Getting closed caption data files from YouTube V3 API (in Delphi) - api

When you upload a video to YouTube, it automatically transcribes it and creates three different CC (closed-caption) files. They can be downloaded via the YT Creator Studio. I want to write a small Delphi app that does that via the YT API and does some stuff with the CC file.
I've found some code that lets you upload and play videos, but nothing that accesses things like the CC data via API. One source says YT charges for some of their API, and other info that says that's not the case. But I've seen nothing on the V3 API.
I'm curious if anybody can clarify this situation and has some example code for getting the CC data via the V3 API. A Delphi example would be most helpful.

Related

How can I get the Views Per Hour stat for a YouTube video?

I checked the Youtube API and it's mainly to do with adding functionalities related to the YouTube app rather than getting analytics data about videos.
There is a chrome extension called VidIQ that shows the views per hours of a particular video when going to the video's page on YouTube, so I tried reading the source code for it, but it is all compressed and I can't easily find what I'm looking for.
Could someone explain to me how VidIQ chrome extension is getting the views per hour stat for YouTube? Maybe it's not an official stat from Youtube but a rough estimate calculated by VidIQ. How do they get this information?
I tried debugging the VidIQ chrome extension to search through the source code but adding a simple html tag made the file corrupted and disabled the extension until I repaired it again. I'm having difficulties deciphering the source code.
Most of what VidIQ gets is from the YouTube analytics api and not directly from the YouTube data api although i would be they use some combination of both.
If you create a report that extracts views and run it every hour you should get the results you are looking for.
However i would be willing to be that they cache a lot of the data and do some internal analytics on it. They would need to cache it as the YouTube analytics api only returns data for the last 90 days last i checked.
If your intent is to Reverse Engineer VidIQ you may need to accept that a lot of the data you are seeing is internally stored in their system and generated by them based upon the data that is avaliable in the YouTube Analytics API and the YouTube data apis.

How do I Automate BIng Maps data upload?

How do I upload data to Bing Maps without having to use the portal? I can’t find anything in the documentation that mentions this, but any time we update our data, I have to manually upload a new XML file. Ideally, we would automate the upload whenever we update the data.
The closest I can get is the Uploading Data page, but there's nothing there about it.
Use the data source management API: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/bingmaps/spatial-data-services/data-source-management-api/
If you are working in .NET, you might also find this library useful: https://github.com/Microsoft/BingMapsSDSToolkit

Uploading documents to a deal in hubspot

I want to implement the following use case and I'm not sure how to do this with the Hubspot API and I don't find any solution within the documentation.
I created a custom request flow which is creating contacts and deals within Hubspot programmatically via the API in the next step the user should upload documents related to his case and I would like to upload and associate these documents with the related deal. Could someone help me or point me to the right spot in the documentation on how such a scenario can be established with the API.
I got the following answer on the community board of Hubspot which worked for me:
You can upload a File (and set the permissions) using the CMS Files
API.
Once you've upload the file you can the associate the file to your
deal (using the File ID returned from the CMS Files API) with the
Create Engagement API.
Link: https://community.hubspot.com/t5/APIs-Integrations/Upload-File-to-a-contact/m-p/398156#M39358

get the data from soundcloud and reverbnation for a windows 8 app

I am trying to create a windows 8 app for a particular band who have stored their songs on
Reverbation and soundcloud. My problem is that i dont know how to get those contents from these sites...I tried creating an rss feed using feedburner but that failed. Is there any way where i can get the feed or the data for my app.
SoundCloud has a well documented API. You can check yourself if the functionality you require is available.
ReverbNation on the other hand doesn't seem to have a public API available at the moment. There's only an API link in the page footer which opens a dialog for subscribing to any news regarding that via email.

Can you create Google Forms from Google Docs in an application?

I am thinking about app that will use google form and I need to create forms from that app. Is there a way how can I create form in google docs without using website but through some api or some other way?
I can offer an idea for a solution using Google App Script.
Since the beginning of 2013 you can create new forms using the App Script Forms Service API quite easily.
var form = FormApp.create(title)
.setDescription(description)
.setConfirmationMessage('Thanks for responding!')
;
The problem now is how to get that App Script running from your non App Script code.
You can use App Script to create a Web App that reacts to HTTP GET requests.
So putting it together, you may be able to create an App Script Web App that reacts to a GET request and when it gets the right URL parameters, it creates the form.
(Nov 2020) Yes, it is possible to programmatically create Google Forms. You can do it with Google Apps Script using its Forms service. You can also extend the code to read in the contents from Google Docs (with Apps Script's Document service) and use it for the creation of Google Forms.
I created a Google Workspace (formerly G Suite) Add-on, which you can think of as a Google Docs extension, called GFormIt. Its original purpose was intended for teachers to write exams/quizzes, possibly with answers, in Google Docs, then automatically convert them to Google Forms to distribute to students who submit their answers into Google Sheets (the destination for Google Forms submissions).
Furthermore, if you (the teacher) provided answers to your test questions, GFormIt would also auto-submit your answers to the Sheet as if you were a student. If you do that, and use a tool like Flubaroo to grade the exam, you could designate your row in the Sheet as “the answer key.” You can learn more about how it works, including viewing a short video, at the GFormIt page linked above.
This Google Docs add-on, along with others for Google Docs, Sheets, Slides, Forms, etc., are all certified/validated by Google and available for free to anyone from the Google Workspace Marketplace. (However, your admins may have to grant permissions for you to try to install them to your corporate Workspace account.) If interested in building your own add-on, please see the developer documentation and perhaps some of my introductory videos to get started, the most relevant being the one linked to at the top of this answer.
Apps Script is a serverless Google technology, meaning you write your code (using JavaScript) in the browser, and it is hosted by & executed on Google servers. If you wanted to create your own web app (and hosted anywhere), you would have to wait for a Google Forms REST API which does not exist at the time of this writing. (If we ever launch one, you'll find its documentation at https://developers.google.com/forms along with the others like Sheets https://developers.google.com/sheets, Gmail https://developers.google.com/gmail, Drive https://developers.google.com/drive, etc.)
Earlier this year (Mar 2022) the new Google Forms Api graduated from Beta. It is more powerful that the previous versions and caters for two main use cases:
Automated form creation and editing: Enables automated form creation
and editing. Enables rapid form generation from large volume question
banks or other data backends.
Reaction to Form responses: The API also enables developers to build
automations for acting on incoming responses. Examples include
developing real-time dashboards or visualizations and triggering
business workflows based on response data.
We have used it to build an integration that Creates documents and slides each time a form is completed: www.portant.co/google-forms-to-docs and it works really well.
I think the other key use case looks like it would be a good fit for you and others looking for a solution like this.
Cheers, James
Sorry, the API doesn't support programmatically creating forms.