import requests
response = requests.post(
"https://api.downloader.org/api/v1/submit/",
headers={"Authorization": "API_KEY"},
json={"url": "URL"},
)
for item in response.json()["items"]:
print(item["type"], item["url"])
Udemy I-GIF Downloader – FAQ
Copy the URL of the Udemy GIF you want, paste it into the box at the top of this page, and click Download. Your file is ready in a few seconds.
Yes — Udemy GIFs download for free, no account needed. A Pro plan exists for users who hit our daily limit or want priority processing, but it isn't required.
Udemy GIFs save as true animated .gif files. For larger or longer clips you'll often get better quality (and a smaller file) by grabbing the MP4 version instead — many platforms serve both.
Udemy hosts long-form video — anything from a 3-minute clip to a multi-hour archive. GIF download time scales with file size, but server-side processing stays constant.
Udemy requires the original poster to have made their account public. Downloader can fetch any GIF reachable without logging into Udemy itself — private accounts and follower-only posts are out of scope.
There's nothing Udemy-specific you need to do when grabbing a GIF. The standard paste-and-download flow handles it.
Yes. We deliver the file Udemy serves — no re-encoding, no compression, no quality loss. The GIF you save matches the one playing in your browser.
No. Downloads happen on our infrastructure — Udemy sees a normal page request, not your identity or your download action. The poster receives no notification.
Udemy is used heavily by professionals for reference, citation, and offline review. Downloads keep the original metadata where the platform exposes it — useful when you need to cite the source later.
Yes. MP4 files play natively in the default Photos / Files / Music app on every modern phone. No third-party player required.
Pro accounts can paste a comma-separated list of Udemy URLs to extract them in a batch. Free accounts handle one URL per request — paste, download, repeat.
Downloading GIFs from Udemy that you have the right to save — your own uploads, openly-licensed work, public-domain material — is standard fair use in most jurisdictions. For anything else, respect copyright and Udemy's terms.