Now, I am trying to get indices information from FMP API.
I want to get the change of index information every minute in the API.
I would appreciate it if you could help me.
Thanks!
Related
I've been for months trying to get more complex type of POST requests to go through and somehow I've never been able. Those like creating a product or a brand are always easy, but when u get to creating complex-rules and modifiers your API seems to close all the doors...
I'm trying to create a Complex-Rule for changing the image when two or more option values are selected. I tried every possible combination of what I think could be the needed values and nothing. Is it possible that I'm misinterpreting what the array of inline_response_200_19_conditions are and how to use them?
This is the response I get every time...
Any help here would be very much appreciated and would save me from doing more than 25.000 combinations and image uploads by hand... :/
Thanks a lot!
I have been working with the SurveyMonkey API for a few days now.
My ultimate goal is to be able to gather the voting results for each question in a survey.
For example... if I have a 5 question survey and each question has 3 options/answers... I'd like to gather the results of each question/option.
From what I'm finding in the API documentation... this is not possible.
Can this really not be possible?
Is there a way to gather the results of each question/answer combo using the API?
I hope I'm simply overlooking something.
Thanks!
It is definitely possible to get this kind of information - you can get the metadata of the survey via the API and all response data. How you process and parse that is up to you.
The most common use case to get a list of survey results is done the following way:
Get a list of respondent_ids via get_respondent_list
Send these respondent_ids to get_responses to get the raw response data
Match up the ids from this data with the ids described in the survey's metadata, which you get from get_survey_details
I am trying to get some information about the post people do in google plus. In particular I am interested in the "+1"'s.
Either from the google api or directly from the google plus web site you can get the total count and name of the people who did "+1". But, I would be interested in getting the time or timestamp of the "+1"'s. Does anyone knows if it is possible or how can I do that?
Help is always appreciated
Thanks to all,
As you can see at https://developers.google.com/+/api/latest/activities, the only data we return for a +1 is a list of the +1-ers, as well as the total number of people who +1'ed the item you are looking at.
If you would like to request additional data, please file a feature request in our Issue Tracker: https://code.google.com/p/google-plus-platform/issues/list. It would really help if you could be as detailed as possible in the type of data you would like to see and how you would ideally use that data.
If you're dealing with your own website and only care about +1s for pages on your own domain, you could use Google Analytic's social information to see how +1s change over time. You wouldn't get information about who did the +1ing.
When I use FaceBook API for retrieving posts information, I found that the returned information are changing all the time.
for e.g., when I retrieved information 2 times with 1mins interval, one record appears in the 1st time, and disapeared in the 2nd time.
https://graph.facebook.com/search?q=baby&type=post&limit=100&since=2010-05-19&until=2010-05-21
Does anyone know what happen?
Cheers,
LingChen
Searches of large datasets are (in general) nondeterministic.
Let's say user A follows user B, and B follows A. I want to know the exact date A started following B and viceversa.
Is this information stored on twitter? Can I retrieve it using the API?
To clear out: The point of this question is finding a way to know who followed who first.
(I'm assuming both A and B deleted the notification e-mails)
No Ignacio, you can't. You just can know who follows who but not the date the follow started.
Looking at the API, there's is no way, there are two calls to get the followers:
User Methods/statuses/followers
and
Social Graph Methods/followers/ids
Neither of them returns dates or even a serial that would let you see who started following first. Really, there's no indication that twitter is internally storing this information, neither in the API nor Twitter's web interface.
This is a very old question, but perhaps some might be interested to know that while you cannot get the date at which someone started following, you can at least infer an "earliest possible following date" from the fact that the list of followers is ordered according to date, and the fact that follower objects come with a created_at timestamp.
Here's a Python function for calculating an "earliest possible following date": https://github.com/BernhardClemm/twitter-follow-dates
Of course Twitter stores it, because Twitter sorts followers and following lists by the date ;)
It is possible to do this, but impractical. When you call the followers API you can page the results. Each returned object contains next_cursor and prev_cursor items. These refer to the first and last records in the next and previous pages. These values are time based and can be used to calculate the time that the respective users followed you.
It follows that, if you set the page size to 1, you can walk through the list of follower IDs one at a time and the next_cursor value will allow you to derive the follow time for the next record.
This is reasonably simple to implement, however, in practice, you'll very quickly hit Twitter's API rate limit.