Tutorial by Examples: u

// List folder Dropbox.authorizedClient!.files.listFolder(path: "/nonexistantpath").response { response, error in print("*** List folder ***") if let result = response { print("Folder contents:") for entry in result.entries { pr...
Dropbox.authorizedClient!.files.getMetadata(path: "/test.jpg", includeMediaInfo: true).response { response, error in if let result = response as? Files.FileMetadata { print(result.name) if result.mediaInfo != nil { switch result.mediaInfo! as Files.Med...
curl -X POST https://api.dropboxapi.com/2/files/get_metadata \ --header "Authorization: Bearer <ACCESS_TOKEN>" \ --header "Content-Type: application/json" \ --data "{\"path\": \"/test.jpg\",\"include_media_info\": true}&quot...
This uses the Dropbox Python SDK to create a shared link for a folder: import dropbox dbx = dropbox.Dropbox("<ACCESS_TOKEN>") shared_link_metadata = dbx.sharing_create_shared_link_with_settings("/Testing") print shared_link_metadata.url <ACCESS_TOKEN> should be...
curl -X POST https://api.dropboxapi.com/2/sharing/list_shared_links \ --header "Authorization: Bearer <ACCESS_TOKEN>" \ --header "Content-Type: application/json" \ --data "{\"path\": \"/test.txt\", \"direct_only\": true}&quo...
Dropbox.authorizedClient!.sharing.createSharedLink(path: "/test.txt").response({ response, error in if let link = response { print(link.url) } else { print(error!) } })
curl -X POST https://api.dropboxapi.com/2/sharing/create_shared_link_with_settings \ --header "Authorization: Bearer <ACCESS_TOKEN>" \ --header "Content-Type: application/json" \ --data "{\"path\": \"/Prime_Numbers.txt\",\"settin...
HTML: <div class="wrapper"> <div class="left-sidebar"> <h1>Left Sidebar</h1> <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. </p> </div> <div class="content"> <h1>Content</h1&g...
A JavaScript value can be converted to a JSON string using the JSON.stringify function. JSON.stringify(value[, replacer[, space]]) value The value to convert to a JSON string. /* Boolean */ JSON.stringify(true) // 'true' /* Number */ JSON.stringify(12) // '12...
A replacer function can be used to filter or transform values being serialized. const userRecords = [ {name: "Joe", points: 14.9, level: 31.5}, {name: "Jane", points: 35.5, level: 74.4}, {name: "Jacob", points: 18.5, level: 41.2}, {name: "Jessie",...
A reviver function can be used to filter or transform the value being parsed. 5.1 var jsonString = '[{"name":"John","score":51},{"name":"Jack","score":17}]'; var data = JSON.parse(jsonString, function reviver(key, value) { return ke...
JavaScript has two primary ways to represent binary data in the browser. ArrayBuffers/TypedArrays contain mutable (though still fixed-length) binary data which you can directly manipulate. Blobs contain immutable binary data which can only be accessed through the asynchronous File interface. Conver...
DataViews provide methods to read and write individual values from an ArrayBuffer, instead of viewing the entire thing as an array of a single type. Here we set two bytes individually then interpret them together as a 16-bit unsigned integer, first big-endian then little-endian. var buffer = new Ar...
TypedArrays are a set of types providing different views into fixed-length mutable binary ArrayBuffers. For the most part, they act like Arrays that coerce all assigned values to a given numeric type. You can pass an ArrayBuffer instance to a TypedArray constructor to create a new view of its data. ...
5.1 When you take a reference to a method (a property which is a function) in JavaScript, it usually doesn't remember the object it was originally attached to. If the method needs to refer to that object as this it won't be able to, and calling it will probably cause a crash. You can use the .bind...
Template literals are a special type of string literal that can be used instead of the standard '...' or "...". They are declared by quoting the string with backticks instead of the standard single or double quotes: `...`. Template literals can contain line breaks and arbitrary expression...
The idea of bound and unbound methods was removed in Python 3. In Python 3 when you declare a method within a class, you are using a def keyword, thus creating a function object. This is a regular function, and the surrounding class works as its namespace. In the following example we declare method ...
#! /bin/bash for i in {1..10}; do # {1..10} expands to "1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10" echo $i done This outputs the following: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 8 10
In the same module Inside a module named "MyModule", Xcode generates a header named MyModule-Swift.h which exposes public Swift classes to Objective-C. Import this header in order to use the Swift classes: // MySwiftClass.swift in MyApp import Foundation // The class must be `public`...
If MyFramework contains Objective-C classes in its public headers (and the umbrella header), then import MyFramework is all that's necessary to use them from Swift. Bridging headers A bridging header makes additional Objective-C and C declarations visible to Swift code. When adding project files, ...

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