fitbitr
makes it easy to interface with Fitbit data in R.
You can install the CRAN version of fitbitr
with:
install.packages("fitbitr")
Or you can install the latest development version from Github:
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("mrkaye97/fitbitr")
There are a few steps you’ll need to do before you can start pulling your Fitbit data:
-
Make an app here.
-
Fill in the fields as you like (see image below for guidance).
-
You’ll be redirected to a page with your credentials. Make sure you keep the Client ID, Client Secret, and Redirect URL. You’ll need them to finish the setup process. You can always refer back to the apps page to find them again.
-
Generate a token:
library(fitbitr) .fitbitr_token <- generate_fitbitr_token( oauth_app_name = <YOUR-APP-NAME>, client_id = <YOUR-CLIENT-ID>, client_secret = <YOUR-CLIENT-SECRET>, callback = <YOUR-REDIRECT-URL> )
- If you want to edit the scopes that are enabled, you can do so
with the
scopes = c('scopes', 'you', 'want', 'enabled')
argument. You can find information on the available scope options here. - If you want to cache your token, you can do so by specifying
either
cache = TRUE
orcache = <some-file-path>
. See the docs onhttr::oauth2.0_token()
for details.
- If you want to edit the scopes that are enabled, you can do so
with the
-
And that’s it! You now have your Fitbit API credentials set up.
fitbitr
tracks them behind the scenes for you, so all that you need to do at the start of each R session isgenerate_fitbitr_token()
. On a session restart,generate_fitbitr_token()
will try to laod a token from your.httr-oauth
if it exists.
Once you have a token, using fitbitr
is very straightforward:
```r
> get_steps("2020-05-21", "2020-05-28")
# A tibble: 8 × 2
date steps
<date> <dbl>
1 2020-05-21 3734
2 2020-05-22 5107
3 2020-05-23 5640
4 2020-05-24 6595
5 2020-05-25 8466
6 2020-05-26 5833
7 2020-05-27 8616
8 2020-05-28 3161
```
fitbitr
tries to return a useful, tidy object back to you from the
API.
Given the structure of the Fitbit API, it doesn’t appear to be currently
possible to use fitbitr
outside of an interactive session. And
furthermore, it doesn’t help that Fitbit refresh tokens only last 8
hours, at which point you’d need another interactive session to generate
a new one.
For these reasons, it is not advised to try to use fitbitr
non-interactively, such as in a Shiny app server, a CI/CD process, a
background job, etc.