let's do this

This commit is contained in:
Kenneth Reitz
2011-08-17 04:32:46 -04:00
parent 470af42bf2
commit 9471b0ab88
2 changed files with 6 additions and 6 deletions
+3 -3
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@@ -2,16 +2,16 @@ History
-------
0.6.0 (2011-09-??)
0.6.0 (2011-08-17)
++++++++++++++++++
* New callback hook system
* New persistient sessions object and context manager
* Transparent Dict-cookie handling
* status code reference object
* Status code reference object
* Removed Response.cached
* Added Response.request
* all args are kwargs
* All args are kwargs
* Relative redirect support
* HTTPError handling improvements
* Improved https testing
+3 -3
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@@ -5,12 +5,12 @@ Requests is an ISC Licensed HTTP library, written in Python, for human
beings.
Most existing Python modules for sending HTTP requests are extremely
verbose and cumbersome. Pythons builtin urllib2 module provides most of
verbose and cumbersome. Python's builtin urllib2 module provides most of
the HTTP capabilities you should need, but the api is thoroughly broken.
It requires an enormous amount of work (even method overrides) to
perform the simplest of tasks.
Things shouldnt be this way. Not in Python.
Things shouldn't be this way. Not in Python.
::
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ See `the same code, without Requests <https://gist.github.com/973705>`_.
Requests allow you to send **HEAD**, **GET**, **POST**, **PUT**,
**PATCH**, and **DELETE** HTTP requests. You can add headers, form data,
multipart files, and parameters with simple Python dictionaries, and access the
response data in the same way. It's powered by :py:class:`urllib2`, but it does
response data in the same way. It's powered by urllib2, but it does
all the hard work and crazy hacks for you.