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1 # CONTRIBUTING TO YT-DLP
2
3 - [OPENING AN ISSUE](#opening-an-issue)
4 - [Is the description of the issue itself sufficient?](#is-the-description-of-the-issue-itself-sufficient)
5 - [Are you using the latest version?](#are-you-using-the-latest-version)
6 - [Is the issue already documented?](#is-the-issue-already-documented)
7 - [Why are existing options not enough?](#why-are-existing-options-not-enough)
8 - [Have you read and understood the changes, between youtube-dl and yt-dlp](#have-you-read-and-understood-the-changes-between-youtube-dl-and-yt-dlp)
9 - [Is there enough context in your bug report?](#is-there-enough-context-in-your-bug-report)
10 - [Does the issue involve one problem, and one problem only?](#does-the-issue-involve-one-problem-and-one-problem-only)
11 - [Is anyone going to need the feature?](#is-anyone-going-to-need-the-feature)
12 - [Is your question about yt-dlp?](#is-your-question-about-yt-dlp)
13 - [Are you willing to share account details if needed?](#are-you-willing-to-share-account-details-if-needed)
14 - [Is the website primarily used for piracy](#is-the-website-primarily-used-for-piracy)
15 - [DEVELOPER INSTRUCTIONS](#developer-instructions)
16 - [Adding new feature or making overarching changes](#adding-new-feature-or-making-overarching-changes)
17 - [Adding support for a new site](#adding-support-for-a-new-site)
18 - [yt-dlp coding conventions](#yt-dlp-coding-conventions)
19 - [Mandatory and optional metafields](#mandatory-and-optional-metafields)
20 - [Provide fallbacks](#provide-fallbacks)
21 - [Regular expressions](#regular-expressions)
22 - [Long lines policy](#long-lines-policy)
23 - [Quotes](#quotes)
24 - [Inline values](#inline-values)
25 - [Collapse fallbacks](#collapse-fallbacks)
26 - [Trailing parentheses](#trailing-parentheses)
27 - [Use convenience conversion and parsing functions](#use-convenience-conversion-and-parsing-functions)
28 - [My pull request is labeled pending-fixes](#my-pull-request-is-labeled-pending-fixes)
29 - [EMBEDDING YT-DLP](README.md#embedding-yt-dlp)
30
31
32
33 # OPENING AN ISSUE
34
35 Bugs and suggestions should be reported at: [yt-dlp/yt-dlp/issues](https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp/issues). Unless you were prompted to or there is another pertinent reason (e.g. GitHub fails to accept the bug report), please do not send bug reports via personal email. For discussions, join us in our [discord server](https://discord.gg/H5MNcFW63r).
36
37 **Please include the full output of yt-dlp when run with `-vU`**, i.e. **add** `-vU` flag to **your command line**, copy the **whole** output and post it in the issue body wrapped in \`\`\` for better formatting. It should look similar to this:
38 ```
39 $ yt-dlp -vU <your command line>
40 [debug] Command-line config: ['-v', 'demo.com']
41 [debug] Encodings: locale UTF-8, fs utf-8, out utf-8, pref UTF-8
42 [debug] yt-dlp version 2021.09.25 (zip)
43 [debug] Python version 3.8.10 (CPython 64bit) - Linux-5.4.0-74-generic-x86_64-with-glibc2.29
44 [debug] exe versions: ffmpeg 4.2.4, ffprobe 4.2.4
45 [debug] Proxy map: {}
46 Current Build Hash 25cc412d1d3c0725a1f2f5b7e4682f6fb40e6d15f7024e96f7afd572e9919535
47 yt-dlp is up to date (2021.09.25)
48 ...
49 ```
50 **Do not post screenshots of verbose logs; only plain text is acceptable.**
51
52 The output (including the first lines) contains important debugging information. Issues without the full output are often not reproducible and therefore will be closed as `incomplete`.
53
54 The templates provided for the Issues, should be completed and **not removed**, this helps aide the resolution of the issue.
