This is a Python module built for easing the construction of JSON manifests compliant with IIIF API 3.0 in a production environment, similarly to iiif-prezi for earlier versions of the protocol.
The library uses only standard libraries and can be installed using pip
.
Stable version:
pip install pyIIIFpres
Development :
pip install git+https://github.com/giacomomarchioro/pyIIIFpres
The module maps the API structure to Python classes. The user set_
objects that can have only one value (e.g. id
) and add_
objects that can have multiple entities (e.g. labels
).
As an example, we will execute the Simple Manifest - Book recipe from the IIIF cookbook. More examples from the cookbook are in the examples folder of this repository.
from IIIFpres import iiifpapi3
iiifpapi3.BASE_URL = "https://iiif.io/api/cookbook/recipe/0009-book-1/"
manifest = iiifpapi3.Manifest()
manifest.set_id(extendbase_url="manifest.json")
manifest.add_label("en","Simple Manifest - Book")
manifest.add_behavior("paged")
# label width height id service
data = (("Blank page",3204,4613,"https://iiif.io/api/image/3.0/example/reference/59d09e6773341f28ea166e9f3c1e674f-gallica_ark_12148_bpt6k1526005v_f18","/full/max/0/default.jpg"),
("Frontispiece",3186,4612,"https://iiif.io/api/image/3.0/example/reference/59d09e6773341f28ea166e9f3c1e674f-gallica_ark_12148_bpt6k1526005v_f19","/full/max/0/default.jpg"),
("Title page",3204,4613,"https://iiif.io/api/image/3.0/example/reference/59d09e6773341f28ea166e9f3c1e674f-gallica_ark_12148_bpt6k1526005v_f20","/full/max/0/default.jpg"),
("Blank page",3174,4578,"https://iiif.io/api/image/3.0/example/reference/59d09e6773341f28ea166e9f3c1e674f-gallica_ark_12148_bpt6k1526005v_f21","/full/max/0/default.jpg"),
("Bookplate",3198,4632,"https://iiif.io/api/image/3.0/example/reference/59d09e6773341f28ea166e9f3c1e674f-gallica_ark_12148_bpt6k1526005v_f22","/full/max/0/default.jpg"),)
for idx,d in enumerate(data):
idx+=1
canvas = manifest.add_canvas_to_items()
canvas.set_id(extendbase_url="canvas/p%s"%idx) # in this case we use the base url
canvas.set_height(d[2])
canvas.set_width(d[1])
canvas.add_label("en",d[0])
annopage = canvas.add_annotationpage_to_items()
annopage.set_id(extendbase_url="page/p%s/1" %idx)
annotation = annopage.add_annotation_to_items(target=canvas.id)
annotation.set_id(extendbase_url="annotation/p%s-image"%str(idx).zfill(4))
annotation.set_motivation("painting")
annotation.body.set_id("".join(d[3:]))
annotation.body.set_type("Image")
annotation.body.set_format("image/jpeg")
annotation.body.set_width(d[1])
annotation.body.set_height(d[2])
s = annotation.body.add_service()
s.set_id(d[3])
s.set_type("ImageService3")
s.set_profile("level1")
manifest.json_save("manifest.json")
When you are populating a new IIIF type from scratch some helpful functions can be used for spotting errors.
.inspect()
method returns a JSON representation of the object where the
recommended and required fields are shown:
from IIIFpres import iiifpapi3
manifest = iiifpapi3.Manifest()
manifest.inspect()
.show_errors_in_browser()
method opens a new browser tab highlighting the
required and recommended fields.
manifest.show_errors_in_browser()
A JSON file compliant with presentation API3 can be read as follows:
from IIIFpres.utilities import read_API3_json
mymanifest = read_API3_json('manifest.json')
This map Canvas, Annotation and the major IIIF types to iiifpapi3 classes, loading the rests as dicts.
See the project wiki or read the complete documentation on readthedocs.io for information regarding getting image sizes automatically, improve the writing performance and more.
The package is provided by the Laboratorio di Studi Medievali e Danteschi of the University of Verona
Besides contributors, I would like to thank dnoneill for suggestions, and IIIF community and coordinators.