# Radiobrowser Lib Rust Client library for radio-browser.info and other radio-browser-rust servers ## Getting started Cargo.toml entry ```toml radiobrowser = "*" ``` Example: ```rust use futures::join; use radiobrowser::RadioBrowserAPI; use radiobrowser::StationOrder; use std::error::Error; #[async_std::main] async fn main() -> Result<(), Box> { let mut api = RadioBrowserAPI::new().await?; let countries = api.get_countries().send(); let languages = api.get_languages().send(); let tags = api.get_tags().filter("jazz").send(); let stations = api .get_stations() .name("jazz") .reverse(true) .order(StationOrder::Clickcount) .send(); let config = api.get_server_config(); let (stations, config, countries, languages, tags) = join!(stations, config, countries, languages, tags); println!("Config: {:#?}", config?); println!("Countries found: {}", countries?.len()); println!("Languages found: {}", languages?.len()); let tags = tags?; println!("Tags found: {}", tags.len()); println!("{:?}", tags); println!("Stations found: {}", stations?.len()); Ok(()) } ``` ## Installation Within a particular ecosystem, there may be a common way of installing things, such as using Yarn, NuGet, or Homebrew. However, consider the possibility that whoever is reading your README is a novice and would like more guidance. Listing specific steps helps remove ambiguity and gets people to using your project as quickly as possible. If it only runs in a specific context like a particular programming language version or operating system or has dependencies that have to be installed manually, also add a Requirements subsection. ## Usage Documentation is at https://docs.rs/radiobrowser ## License This project is MIT licensed.