55
56 Please re-read your issue once again to avoid a couple of common mistakes (you can and should use this as a checklist):
57
58 ### Is the description of the issue itself sufficient?
59
60 We often get issue reports that we cannot really decipher. While in most cases we eventually get the required information after asking back multiple times, this poses an unnecessary drain on our resources.
61
62 So please elaborate on what feature you are requesting, or what bug you want to be fixed. Make sure that it's obvious
63
64 - What the problem is
65 - How it could be fixed
66 - How your proposed solution would look like
67
68 If your report is shorter than two lines, it is almost certainly missing some of these, which makes it hard for us to respond to it. We're often too polite to close the issue outright, but the missing info makes misinterpretation likely. We often get frustrated by these issues, since the only possible way for us to move forward on them is to ask for clarification over and over.
69
70 For bug reports, this means that your report should contain the **complete** output of yt-dlp when called with the `-vU` flag. The error message you get for (most) bugs even says so, but you would not believe how many of our bug reports do not contain this information.
71
72 If the error is `ERROR: Unable to extract ...` and you cannot reproduce it from multiple countries, add `--write-pages` and upload the `.dump` files you get [somewhere](https://gist.github.com).
73
74 **Site support requests must contain an example URL**. An example URL is a URL you might want to download, like `https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BaW_jenozKc`. There should be an obvious video present. Except under very special circumstances, the main page of a video service (e.g. `https://www.youtube.com/`) is *not* an example URL.
75
76 ### Are you using the latest version?
77
78 Before reporting any issue, type `yt-dlp -U`. This should report that you're up-to-date. This goes for feature requests as well.
79
80 ### Is the issue already documented?
81
82 Make sure that someone has not already opened the issue you're trying to open. Search at the top of the window or browse the [GitHub Issues](https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp/search?type=Issues) of this repository. If there is an issue, feel free to write something along the lines of "This affects me as well, with version 2021.01.01. Here is some more information on the issue: ...". While some issues may be old, a new post into them often spurs rapid activity.
83
84 Additionally, it is also helpful to see if the issue has already been documented in the [youtube-dl issue tracker](https://github.com/ytdl-org/youtube-dl/issues). If similar issues have already been reported in youtube-dl (but not in our issue tracker), links to them can be included in your issue report here.
85
86 ### Why are existing options not enough?
87
88 Before requesting a new feature, please have a quick peek at [the list of supported options](README.md#usage-and-options). Many feature requests are for features that actually exist already! Please, absolutely do show off your work in the issue report and detail how the existing similar options do *not* solve your problem.
89
90 ### Have you read and understood the changes, between youtube-dl and yt-dlp
91
92 There are many changes between youtube-dl and yt-dlp [(changes to default behavior)](README.md#differences-in-default-behavior), and some of the options available have a different behaviour in yt-dlp, or have been removed all together [(list of changes to options)](README.md#deprecated-options). Make sure you have read and understand the differences in the options and how this may impact your downloads before opening an issue.
93
94 ### Is there enough context in your bug report?
95
96 People want to solve problems, and often think they do us a favor by breaking down their larger problems (e.g. wanting to skip already downloaded files) to a specific request (e.g. requesting us to look whether the file exists before downloading the info page). However, what often happens is that they break down the problem into two steps: One simple, and one impossible (or extremely complicated one).
97
98 We are then presented with a very complicated request when the original problem could be solved far easier, e.g. by recording the downloaded video IDs in a separate file. To avoid this, you must include the greater context where it is non-obvious. In particular, every feature request that does not consist of adding support for a new site should contain a use case scenario that explains in what situation the missing feature would be useful.
99
100 ### Does the issue involve one problem, and one problem only?
101
102 Some of our users seem to think there is a limit of issues they can or should open. There is no limit of issues they can or should open. While it may seem appealing to be able to dump all your issues into one ticket, that means that someone who solves one of your issues cannot mark the issue as closed. Typically, reporting a bunch of issues leads to the ticket lingering since nobody wants to attack that behemoth, until someone mercifully splits the issue into multiple ones.
