pybadges
pybadges is a Python library and command line tool that allows you to create
Github-style badges as SVG images. For example:
The aesthetics of the generated badges matches the visual design found in this
specification.
The implementation of the library was heavily influenced by
Shields.io and the JavaScript
badge-maker library.
Getting Started
Installing
pybadges can be installed using pip:
pip install pybadges
To test that installation was successful, try:
python -m pybadges --left-text=build --right-text=failure --right-color='#c00' --browser
You will see a badge like this in your browser:
Usage
pybadges can be used both from the command line and as a Python library.
The command line interface is a great way to experiment with the API before
writing Python code.
You could also look at the example server.
Command line usage
Complete documentation of pybadges command arguments can be found using the --help
flag:
python -m pybadges --help
But the following usage demonstrates every interesting option:
python -m pybadges \
--left-text=complete \
--right-text=example \
--left-color=green \
--right-color='#fb3' \
--left-link=http://www.complete.com/ \
--right-link=http://www.example.com \
--logo='data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAIAAAACCAIAAAD91JpzAAAAD0lEQVQI12P4zwAD/xkYAA/+Af8iHnLUAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC' \
--embed-logo \
--whole-title="Badge Title" \
--left-title="Left Title" \
--right-title="Right Title" \
--browser
A note about --logo
and --embed-logo
Note that the --logo
option can include a regular URL:
python -m pybadges \
--left-text="python" \
--right-text="3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6" \
--whole-link="https://www.python.org/" \
--browser \
--logo='https://dev.w3.org/SVG/tools/svgweb/samples/svg-files/python.svg'
If the --logo
option is set, the --embed-logo
option can also be set.
The --embed-logo
option causes the content of the URL provided in --logo
to be embedded in the badge rather than be referenced through a link.
The advantage of using this option is an extra HTTP request will not be required
to render the badge and that some browsers will not load image references at all.
You can see the difference in your browser:
A note about --(whole|left|right)-title
The title
element is usually displayed as a
pop-up by browsers
but is currently
filtered by Github.
Library usage
pybadges is primarily meant to be used as a Python library.
from pybadges import badge
s = badge(left_text='coverage', right_text='23%', right_color='red')
print(s[:40])
The keyword arguments to badge()
are identical to the command flags names
described above except with keyword arguments using underscore instead of
hyphen/minus (e.g. --left-text
=> left_text=
)
Server usage
pybadges can be used to serve badge images on the web.
server-example
contains an example of serving badge images from a
Flask server.
Caveats
-
pybadges uses a pre-calculated table of text widths and
kerning distances
(for western glyphs) to determine the size of the badge.
So Eastern European languages may be rendered less well than
Western European ones:
and glyphs not present in Deja Vu Sans (the default font) may
be rendered very poorly:
-
pybadges does not have any explicit support for languages that
are written right-to-left (e.g. Arabic, Hebrew) and the displayed
text direction may be incorrect:
Development
git clone https://github.com/google/pybadges.git
cd pybadges
python -m virtualenv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install -e .[dev]
nox
If you'd like to contribute your changes back to pybadges, please read the
contributor guide.
Versioning
We use SemVer for versioning.
License
This project is licensed under the Apache License - see the LICENSE file for details
This is not an officially supported Google product.