Update a user
This endpoint is only available to organization administrators.
PATCH https://zulip.fairsharing.org/api/v1/users/{user_id}
Administrative endpoint to update the details of another user in the organization.
Supports everything an administrator can do to edit details of another
user's account, including editing full name,
role, and custom profile
fields.
Usage examples
#!/usr/bin/env python
import zulip
# The user for this zuliprc file must be an organization administrator
client = zulip.Client(config_file="~/zuliprc-admin")
# Change a user's full name given a user ID.
result = client.update_user_by_id(user_id, full_name="New Name")
# Change value of the custom profile field with ID 9.
result = client.update_user_by_id(user_id, profile_data=[{"id": 9, "value": "some data"}])
print(result)
curl -sSX PATCH https://zulip.fairsharing.org/api/v1/users/12 \
-u BOT_EMAIL_ADDRESS:BOT_API_KEY \
--data-urlencode full_name=NewName \
--data-urlencode role=400 \
--data-urlencode 'profile_data=[{"id": 4, "value": "0"}, {"id": 5, "value": "1909-04-05"}]'
Parameters
user_id integer required in path
Example: 12
full_name string optional
Example: "NewName"
The user's full name.
Changes: Removed unnecessary JSON-encoding of this parameter in
Zulip 5.0 (feature level 106).
role integer optional
Example: 400
New role for the user. Roles are encoded as:
- Organization owner: 100
- Organization administrator: 200
- Organization moderator: 300
- Member: 400
- Guest: 600
Only organization owners can add or remove the owner role.
The owner role cannot be removed from the only organization owner.
Changes: New in Zulip 3.0 (feature level 8), replacing the previous
pair of is_admin
and is_guest
boolean parameters. Organization moderator
role added in Zulip 4.0 (feature level 60).
profile_data (object)[] optional
Example: [{"id": 4, "value": "0"}, {"id": 5, "value": "1909-04-05"}]
A dictionary containing the to be updated custom profile field data for the user.
Response
Example response(s)
Changes: As of Zulip 7.0 (feature level 167), if any
parameters sent in the request are not supported by this
endpoint, a successful JSON response will include an
ignored_parameters_unsupported
array.
A typical successful JSON response may look like:
{
"msg": "",
"result": "success"
}
A typical unsuccessful JSON response:
{
"code": "BAD_REQUEST",
"msg": "Guests cannot be organization administrators",
"result": "error"
}