103
104 In particular, every site support request issue should only pertain to services at one site (generally under a common domain, but always using the same backend technology). Do not request support for vimeo user videos, White house podcasts, and Google Plus pages in the same issue. Also, make sure that you don't post bug reports alongside feature requests. As a rule of thumb, a feature request does not include outputs of yt-dlp that are not immediately related to the feature at hand. Do not post reports of a network error alongside the request for a new video service.
105
106 ### Is anyone going to need the feature?
107
108 Only post features that you (or an incapacitated friend you can personally talk to) require. Do not post features because they seem like a good idea. If they are really useful, they will be requested by someone who requires them.
109
110 ### Is your question about yt-dlp?
111
112 Some bug reports are completely unrelated to yt-dlp and relate to a different, or even the reporter's own, application. Please make sure that you are actually using yt-dlp. If you are using a UI for yt-dlp, report the bug to the maintainer of the actual application providing the UI. In general, if you are unable to provide the verbose log, you should not be opening the issue here.
113
114 If the issue is with `youtube-dl` (the upstream fork of yt-dlp) and not with yt-dlp, the issue should be raised in the youtube-dl project.
115
116 ### Are you willing to share account details if needed?
117
118 The maintainers and potential contributors of the project often do not have an account for the website you are asking support for. So any developer interested in solving your issue may ask you for account details. It is your personal discretion whether you are willing to share the account in order for the developer to try and solve your issue. However, if you are unwilling or unable to provide details, they obviously cannot work on the issue and it cannot be solved unless some developer who both has an account and is willing/able to contribute decides to solve it.
119
120 By sharing an account with anyone, you agree to bear all risks associated with it. The maintainers and yt-dlp can't be held responsible for any misuse of the credentials.
121
122 While these steps won't necessarily ensure that no misuse of the account takes place, these are still some good practices to follow.
123
124 - Look for people with `Member` (maintainers of the project) or `Contributor` (people who have previously contributed code) tag on their messages.
125 - Change the password before sharing the account to something random (use [this](https://passwordsgenerator.net/) if you don't have a random password generator).
126 - Change the password after receiving the account back.
127
128 ### Is the website primarily used for piracy?
129
130 We follow [youtube-dl's policy](https://github.com/ytdl-org/youtube-dl#can-you-add-support-for-this-anime-video-site-or-site-which-shows-current-movies-for-free) to not support services that is primarily used for infringing copyright. Additionally, it has been decided to not to support porn sites that specialize in deep fake. We also cannot support any service that serves only [DRM protected content](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_rights_management).
131
132
133
134
135 # DEVELOPER INSTRUCTIONS
136
137 Most users do not need to build yt-dlp and can [download the builds](https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp/releases) or get them via [the other installation methods](README.md#installation).
138
139 To run yt-dlp as a developer, you don't need to build anything either. Simply execute
140
141 python -m yt_dlp
142
143 To run the test, simply invoke your favorite test runner, or execute a test file directly; any of the following work:
144
145 python -m unittest discover
146 python test/test_download.py
147 nosetests
148 pytest
149
150 See item 6 of [new extractor tutorial](#adding-support-for-a-new-site) for how to run extractor specific test cases.
151
152 If you want to create a build of yt-dlp yourself, you can follow the instructions [here](README.md#compile).
153
154
155 ## Adding new feature or making overarching changes
156
157 Before you start writing code for implementing a new feature, open an issue explaining your feature request and atleast one use case. This allows the maintainers to decide whether such a feature is desired for the project in the first place, and will provide an avenue to discuss some implementation details. If you open a pull request for a new feature without discussing with us first, do not be surprised when we ask for large changes to the code, or even reject it outright.
158
159 The same applies for changes to the documentation, code style, or overarching changes to the architecture
160
161
162 ## Adding support for a new site
163
164 If you want to add support for a new site, first of all **make sure** this site is **not dedicated to [copyright infringement](https://www.github.com/ytdl-org/youtube-dl#can-you-add-support-for-this-anime-video-site-or-site-which-shows-current-movies-for-free)**. yt-dlp does **not support** such sites thus pull requests adding support for them **will be rejected**.
