arcade-mcp/toolkits/reddit/tests/__init__.py
Eric Gustin 7c6a739f25
Add Reddit Toolkit (#336)
| Name | Description | Package | Version |

|----------------------------|------------------------------------------------------------------|---------|---------|
| Reddit.SubmitTextPost | Submit a text-based post to a subreddit |
Reddit | 0.0.1 |
| Reddit.CommentOnPost | Comment on a Reddit post | Reddit | 0.0.1 |
| Reddit.ReplyToComment | Reply to a Reddit comment | Reddit | 0.0.1 |
| Reddit.GetPostsInSubreddit | Gets posts titles, links, and other
metadata in the specified subreddit | Reddit | 0.0.1 |
| Reddit.GetContentOfPost | Get the content (body) of a Reddit post by
its identifier. | Reddit | 0.0.1 |
| Reddit.GetContentOfMultiplePosts | Get the content (body) of multiple
Reddit posts by their identifiers. | Reddit | 0.0.1 |
| Reddit.GetTopLevelComments | Get the first page of top-level comments
of a Reddit post. | Reddit | 0.0.1 |


### Why not use an SDK?
Reddit API does not have an official SDK, although
[PRAW](https://github.com/praw-dev/praw) has large community support.

I played around with PRAW, but ultimately decided to not use an SDK.
PRAW made it incredibly easy to work with Reddit Objects, but there were
a few drawbacks that ultimately swayed me to not use it:
1. PRAW assumes that it will do the auth for you. A client ID and secret
must be passed to PRAW, but a tool only has the auth token. I was able
to hack around this by manipulating private properties - but it felt too
hacky
2. PRAW does not support Python 3.13
3. PRAW is not async. There is
[AsyncPRAW](https://github.com/praw-dev/asyncpraw), but the community
does not look active there.
2025-04-03 14:07:10 -07:00

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