Native API into Mozilla Thunderbird [closed] - api

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I am making an application and would like for this application to be able to retrieve data from Mozilla Thunderbird. However, I have only been able to find an API for Thunderbird extensions. Is there an API that will allow native applications, outside of Thunderbird to interact with Thunderbird's databases?

No. But you could create a Thunderbird extension and communicate with it via TCP sockets (see nsIServerSocket). That extension would do the "dirty work" for you. If you want to get the data while Thunderbird isn't running then the only solution will be redoing the database reading logic in your application (Thunderbird is open-source of course but reusing its code will be hard). Btw, the .msf files use the infamous Mork file format.

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Is there a simple way to create a HTTP server in Kotlin Native? [closed]

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I'm looking for a library/code snippet that would allow the creation of a very basic HTTP server, that works on Windows.
I've seen the Ktor project, but it doesn't
support Windows unfortunately. Is that something that can easily be done without using an entire framework?
I only need to serve some generated text on one or two routes, I don't care too much about the headers, status codes etc. :)

sharepoint API using Golang? [closed]

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i want to know is there any example or package of golang developed for SHAREPOINT,
Please suggest,
authenticate sharepoint using golang api,
listing all the documents in sharepoint,
getting document from sharepoint to local using api.
above are some of the basic operations that an be done.
As far as I know there aren't any libraries yet, but SharePoint 2013 and later version(s) have powerful REST APIs you can use to interact with SharePoint objects. If there were libraries for Golang, I'd assume they were nothing more than a wrapper around the REST apis.
There's plenty of documentation and examples that will help you with that. I answered a similar question here for Java a while ago.

Documenting a Spring HATEOAS API [closed]

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Are there any plugins out there (similar to Swagger) which provide the ability to document HATEOAS APIs?
The Swagger interface is quite good but it doesn't have level 3 REST support.
I use spring-restdocs in combination with the HAL-browser.
You don't necessarily need HAL for restdocs though, although it is recommended.
Restdocs will generate code samples and link & field descriptors in the asciidoc format. You can then link to these asciidocs from inside the HAL-browser.
To see the result in action (although this is hardcoded), check this out: foxycart. Click on the little doc links next to the rels.
After further investigation I discovered HAL-browser (https://github.com/mikekelly/hal-browser) which is quite good. Although, your API must return content-type of HAL for it.
You don't need to configure anything on the server for this tool. Just open it in a browser and point to your API.

Dropbox API for Erlang [closed]

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is there a good dropbox API for erlang ?
It is possible to use REST to work with dropbox.
Is there a good REST helper library for erlang ?
Thank you.
Erlang definately has its own HTTP client, but I haven't come across a client REST library, but it shouldn't be too hard to roll your own on top of the client. There isn't an SDK for Erlang but AFAIK all the dropbox API SDK's revolve around wrapping the REST API anyway.
If you still interested, I've been working on it, and here is result — https://github.com/StepanKuzmin/erlang-dropbox

looking Rapid application development / application builder for non programmers [closed]

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is there any tool that can produce me simple application something like access
but without the need for access or open office to be installed
some thing that will save the data in real stand alone executable file with embedded simple db for non programmers.
I believe Filemaker does what you want. It's not free, however you could always download the trial and see if it fits.
If you are familiar with Access, you should look into compiling it into a standalone app using the Access runtime. Here's a thread on it.
Bear in mind that non-programmers will be quite limited in what they'll be able to accomplish, so calling this "rapid application development" is probably way overstating things.