165
166 After you have ensured this site is distributing its content legally, you can follow this quick list (assuming your service is called `yourextractor`):
167
168 1. [Fork this repository](https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp/fork)
169 1. Check out the source code with:
170
171 git clone git@github.com:YOUR_GITHUB_USERNAME/yt-dlp.git
172
173 1. Start a new git branch with
174
175 cd yt-dlp
176 git checkout -b yourextractor
177
178 1. Start with this simple template and save it to `yt_dlp/extractor/yourextractor.py`:
179
180 ```python
181 # coding: utf-8
182 from .common import InfoExtractor
183
184
185 class YourExtractorIE(InfoExtractor):
186 _VALID_URL = r'https?://(?:www\.)?yourextractor\.com/watch/(?P<id>[0-9]+)'
187 _TESTS = [{
188 'url': 'https://yourextractor.com/watch/42',
189 'md5': 'TODO: md5 sum of the first 10241 bytes of the video file (use --test)',
190 'info_dict': {
191 'id': '42',
192 'ext': 'mp4',
193 'title': 'Video title goes here',
194 'thumbnail': r're:^https?://.*\.jpg$',
195 # TODO more properties, either as:
196 # * A value
197 # * MD5 checksum; start the string with md5:
198 # * A regular expression; start the string with re:
199 # * Any Python type (for example int or float)
200 }
201 }]
202
203 def _real_extract(self, url):
204 video_id = self._match_id(url)
205 webpage = self._download_webpage(url, video_id)
206
207 # TODO more code goes here, for example ...
208 title = self._html_search_regex(r'<h1>(.+?)</h1>', webpage, 'title')
209
210 return {
211 'id': video_id,
212 'title': title,
213 'description': self._og_search_description(webpage),
214 'uploader': self._search_regex(r'<div[^>]+id="uploader"[^>]*>([^<]+)<', webpage, 'uploader', fatal=False),
215 # TODO more properties (see yt_dlp/extractor/common.py)
216 }
217 ```
218 1. Add an import in [`yt_dlp/extractor/extractors.py`](yt_dlp/extractor/extractors.py).
219 1. Run `python test/test_download.py TestDownload.test_YourExtractor` (note that `YourExtractor` doesn't end with `IE`). This *should fail* at first, but you can continually re-run it until you're done. If you decide to add more than one test, the tests will then be named `TestDownload.test_YourExtractor`, `TestDownload.test_YourExtractor_1`, `TestDownload.test_YourExtractor_2`, etc. Note that tests with `only_matching` key in test's dict are not counted in. You can also run all the tests in one go with `TestDownload.test_YourExtractor_all`
220 1. Make sure you have atleast one test for your extractor. Even if all videos covered by the extractor are expected to be inaccessible for automated testing, tests should still be added with a `skip` parameter indicating why the particular test is disabled from running.
221 1. Have a look at [`yt_dlp/extractor/common.py`](yt_dlp/extractor/common.py) for possible helper methods and a [detailed description of what your extractor should and may return](yt_dlp/extractor/common.py#L91-L426). Add tests and code for as many as you want.
222 1. Make sure your code follows [yt-dlp coding conventions](#yt-dlp-coding-conventions) and check the code with [flake8](https://flake8.pycqa.org/en/latest/index.html#quickstart):
223
224 $ flake8 yt_dlp/extractor/yourextractor.py
225
226 1. Make sure your code works under all [Python](https://www.python.org/) versions supported by yt-dlp, namely CPython and PyPy for Python 3.6 and above. Backward compatibility is not required for even older versions of Python.
227 1. When the tests pass, [add](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-add) the new files, [commit](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-commit) them and [push](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-push) the result, like this:
228
229 $ git add yt_dlp/extractor/extractors.py
230 $ git add yt_dlp/extractor/yourextractor.py
231 $ git commit -m '[yourextractor] Add extractor'
232 $ git push origin yourextractor
233
234 1. Finally, [create a pull request](https://help.github.com/articles/creating-a-pull-request). We'll then review and merge it.
