The documentation for the Twilio API can be found here.
The Python library documentation can be found here.
twilio-python
uses a modified version of Semantic Versioning for all changes. See this document for details.
Please consult the official migration guide for information on upgrading your application using twilio-python 5.x to 6.x
This library supports the following Python implementations:
- Python 3.6
- Python 3.7
- Python 3.8
- Python 3.9
- Python 3.10
Install from PyPi using pip, a package manager for Python.
pip install twilio
If pip install fails on Windows, check the path length of the directory. If it is greater 260 characters then enable Long Paths or choose other shorter location.
Don't have pip installed? Try installing it, by running this from the command line:
$ curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py | python
Or, you can download the source code
(ZIP) for twilio-python
, and then run:
python setup.py install
You may need to run the above commands with sudo
.
Getting started with the Twilio API couldn't be easier. Create a
Client
and you're ready to go.
The Twilio
needs your Twilio credentials. You can either pass these
directly to the constructor (see the code below) or via environment variables.
from twilio.rest import Client
account = "ACXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX"
token = "YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY"
client = Client(account, token)
Alternatively, a Client
constructor without these parameters will
look for TWILIO_ACCOUNT_SID
and TWILIO_AUTH_TOKEN
variables inside the
current environment.
We suggest storing your credentials as environment variables. Why? You'll never have to worry about committing your credentials and accidentally posting them somewhere public.
from twilio.rest import Client
client = Client()
To take advantage of Twilio's Global Infrastructure, specify the target Region and/or Edge for the client:
from twilio.rest import Client
client = Client(region='au1', edge='sydney')
A Client
constructor without these parameters will also look for TWILIO_REGION
and TWILIO_EDGE
variables inside the current environment.
Alternatively, you may specify the edge and/or region after constructing the Twilio client:
from twilio.rest import Client
client = Client()
client.region = 'au1'
client.edge = 'sydney'
This will result in the hostname
transforming from api.twilio.com
to api.sydney.au1.twilio.com
.
from twilio.rest import Client
account = "ACXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX"
token = "YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY"
client = Client(account, token)
call = client.calls.create(to="9991231234",
from_="9991231234",
url="http://twimlets.com/holdmusic?Bucket=com.twilio.music.ambient")
print(call.sid)
from twilio.rest import Client
account = "ACXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX"
token = "YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY"
client = Client(account, token)
message = client.messages.create(to="+12316851234", from_="+15555555555",
body="Hello there!")
Log the API request and response data to the console:
import logging
client = Client(account, token)
logging.basicConfig()
client.http_client.logger.setLevel(logging.INFO)
Log the API request and response data to a file:
import logging
client = Client(account, token)
logging.basicConfig(filename='./log.txt')
client.http_client.logger.setLevel(logging.INFO)
from twilio.rest import Client
from twilio.base.exceptions import TwilioRestException
account = "ACXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX"
token = "YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY"
client = Client(account, token)
try:
message = client.messages.create(to="+12316851234", from_="+15555555555",
body="Hello there!")
except TwilioRestException as e:
print(e)
For more descriptive exception types, please see the Twilio documentation.
To control phone calls, your application needs to output TwiML.
Use twilio.twiml.Response
to easily create such responses.
from twilio.twiml.voice_response import VoiceResponse
r = VoiceResponse()
r.say("Welcome to twilio!")
print(str(r))
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<Response><Say>Welcome to twilio!</Say></Response>
To use a custom HTTP client with this helper library, please see the Twilio documentation.
The Dockerfile
present in this repository and its respective twilio/twilio-python
Docker image are currently used by Twilio for testing purposes only.
If you need help installing or using the library, please check the Twilio Support Help Center first, and file a support ticket if you don't find an answer to your question.
If you've instead found a bug in the library or would like new features added, go ahead and open issues or pull requests against this repo!