It seems that when a key in data
has a value of None
, the key isn\'t included by requests.
>>> req = requests.Request(\'PO
I had similar issue with a blank value and this was my workaround. I sent the data as json string and set content type headers as application/json. This seems to send the whole data across as expected. Took quite some time to figure out. Hope this helps someone.
import requests
import json
header = {"Content-Type":"application/json"}
data = {
"xxx": None,
"yyy": "http://",
"zzz": 12345
}
res = requests.post('https://httpbin.org/post',
data=json.dumps(data), headers=header)
obj = json.loads(res.text)
print obj['json']
I had the same question few days ago and if you replace data with json it should work for you, as now None
will be sent in the body.
request('POST', 'http://google.com', json=dict(a=None, b=1))
Setting a dictionary element to None
is how you explicitly say that you don't want that parameter to be sent to the server.
I can't find this mentioned specifically in the requests.Request()
documentation, but in Passing Parameters in URLs it says:
Note that any dictionary key whose value is None will not be added to the URL's query string.
Obviously it uses consistent logic for POST
requests as well.
If you want to send an empty string, set the dictionary element to an empty string rather than None
.