235
236 In any case, thank you very much for your contributions!
237
238 **Tip:** To test extractors that require login information, create a file `test/local_parameters.json` and add `"usenetrc": true` or your username and password in it:
239 ```json
240 {
241 "username": "your user name",
242 "password": "your password"
243 }
244 ```
245
246 ## yt-dlp coding conventions
247
248 This section introduces a guide lines for writing idiomatic, robust and future-proof extractor code.
249
250 Extractors are very fragile by nature since they depend on the layout of the source data provided by 3rd party media hosters out of your control and this layout tends to change. As an extractor implementer your task is not only to write code that will extract media links and metadata correctly but also to minimize dependency on the source's layout and even to make the code foresee potential future changes and be ready for that. This is important because it will allow the extractor not to break on minor layout changes thus keeping old yt-dlp versions working. Even though this breakage issue may be easily fixed by a new version of yt-dlp, this could take some time, during which the the extractor will remain broken.
251
252
253 ### Mandatory and optional metafields
254
255 For extraction to work yt-dlp relies on metadata your extractor extracts and provides to yt-dlp expressed by an [information dictionary](yt_dlp/extractor/common.py#L91-L426) or simply *info dict*. Only the following meta fields in the *info dict* are considered mandatory for a successful extraction process by yt-dlp:
256
257 - `id` (media identifier)
258 - `title` (media title)
259 - `url` (media download URL) or `formats`
260
261 The aforementioned metafields are the critical data that the extraction does not make any sense without and if any of them fail to be extracted then the extractor is considered completely broken. While all extractors must return a `title`, they must also allow it's extraction to be non-fatal.
262
263 For pornographic sites, appropriate `age_limit` must also be returned.
264
265 The extractor is allowed to return the info dict without url or formats in some special cases if it allows the user to extract usefull information with `--ignore-no-formats-error` - Eg: when the video is a live stream that has not started yet.
266
267 [Any field](yt_dlp/extractor/common.py#219-L426) apart from the aforementioned ones are considered **optional**. That means that extraction should be **tolerant** to situations when sources for these fields can potentially be unavailable (even if they are always available at the moment) and **future-proof** in order not to break the extraction of general purpose mandatory fields.
268
269 #### Example
270
271 Say you have some source dictionary `meta` that you've fetched as JSON with HTTP request and it has a key `summary`:
272
273 ```python
274 meta = self._download_json(url, video_id)
275 ```
276
277 Assume at this point `meta`'s layout is:
278
279 ```python
280 {
281 "summary": "some fancy summary text",
282 "user": {
283 "name": "uploader name"
284 },
285 ...
286 }
287 ```
288
289 Assume you want to extract `summary` and put it into the resulting info dict as `description`. Since `description` is an optional meta field you should be ready that this key may be missing from the `meta` dict, so that you should extract it like:
290
291 ```python
292 description = meta.get('summary') # correct
293 ```
294
295 and not like:
296
297 ```python
298 description = meta['summary'] # incorrect
299 ```
300
301 The latter will break extraction process with `KeyError` if `summary` disappears from `meta` at some later time but with the former approach extraction will just go ahead with `description` set to `None` which is perfectly fine (remember `None` is equivalent to the absence of data).
302
303
304 If the data is nested, do not use `.get` chains, but instead make use of the utility functions `try_get` or `traverse_obj`
305
306 Considering the above `meta` again, assume you want to extract `["user"]["name"]` and put it in the resulting info dict as `uploader`
307
308 ```python
309 uploader = try_get(meta, lambda x: x['user']['name']) # correct
310 ```
311 or
312 ```python
313 uploader = traverse_obj(meta, ('user', 'name')) # correct
314 ```
315
316 and not like:
317
318 ```python
319 uploader = meta['user']['name'] # incorrect
320 ```
321 or
322 ```python
323 uploader = meta.get('user', {}).get('name') # incorrect
324 ```
325
326
327 Similarly, you should pass `fatal=False` when extracting optional data from a webpage with `_search_regex`, `_html_search_regex` or similar methods, for instance:
328
329 ```python
330 description = self._search_regex(
331 r'<span[^>]+id="title"[^>]*>([^<]+)<',
332 webpage, 'description', fatal=False)
333 ```
334
335 With `fatal` set to `False` if `_search_regex` fails to extract `description` it will emit a warning and continue extraction.
