Habitica
This integration allows you to monitor and manage your Habitica profile. This integration exposes the Habitica’s API as a Home Assistant service. It supports multiple users and allows you to automate checking out your habits and daily tasks or casting magics using Home Assistant.
There is currently support for the following device types within Home Assistant:
Player data: allows you to view and monitor your player data from Habitica in Home Assistant. The following sensors will be available:
- Player’s name
- Player’s health points
- Player’s max health
- Player’s mana points
- Player’s max mana points
- Player’s experience
- Player’s experience to the next level
- Player’s level
- Player’s gold pieces
- Player’s class
Tasks: allows you to view and monitor your tasks from Habitica in Home Assistant. The following sensors will be available:
- Habits
- Daily tasks
- Todo tasks
- Rewards
Configuration
To add the Habitica integration to your Home Assistant instance, use this My button:
If the above My button doesn’t work, you can also perform the following steps manually:
-
Browse to your Home Assistant instance.
-
In the bottom right corner, select the Add Integration button.
-
From the list, select Habitica.
-
Follow the instructions on screen to complete the setup.
At runtime you will be able to use API for each respective user by their Habitica’s username.
You can override this by passing name
key, this value will be used instead of the username.
If you are hosting your own instance of Habitica, you can specify a URL to it in url
key.
Configuration Variables
Habitica’s API user ID. This value can be grabbed from account setting
Habitica’s API password (token). This value can be grabbed from account setting by pressing ‘Show API token’
Override for Habitica’s username. Will be used for service calls
URL to your Habitica instance, if you are hosting your own
API Service Parameters
The API is exposed to Home Assistant as a service called habitica.api_call
. To call it you should specify this keys in service data:
Service data attribute | Required | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
name |
yes | string | Habitica’s username as per configuration.yaml entry. |
path |
yes | [string] | Items from API URL in form of an array with method attached at the end. See the example below. |
args |
no | map | Any additional JSON or URL parameter arguments. See the example below and apidoc. |
A successful call to this service will fire an event habitica_api_call_success
.
Event data attribute | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
string | Copied from service data attribute. |
path |
[string] | Copied from service data attribute. |
data |
map | Deserialized data field of JSON object Habitica’s server returned in response to API call. For more info see the API documentation. |
Let’s consider some examples on how to call the service.
For example, let’s say that there is a configured habitica
platform for user xxxNotAValidNickxxx
with their respective api_user
and api_key
.
Let’s create a new task (a todo) for this user via Home Assistant. There is an API call for this purpose.
To create a new task one should hit https://habitica.com/api/v3/tasks/user
endpoint with POST
request with a JSON object with task properties.
So let’s call the API on habitica.api_call
.
- The
name
key becomesxxxNotAValidNickxxx
. - The
path
key is trickier.- Remove
https://habitica.com/api/v3/
at the beginning of the endpoint URL. - Split the remaining on slashes (/) and append the lowercase method at the end.
- You should get
["tasks", "user", "post"]
. To get a better idea of the API you are recommended to try all of the API calls in IPython console using this package.
- Remove
- The
args
key is more or less described in the API documentation.
Combining all together:
call habitica.api_call
with data
{
"name": "xxxNotAValidNickxxx",
"path": ["tasks", "user", "post"],
"args": {"text": "Use API from Home Assistant", "type": "todo"}
}
This call will create a new todo on xxxNotAValidNickxxx
’s account with text Use API from Home Assistant
like this:
Also an event habitica_api_call_success
will be fired with the following data:
{
"name": "xxxNotAValidNickxxx",
"path": ["tasks", "user", "post"],
"data": {
"challenge": {},
"group": {"approval": {"required": false,
"approved": false,
"requested": false},
"assignedUsers": [],
"sharedCompletion": "recurringCompletion"},
"completed": false,
"collapseChecklist": false,
"type": "todo",
"notes": "",
"tags": [],
"value": 0,
"priority": 1,
"attribute": "str",
"text": "Use API from Home Assistant",
"checklist": [],
"reminders": [],
"_id": "NEW_TASK_UUID",
"createdAt": "2018-08-09T18:03:27.759Z",
"updatedAt": "2018-08-09T18:03:27.759Z",
"userId": "xxxNotAValidNickxxx's ID",
"id": "NEW_TASK_UUID"}
}
Templating
sensor.habitica_USER_dailys
, sensor.habitica_USER_habits
, sensor.habitica_USER_rewards
, and sensor.habitica_USER_todos
have state attributes listing the user’s respective tasks. For example, you can see this information in Developer Tools -> States -> sensor.habitica_USER_dailys
-> Attributes, or by adding a Markdown card to a dashboard with the following code:
{% for key, value in states.sensor.habitica_USER_dailys.attributes.items() %}
{% if 'text' in value | string %}
{{ loop.index }}. {{ value.text }}
{% endif %}
{% endfor %}