Forum Discussion
AustinK
Qrew Commander
If you follow the instructions listed in the link of the post you replied to you should be able to get to the point where you extract information from Quickbase. In the link it is the first 2 things listed. "Create the client" first and then you can do one of the things below that, DoQuery sounds like what you want. So set up your Python file as the link shows.
Is there any specific part that you need help with? Some part you have attempted but not been able to get to work? Maybe post the code you have tried that failed and someone can help you fix it.
When you say you would like the code to extract the data and save it in the same place as the csv do you mean save to the same place your browser would save a csv if you clicked "Save as csv" on a report? Like your downloads folder? I assume you want the data to also be the same exact csv format as you would get from QuickBase? You may need to create the csv in code then, depending on what is returned via Python. I would assume you will get XML returned though.
The post below mine by David Choi is a great example of how to connect to QuickBase without using a library like the one above. So you are not limited to what the library can do, you can make whatever API call you need. It is more involved though and probably more difficult at times.
import pyqb # def Client(url="http://www.quickbase.com", database=None, proxy=None, user_token=None): qbc = pyqb.Client(url='http://my_domain.quickbase.com') # Below authenticate is not required if `user_token` argument is passed to pyqb.Client() above qbc.authenticate(username='myusername', password='mypassword')If you need more context on what the "6".EX."myval" and other parts mean then the QuickBase api help docs should get you there. You can choose to grab a saved report or do your own query. https://help.quickbase.com/api-guide/do_query.html
# doquery(query=None, qid=None, qname=None, database=None, fields=None, fmt=False, rids=False, sort_fields=None, options=False): qbc.doquery(qid=64) qbc.doquery(query='{"6".EX."myval"}', database='asdfasdf') qbc.doquery(qid=64, fields=["3", "4"], fmt=True, rids=False)
Is there any specific part that you need help with? Some part you have attempted but not been able to get to work? Maybe post the code you have tried that failed and someone can help you fix it.
When you say you would like the code to extract the data and save it in the same place as the csv do you mean save to the same place your browser would save a csv if you clicked "Save as csv" on a report? Like your downloads folder? I assume you want the data to also be the same exact csv format as you would get from QuickBase? You may need to create the csv in code then, depending on what is returned via Python. I would assume you will get XML returned though.
The post below mine by David Choi is a great example of how to connect to QuickBase without using a library like the one above. So you are not limited to what the library can do, you can make whatever API call you need. It is more involved though and probably more difficult at times.
PushpakumarGna1
5 years agoQrew Assistant Captain
My thought process is i should be able to run a python code from unix box. Extract the data from quickbase, store it in a csv format and load the data to PostgreSQL server.
Thanks
Pushpakumar
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Pushpakumar Gnanadurai
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Thanks
Pushpakumar
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Pushpakumar Gnanadurai
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- AustinK5 years agoQrew CommanderWithout checking I am fairly sure the data is returned as XML. However the Python library there does say it uses XMLtoDict, so it is possible it automatically turns it into a Python dict. You will have to test this yourself to see what is returned to be sure.
I know with JavaScript when I connect and pull data in a similar way I need to often create the csv file myself in the code. A quick Google search gave me this link, which says it can take the XML and convert to a csv, might be worth trying it out considering it is like 3 lines of code and uses XMLtoDict already. https://gist.github.com/JoaoCarabetta/fcc2ce166fea58b0397e7b1f77b96f34
If nothing else works for you there are integrations with Workato and Zapier that I believe allow you to connect QuickBase to PostgreSQL.
In the code I posted before the simplest possible option for pulling data would be to use this for the DoQuery. It uses a saved report on the table to pull data from and just needs the report ID.qbc.doquery(qid=64)