336
337 You can also pass `default=<some fallback value>`, for example:
338
339 ```python
340 description = self._search_regex(
341 r'<span[^>]+id="title"[^>]*>([^<]+)<',
342 webpage, 'description', default=None)
343 ```
344
345 On failure this code will silently continue the extraction with `description` set to `None`. That is useful for metafields that may or may not be present.
346
347
348 Another thing to remember is not to try to iterate over `None`
349
350 Say you extracted a list of thumbnails into `thumbnail_data` using `try_get` and now want to iterate over them
351
352 ```python
353 thumbnail_data = try_get(...)
354 thumbnails = [{
355 'url': item['url']
356 } for item in thumbnail_data or []] # correct
357 ```
358
359 and not like:
360
361 ```python
362 thumbnail_data = try_get(...)
363 thumbnails = [{
364 'url': item['url']
365 } for item in thumbnail_data] # incorrect
366 ```
367
368 In the later case, `thumbnail_data` will be `None` if the field was not found and this will cause the loop `for item in thumbnail_data` to raise a fatal error. Using `for item in thumbnail_data or []` avoids this error and results in setting an empty list in `thumbnails` instead.
369
370
371 ### Provide fallbacks
372
373 When extracting metadata try to do so from multiple sources. For example if `title` is present in several places, try extracting from at least some of them. This makes it more future-proof in case some of the sources become unavailable.
374
375
376 #### Example
377
378 Say `meta` from the previous example has a `title` and you are about to extract it. Since `title` is a mandatory meta field you should end up with something like:
379
380 ```python
381 title = meta['title']
382 ```
383
384 If `title` disappears from `meta` in future due to some changes on the hoster's side the extraction would fail since `title` is mandatory. That's expected.
385
386 Assume that you have some another source you can extract `title` from, for example `og:title` HTML meta of a `webpage`. In this case you can provide a fallback scenario:
387
388 ```python
389 title = meta.get('title') or self._og_search_title(webpage)
390 ```
391
392 This code will try to extract from `meta` first and if it fails it will try extracting `og:title` from a `webpage`.
393
394
395 ### Regular expressions
396
397 #### Don't capture groups you don't use
398
399 Capturing group must be an indication that it's used somewhere in the code. Any group that is not used must be non capturing.
400
401 ##### Example
402
403 Don't capture id attribute name here since you can't use it for anything anyway.
404
405 Correct:
406
407 ```python
408 r'(?:id|ID)=(?P<id>\d+)'
409 ```
410
411 Incorrect:
412 ```python
413 r'(id|ID)=(?P<id>\d+)'
414 ```
415
416 #### Make regular expressions relaxed and flexible
417
418 When using regular expressions try to write them fuzzy, relaxed and flexible, skipping insignificant parts that are more likely to change, allowing both single and double quotes for quoted values and so on.
