This is the official Scale API RubyGem (scaleapi
).
Scale is an API for Human Intelligence. Businesses like Alphabet (Google), Uber, Proctor & Gamble, Houzz, and many more use us to power tasks such as:
- Draw bounding boxes and label parts of images (to train ML algorithms for self-driving cars)
- Place phone calls
- Transcribe documents, images, and webpages
- Scrape websites
- Triage support tickets
- Categorize and compare images, documents, and webpages
Scale is actively hiring software engineers - apply here.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'scaleapi'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install scaleapi
First, initialize the Scale API client:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
Note that you can optionally provide a callback_auth_key
and callback_url
when initializing the Scale API client. You can also set default_request_params
which is a Hash
that will be included in every request sent to Scale (either as a query string param or part of the request body).
If you're having trouble finding your API Key or Callback Auth Key, then go to the Scale Dashboard. If you set a default callback_url
in your account settings, you won't need to pass it in everytime.
This gem supports two ways of creating tasks. You can call create_#{tasktype}_task
on the scale
object or you can call scale.tasks.create
and pass in the corresponding type
. Upon success, it will return the appropriate object for that task type. Upon failure, it will raise an application-level error.
For every type of task, you can pass in the following options when creating:
callback_url
: a URL to send the webhook to upon completion. This is required when there is no default callback URL set when either initializing theScale
object or in your account settings.urgency
: a string indicating how long the task should take, options areimmediate
,day
, orweek
. The default isday
.metadata
: aHash
that contains anything you want in it. Use it for storing data relevant to that task, such as an internal ID for your application to associate the task with. Note that the keys of theHash
will be returned asString
rather thanSymbol
.
To create a categorization task, run the following:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.create_categorization_task({
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Is this company public or private?',
attachment_type: 'website',
attachment: 'https://www.google.com',
categories: ['public', 'private']
})
Upon success, this will return a Scale::Api::Tasks::Categorization
object. It will raise one of the errors if it's not successful.
Alternatively, you can also create a task this way
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.create({
type: 'categorization',
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Is this company public or private?',
attachment_type: 'website',
attachment: 'https://www.google.com',
categories: ['public', 'private']
})
This will also return a Scale::Api::Tasks::Categorization
object.
Read more about creating categorization tasks
To create a comparison task, run the following:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.create_comparison_task({
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Do the objects in these images have the same pattern?',
attachments: [
'http://i.ebayimg.com/00/$T2eC16dHJGwFFZKjy5ZjBRfNyMC4Ig~~_32.JPG',
'http://images.wisegeek.com/checkered-tablecloth.jpg'
],
attachment_type: 'image',
choices: ['yes', 'no']
})
Upon success, this will return a Scale::Api::Tasks::Comparison
object. If it fails, it will raise one of the errors.
Alternatively, you can also create a task this way
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.create({
type: 'comparison',
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Do the objects in these images have the same pattern?',
attachments: [
'http://i.ebayimg.com/00/$T2eC16dHJGwFFZKjy5ZjBRfNyMC4Ig~~_32.JPG',
'http://images.wisegeek.com/checkered-tablecloth.jpg'
],
attachment_type: 'image',
choices: ['yes', 'no']
})
This will also return a Scale::Api::Tasks::Comparison
object.
Read more about creating comparison tasks
To create a datacollection task, run the following:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.create_datacollection_task({
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Find the URL for the hiring page for the company with attached website.',
attachment: 'https://www.scaleapi.com/',
attachment_type: 'website',
fields: {
hiring_page: 'Hiring Page URL'
}
})
Upon success, this will return a Scale::Api::Tasks::Datacollection
object. If it fails, it will raise one of the errors.
Alternatively, you can also create a task this way
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.create({
type: 'datacollection',
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Find the URL for the hiring page for the company with attached website.',
attachment: 'https://www.scaleapi.com/',
attachment_type: 'website',
fields: {
hiring_page: 'Hiring Page URL'
}
})
This will also return a Scale::Api::Tasks::Datacollection
object.
