
)
business_days_count -- number of business days to count (default 1)
# This returns datetime.date(2023, 1, 5)
holidays.get_next_business_day(
country_code=holidays.CL,
from_date=datetime.date(2022, 12, 31),
business_days_count=3,
)
# step -- the amount by which the index increases. (default 1)
# This returns datetime.date(2023, 1, 3)
holidays.get_next_business_day(
country_code=holidays.CL,
from_date=datetime.date(2022, 12, 31),
step=3,
)
# And this returns datetime.date(2023, 1, 4)
holidays.get_next_business_day(
country_code=holidays.CL,
from_date=datetime.date(2023, 1, 1),
step=3,
)
# get the number of holidays wasted on weekdays. This example returns 1
holidays.get_holidays_count_during_weekdays(
holidays.CL,
datetime.date(2022, 12, 30),
datetime.date(2023, 1, 7),
)
To develop locally, install requirements using poetry.
poetry install
Test are written using the django testing framework: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/4.1/topics/testing/
All tests are stored in the tests
folder.
All new features have to be tested. poetry.
python manage.py test
To develop new features, create a pull request, specifying what you are fixing / adding and the issue it's addressing if there is one.
All new features need a test in the tests
folder.
All tests need to pass in order for a maintainer to merge the pull request.
Use poetry to publish. You'll need a pypi token to publish in the project root.
On the project root, run:
poetry build
poetry publish