419
420 ##### Example
421
422 Say you need to extract `title` from the following HTML code:
423
424 ```html
425 <span style="position: absolute; left: 910px; width: 90px; float: right; z-index: 9999;" class="title">some fancy title</span>
426 ```
427
428 The code for that task should look similar to:
429
430 ```python
431 title = self._search_regex( # correct
432 r'<span[^>]+class="title"[^>]*>([^<]+)', webpage, 'title')
433 ```
434
435 Or even better:
436
437 ```python
438 title = self._search_regex( # correct
439 r'<span[^>]+class=(["\'])title\1[^>]*>(?P<title>[^<]+)',
440 webpage, 'title', group='title')
441 ```
442
443 Note how you tolerate potential changes in the `style` attribute's value or switch from using double quotes to single for `class` attribute:
444
445 The code definitely should not look like:
446
447 ```python
448 title = self._search_regex( # incorrect
449 r'<span style="position: absolute; left: 910px; width: 90px; float: right; z-index: 9999;" class="title">(.*?)</span>',
450 webpage, 'title', group='title')
451 ```
452
453 or even
454
455 ```python
456 title = self._search_regex( # incorrect
457 r'<span style=".*?" class="title">(.*?)</span>',
458 webpage, 'title', group='title')
459 ```
460
461 Here the presence or absence of other attributes including `style` is irrelevent for the data we need, and so the regex must not depend on it
462
463
464 ### Long lines policy
465
466 There is a soft limit to keep lines of code under 100 characters long. This means it should be respected if possible and if it does not make readability and code maintenance worse. Sometimes, it may be reasonable to go upto 120 characters and sometimes even 80 can be unreadable. Keep in mind that this is not a hard limit and is just one of many tools to make the code more readable.
467
468 For example, you should **never** split long string literals like URLs or some other often copied entities over multiple lines to fit this limit:
469
470 Conversely, don't unecessarily split small lines further. As a rule of thumb, if removing the line split keeps the code under 80 characters, it should be a single line.
471
472 ##### Examples
473
474 Correct:
475
476 ```python
477 'https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqZTN594JQw&list=PLMYEtVRpaqY00V9W81Cwmzp6N6vZqfUKD4'
478 ```
479
480 Incorrect:
481
482 ```python
483 'https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqZTN594JQw&list='
484 'PLMYEtVRpaqY00V9W81Cwmzp6N6vZqfUKD4'
485 ```
486
487 Correct:
488
489 ```python
490 uploader = traverse_obj(info, ('uploader', 'name'), ('author', 'fullname'))
491 ```
492
493 Incorrect:
494
495 ```python
496 uploader = traverse_obj(
497 info,
498 ('uploader', 'name'),
499 ('author', 'fullname'))
500 ```
501
502 Correct:
503
504 ```python
505 formats = self._extract_m3u8_formats(
506 m3u8_url, video_id, 'mp4', 'm3u8_native', m3u8_id='hls',
507 note='Downloading HD m3u8 information', errnote='Unable to download HD m3u8 information')
508 ```
509
510 Incorrect:
511
512 ```python
513 formats = self._extract_m3u8_formats(m3u8_url,
514 video_id,
515 'mp4',
516 'm3u8_native',
517 m3u8_id='hls',
518 note='Downloading HD m3u8 information',
519 errnote='Unable to download HD m3u8 information')
520 ```
521
522
523 ### Quotes
524
525 Always use single quotes for strings (even if the string has `'`) and double quotes for docstrings. Use `'''` only for multi-line strings. An exception can be made if a string has multiple single quotes in it and escaping makes it significantly harder to read. For f-strings, use you can use double quotes on the inside. But avoid f-strings that have too many quotes inside.
526
527
528 ### Inline values
529
530 Extracting variables is acceptable for reducing code duplication and improving readability of complex expressions. However, you should avoid extracting variables used only once and moving them to opposite parts of the extractor file, which makes reading the linear flow difficult.
531
532 #### Example
533
534 Correct:
535
536 ```python
537 title = self._html_search_regex(r'<title>([^<]+)</title>', webpage, 'title')
538 ```
539
540 Incorrect:
541
542 ```python
543 TITLE_RE = r'<title>([^<]+)</title>'
544 # ...some lines of code...
545 title = self._html_search_regex(TITLE_RE, webpage, 'title')
546 ```
547
548
549 ### Collapse fallbacks
550
551 Multiple fallback values can quickly become unwieldy. Collapse multiple fallback values into a single expression via a list of patterns.
