Chilkat HOME .NET Core C# Android™ AutoIt C C# C++ Chilkat2-Python CkPython Classic ASP DataFlex Delphi ActiveX Delphi DLL Go Java Lianja Mono C# Node.js Objective-C PHP ActiveX PHP Extension Perl PowerBuilder PowerShell PureBasic Ruby SQL Server Swift 2 Swift 3,4,5... Tcl Unicode C Unicode C++ VB.NET VBScript Visual Basic 6.0 Visual FoxPro Xojo Plugin
(PowerShell) Firebase PUT - Writing DataDemonstrates how to PUT new data to a Firebase JSON database. The data used in this example is at Chilkat Firebase Pigs Database, and is shown here:
Add-Type -Path "C:\chilkat\ChilkatDotNet47-9.5.0-x64\ChilkatDotNet47.dll" # Demonstrates how to PUT new data to a Firebase JSON database. # This example requires the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked. # See Global Unlock Sample for sample code. # This example assumes a JWT authentication token, if required, has been previously obtained. # See Get Firebase Access Token from JSON Service Account Private Key for sample code. # Load the previously obtained Firebase access token into a string. $fac = New-Object Chilkat.FileAccess $accessToken = $fac.ReadEntireTextFile("qa_data/tokens/firebaseToken.txt","utf-8") if ($fac.LastMethodSuccess -ne $true) { $($fac.LastErrorText) exit } $rest = New-Object Chilkat.Rest # Make the initial connection (without sending a request yet). # Once connected, any number of requests may be sent. It is not necessary to explicitly # call Connect before each request. $success = $rest.Connect("chilkat.firebaseio.com",443,$true,$true) if ($success -ne $true) { $($rest.LastErrorText) exit } $authGoogle = New-Object Chilkat.AuthGoogle $authGoogle.AccessToken = $accessToken $rest.SetAuthGoogle($authGoogle) # Chilkat's sample data (pig-rescue data) is publicly readable at: https://chilkat.firebaseio.com/.json # This data is publicly readable, but not writable. You'll need to # run against your own database.. # Generate a new push ID. $prng = New-Object Chilkat.Prng $pushId = $prng.FirebasePushId() # We're going to add a new pig with just the name. $pigRecord = New-Object Chilkat.JsonObject $pigRecord.AppendString("name","William") $path = New-Object Chilkat.StringBuilder $path.Append("/pig-rescue/animal/") $path.Append($pushId) $path.Append(".json") # The string content of the last arg passed is {"name":"William"} $jsonResponse = $rest.FullRequestString("PUT",$path.GetAsString(),$pigRecord.Emit()) if ($rest.LastMethodSuccess -ne $true) { # Something happened in the communications (either no request was sent, or no response was received. # (The Chilkat REST API also has lower-level methods where an app can send the request in one call, # and then receive the response in another call.) $($rest.LastErrorText) exit } # Check the response status code. A 200 response status indicates success. if ($rest.ResponseStatusCode -ne 200) { $($rest.ResponseStatusText) $($jsonResponse) $("Failed.") exit } $($jsonResponse) $("Success.") # Note: In many of the Chilkat examples, you may notice strange ways # of doing something that should be simpler and shorter. For example, # building the path (above) could've been written differently, # with some simple string concatenation. # # The reason is that the Chilkat examples are written in a # proprietary "example code" scripting language, # and then automatically generated to each of the different programming # languages you see on example-code.com. The code generation is # limited in what it can do. For example, string concatentation # is not yet a feature of the "example code" scripting language (as of May 2016), # and therefore you won't see the use of a programming language's string # concatentation operators in any example. # |
© 2000-2024 Chilkat Software, Inc. All Rights Reserved.