# Real-time events API Zulip's real-time events API lets you write software that reacts immediately to events happening in Zulip. This API is what powers the real-time updates in the Zulip web and mobile apps. As a result, the events available via this API cover all changes to data displayed in the Zulip product, from new messages to stream descriptions to emoji reactions to changes in user or organization-level settings. ## Using the events API The simplest way to use Zulip's real-time events API is by using `call_on_each_event` from our Python bindings. You just need to write a Python function (in the examples below, the `lambda`s) and pass it into `call_on_each_event`; your function will be called whenever a new event matching the specific `event_type` and/or `narrow` arguments occurs in Zulip. `call_on_each_event` takes care of all the potentially tricky details of long-polling, error handling, exponential backoff in retries, etc. It's cousin, `call_on_each_message`, provides an even simpler interface for processing Zulip messages. More complex applications (like a Zulip terminal client) may need to instead use the raw [register](/api/register-queue) and [events](/api/get-events-from-queue) endpoints. ## Usage examples {start_tabs} {tab|python} ``` #!/usr/bin/env python import sys import zulip # Download ~/zuliprc-dev from your dev server client = zulip.Client(config_file="~/zuliprc-dev") # Print every message the current user would receive # This is a blocking call that will run forever client.call_on_each_message(lambda msg: sys.stdout.write(str(msg) + "\n")) # Print every event relevant to the user # This is a blocking call that will run forever client.call_on_each_event(lambda event: sys.stdout.write(str(event) + "\n")) ``` {end_tabs} ## Arguments You may also pass in the following keyword arguments to `call_on_each_event`: {generate_api_arguments_table|arguments.json|call_on_each_event}