Book Image

Python Automation Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Jaime Buelta
Book Image

Python Automation Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Jaime Buelta

Overview of this book

In this updated and extended version of Python Automation Cookbook, each chapter now comprises the newest recipes and is revised to align with Python 3.8 and higher. The book includes three new chapters that focus on using Python for test automation, machine learning projects, and for working with messy data. This edition will enable you to develop a sharp understanding of the fundamentals required to automate business processes through real-world tasks, such as developing your first web scraping application, analyzing information to generate spreadsheet reports with graphs, and communicating with automatically generated emails. Once you grasp the basics, you will acquire the practical knowledge to create stunning graphs and charts using Matplotlib, generate rich graphics with relevant information, automate marketing campaigns, build machine learning projects, and execute debugging techniques. By the end of this book, you will be proficient in identifying monotonous tasks and resolving process inefficiencies to produce superior and reliable systems.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
14
Other Books You May Enjoy
15
Index

Receiving SMS

SMS can also be received and processed automatically. This enables services such as delivering information on request (for instance, send INFO GOALS to receive the results from the Soccer League), but also more complex flows such as in bots, which can have simple conversations with users that enable rich services such as remotely configuring a thermostat.

Each time Twilio receives an SMS to one of your registered phone numbers, it performs a request to a publicly available URL. This is configured in the Twilio service, meaning the code to execute when accessing the URL should be under your control. This creates the problem of having this URL available on the internet. That means that just your local computer won't work, as it's very unlikely that it is addressable externally from your local network. We will use Heroku (http://heroku.com) to deliver an available service, but there are other alternatives. The Twilio documentation provides examples...