02a556774e
Bumps [certifi](https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi) from 2024.2.2 to 2024.7.4. - [Commits](https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/compare/2024.02.02...2024.07.04) --- updated-dependencies: - dependency-name: certifi dependency-type: indirect ... Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com> |
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.media | ||
.vscode | ||
steamleaderboards | ||
.gitignore | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
poetry.lock | ||
pyproject.toml | ||
README.md |
Links
History
It was created with the Isaac Daily Run scoreboards in mind, but it can be used for other games that have a public leaderboard as well.
Usage
In code
To use steamleaderboards
, first install it via PyPI:
$ # If you're using pip in a venv on
$ .venv/bin/pip install steamleaderboards --upgrade
$ # If you're using poetry
$ poetry add steamleaderboards
Then, create a LeaderboardGroup
for the desired game.
import steamleaderboards as sl
lbgroup = sl.LeaderboardGroup(STEAM_APP_ID)
Once you have created the LeaderboardGroup
, you can retrieve the desired leaderboards by using the LeaderboardGroup.get
method.
You can specify the name, the display name or the id of the leaderboard to retrieve.
leaderboard_a = lbgroup.get(name=LEADERBOARD_NAME)
leaderboard_b = lbgroup.get(lbid=LEADERBOARD_ID)
leaderboard_c = lbgroup.get(display_name=LEADERBOARD_DISPLAY_NAME)
When you have the Leaderboard
object, you can find all the entries in the Leaderboard.entries
field, or you can search for a specific one through the Leaderboard.find_entry
method.
all_scores = leaderboard_a.entries
my_score = leaderboard_a.find_entry(MY_STEAMID_1)
first_place_score = leaderboard_a.find_entry(rank=1)
last_place_score = leaderboard_a.find_entry(rank=-1)
In the terminal
To use steamleaderboards
, first install it via PyPI:
$ # Using pipx
$ pipx install steamleaderboards
Then, you can use it to retrieve leaderboards for one or more Steam games via the terminal:
$ steamleaderboards --output_dir="./data" 440
This will download all leaderboards for Team Fortress 2, the game with the app id 440
, to the ./data
directory.
App ids for games can be found via SteamDB.