Read more about creating datacollection tasks
To create an image recognition task, run the following:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.create_annotation_task({
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Draw a box around each **baby cow** and **big cow**',
attachment_type: 'image',
attachment: 'http://i.imgur.com/v4cBreD.jpg',
objects_to_annotate: ['baby cow', 'big cow'],
with_labels: true,
examples: [
{
correct: false,
image: 'http://i.imgur.com/lj6e98s.jpg',
explanation: 'The boxes are tight and accurate'
},
{
correct: true,
image: 'http://i.imgur.com/HIrvIDq.jpg',
explanation: 'The boxes are neither accurate nor complete'
}
]
})
Upon success, this will return a Scale::Api::Tasks::ImageRecognition
object. If it fails, it will raise one of the errors.
Note: create_annotation_task
is also aliased to create_image_recognition_task
, to help avoid confusion.
Alternatively, you can also create a task this way
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.create({
type: 'annotation',
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Draw a box around each **baby cow** and **big cow**',
attachment_type: 'image',
attachment: 'http://i.imgur.com/v4cBreD.jpg',
objects_to_annotate: ['baby cow', 'big cow'],
with_labels: true,
examples: [
{
correct: false,
image: 'http://i.imgur.com/lj6e98s.jpg',
explanation: 'The boxes are tight and accurate'
},
{
correct: true,
image: 'http://i.imgur.com/HIrvIDq.jpg',
explanation: 'The boxes are neither accurate nor complete'
}
]
})
This will also return a Scale::Api::Tasks::ImageRecognition
object.
Read more about creating image recognition tasks
You can use this to have real people call other people! Isn't that cool?
To create a phone call task, run the following:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.create_phone_call_task({
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Call this person and follow the script provided, recording responses',
phone_number: '5055006865',
entity_name: 'Alexandr Wang',
script: 'Hello ! Are you happy today? (pause) One more thing - what is your email address?',
fields: {
email: 'Email Address',
},
choices: ['He is happy', 'He is not happy']
})
Upon success, this will return a Scale::Api::Tasks::PhoneCall
object. If it fails, it will raise one of the errors.
Note: create_phone_call_task
is also aliased to create_phonecall_task
, to help avoid confusion.
Alternatively, you can also create a task this way
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.create({
type: 'phonecall',
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Call this person and follow the script provided, recording responses',
phone_number: '5055006865',
entity_name: 'Alexandr Wang',
script: 'Hello ! Are you happy today? (pause) One more thing - what is your email address?',
fields: {
email: 'Email Address',
},
choices: ['He is happy', 'He is not happy']
})
This will also return a Scale::Api::Tasks::PhoneCall
object.
Read more about creating phone call tasks
To create a transcription task, run the following:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.create_transcription_task({
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Transcribe the given fields.',
attachment_type: 'website',
attachment: 'http://news.ycombinator.com/',
fields: {
title: 'Title of Webpage',
top_result: 'Title of the top result'
}
})
Upon success, this will return a Scale::Api::Tasks::Transcription
object. If it fails, it will raise one of the errors.
Alternatively, you can also create a task this way
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.create({
type: 'transcription',
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
instruction: 'Transcribe the given fields.',
attachment_type: 'website',
attachment: 'http://news.ycombinator.com/',
fields: {
title: 'Title of Webpage',
top_result: 'Title of the top result'
}
})
This will also return a Scale::Api::Tasks::Transcription
object.
Read more about creating transcription tasks
To create an audio transcription task, run the following:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.create_audiotranscription_task({
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
attachment_type: 'audio',
attachment: 'https://storage.googleapis.com/deepmind-media/pixie/knowing-what-to-say/second-list/speaker-3.wav',
verbatim: false
})
Upon success, this will return a Scale::Api::Tasks::AudioTranscription
object. If it fails, it will raise one of the errors.
Alternatively, you can also create a task this way
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.create({
type: 'audiotranscription',
callback_url: 'http://www.example.com/callback',
attachment_type: 'audio',
attachment: 'https://storage.googleapis.com/deepmind-media/pixie/knowing-what-to-say/second-list/speaker-3.wav',
verbatim: false
})
This will also return a Scale::Api::Tasks::AudioTranscription
object.
Read more about creating audio transcription tasks
To get a list of tasks, run the following command:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.list
This will return a Scale::Api::TaskList
object.
Scale::Api::TaskList
implements Enumerable
, meaning you can do fun stuff like this:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.list.map(&:id)
This will return an array containing the last 100 tasks' task_id
.