552
553 #### Example
554
555 Good:
556
557 ```python
558 description = self._html_search_meta(
559 ['og:description', 'description', 'twitter:description'],
560 webpage, 'description', default=None)
561 ```
562
563 Unwieldy:
564
565 ```python
566 description = (
567 self._og_search_description(webpage, default=None)
568 or self._html_search_meta('description', webpage, default=None)
569 or self._html_search_meta('twitter:description', webpage, default=None))
570 ```
571
572 Methods supporting list of patterns are: `_search_regex`, `_html_search_regex`, `_og_search_property`, `_html_search_meta`.
573
574
575 ### Trailing parentheses
576
577 Always move trailing parentheses used for grouping/functions after the last argument. On the other hand, literal list/tuple/dict/set should closed be in a new line. Generators and list/dict comprehensions may use either style
578
579 #### Examples
580
581 Correct:
582
583 ```python
584 url = try_get(
585 info,
586 lambda x: x['ResultSet']['Result'][0]['VideoUrlSet']['VideoUrl'],
587 list)
588 ```
589 Correct:
590
591 ```python
592 url = try_get(info,
593 lambda x: x['ResultSet']['Result'][0]['VideoUrlSet']['VideoUrl'],
594 list)
595 ```
596
597 Incorrect:
598
599 ```python
600 url = try_get(
601 info,
602 lambda x: x['ResultSet']['Result'][0]['VideoUrlSet']['VideoUrl'],
603 list,
604 )
605 ```
606
607 Correct:
608
609 ```python
610 f = {
611 'url': url,
612 'format_id': format_id,
613 }
614 ```
615
616 Incorrect:
617
618 ```python
619 f = {'url': url,
620 'format_id': format_id}
621 ```
622
623 Correct:
624
625 ```python
626 formats = [process_formats(f) for f in format_data
627 if f.get('type') in ('hls', 'dash', 'direct') and f.get('downloadable')]
628 ```
629
630 Correct:
631
632 ```python
633 formats = [
634 process_formats(f) for f in format_data
635 if f.get('type') in ('hls', 'dash', 'direct') and f.get('downloadable')
636 ]
637 ```
638
639
640 ### Use convenience conversion and parsing functions
641
642 Wrap all extracted numeric data into safe functions from [`yt_dlp/utils.py`](yt_dlp/utils.py): `int_or_none`, `float_or_none`. Use them for string to number conversions as well.
643
644 Use `url_or_none` for safe URL processing.
645
646 Use `try_get`, `dict_get` and `traverse_obj` for safe metadata extraction from parsed JSON.
647
648 Use `unified_strdate` for uniform `upload_date` or any `YYYYMMDD` meta field extraction, `unified_timestamp` for uniform `timestamp` extraction, `parse_filesize` for `filesize` extraction, `parse_count` for count meta fields extraction, `parse_resolution`, `parse_duration` for `duration` extraction, `parse_age_limit` for `age_limit` extraction.
649
650 Explore [`yt_dlp/utils.py`](yt_dlp/utils.py) for more useful convenience functions.
651
652 #### More examples
653
654 ##### Safely extract optional description from parsed JSON
655 ```python
656 description = traverse_obj(response, ('result', 'video', 'summary'), expected_type=str)
657 ```
658
659 ##### Safely extract more optional metadata
660 ```python
661 video = traverse_obj(response, ('result', 'video', 0), default={}, expected_type=dict)
662 description = video.get('summary')
663 duration = float_or_none(video.get('durationMs'), scale=1000)
664 view_count = int_or_none(video.get('views'))
665 ```
666
667 # My pull request is labeled pending-fixes
668
669 The `pending-fixes` label is added when there are changes requested to a PR. When the necessary changes are made, the label should be removed. However, despite our best efforts, it may sometimes happen that the maintainer did not see the changes or forgot to remove the label. If your PR is still marked as `pending-fixes` a few days after all requested changes have been made, feel free to ping the maintainer who labeled your issue and ask them to re-review and remove the label.
670
671
672
673
674 # EMBEDDING YT-DLP
675 See [README.md#embedding-yt-dlp](README.md#embedding-yt-dlp) for instructions on how to embed yt-dlp in another Python program