You can also access it like a normal array:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.list[0]
This will return the appropriate Task object (or nil if empty).
You can filter this list by:
start_time
(which expects aTime
object)end_time
(which expects aTime
object)type
(which expects one of the tasks types)status
(which expects a string which is eithercompleted
,pending
, orcanceled
)
For example:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
scale.tasks.list(end_time: Time.parse('January 20th, 2017'), status: 'completed')
This will return a Scale::Api::TaskList
object up to 100 tasks that were completed by January 20th, 2017.
By default, scale.tasks.list
only returns up to 100 tasks, but you can pass in the limit
yourself.
It also supports pagination, here's an example:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
first_page = scale.tasks.list
second_page = first_page.next_page
Scale::Api::TaskList#next_page
returns the next page in the list of tasks (as a new Scale::Api::TaskList
). You can see if there are more pages by calling Scale::Api::TaskList#has_more?
on the object.
scale.tasks.list
is aliased to scale.tasks.where
and scale.tasks.all
.
For more information, read our documentation
To find a task by ID, run the following:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
task_id = 'TASK_ID'
scale.tasks.find(task_id)
This will return the appropriate Scaler::Api::Tasks object based on the task type
There are two ways to cancel a task.
Cancel by task_id
:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
task_id = 'TASK_ID'
scale.tasks.cancel(task_id)
Cancel on the task object:
require 'scale'
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY')
task_id = 'TASK_ID'
scale.tasks.find(task_id).cancel!
Both ways will return a new task object for the type, with the status
set to canceled
and calling canceled?
on the task will return true.
All tasks return a task object for their type
. Currently, this gem supports the following task types:
categorization
(Scale::Api::Tasks::Categorization
)comparison
(Scale::Api::Tasks::Comparison
)datacollection
(Scale::Api::Tasks::Datacollection
)annotation
(Scale::Api::Tasks::ImageRecognition
)phonecall
(Scale::Api::Tasks::PhoneCall
)transcription
(Scale::Api::Tasks::Transcription
)audiotranscription
(Scale::Api::Tasks::AudioTranscription
)
At the time of writing, this is every task type that Scale supports.
Every one of the task type objects has the following convenience (instance) methods:
day?
: returnstrue
when a task'surgency
is set today
week?
: returnstrue
when a task'surgency
is set toweek
immediate?
: returnstrue
when a task'surgency
is set toimmediate
pending?
: returnstrue
when a task'sstatus
is set topending
completed?
: returnstrue
when a task'sstatus
is set tocompleted
canceled?
: returnstrue
when a task'sstatus
is set tocanceled
callback_succeeded?
: returnstrue
when the response from the callback was successful
You can also access all the properties of the task object directly, some examples:
irb(main):009:0> task.instruction
=> "Find the URL for the hiring page for the company with attached website."
irb(main):013:0> task.metadata
=> {"bagel"=>true}
irb(main):016:0> task.completed_at
=> 2017-02-10 20:41:12 UTC
This gem allows you to create and parse callback data, so it can be easily used for web applications:
For example, for Ruby on Rails:
# app/controllers/scale_api_controller.rb
require 'scale'
class ScaleApiController < ApplicationController
# POST /scale_api
def create
scale = Scale.new(api_key: 'SCALE_API_KEY', callback_auth_key: 'SCALE_CALLBACK_AUTH_KEY')
callback = scale.build_callback params, callback_key: request.headers['scale-callback-auth']
return render status: 403 unless callback.verified? # Render forbidden if verifying the callback fails
callback.response # Response content hash (code and result)
callback.task # Scale::Api::Tasks object for task type
end
end
This gem will raise exceptions on application-level errors. Here are the list of errors:
Scale::Api::BadRequest
Scale::Api::TooManyRequests
Scale::Api::NotFound
Scale::Api::Unauthorized
Scale::Api::InternalServerError
Scale::Api::ConnectionError
Scale::Api::APIKeyInvalid
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in scaleapi-ruby.gemspec
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/scaleapi/scaleapi-ruby.
Currently, this repository has no tests - and adding tests using RSpec would make a for a great PR :)
Thanks to wikiti for creating the first unofficial Scale API Ruby Client!
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.