Webtags (preserving history): Difference between revisions

m
Line 698: Line 698:
You may have used GET as an attribute when defining the action of a HTML form.  Equally you might in a script language access the query-string part of a Universal Resource Locator to get parameters for what the script is to supply to the web page.  Even if you don't understand the meaning of those technical terms, you probably have seen when using a browser (in the box where a URL is entered) that sometimes the URL seen there has a query-string. You will have seen a question mark (?) followed by one or [separated by ampersand (&)] more '''name=value''' parameters.
You may have used GET as an attribute when defining the action of a HTML form.  Equally you might in a script language access the query-string part of a Universal Resource Locator to get parameters for what the script is to supply to the web page.  Even if you don't understand the meaning of those technical terms, you probably have seen when using a browser (in the box where a URL is entered) that sometimes the URL seen there has a query-string. You will have seen a question mark (?) followed by one or [separated by ampersand (&)] more '''name=value''' parameters.


The GET approach to using the Cumulus general api works in this way indicating the start of a query-string with a question mark and using ampersands to separate names. The difference is that a tag name (or list of tag names) is used instead of a name=value parameter (or list of name=value parameters).   
The GET approach to using the Cumulus general api works in this way indicating the start of a query-string with a question mark and using ampersands to separate names. The difference is that a tag name (or list of tag names) is used instead of a name=value parameter (or list of name=value parameters).  However, when the Cumulus api returns the values they will be in attribute=value format.  Therefore if (like example below) you are coding in JavaScript, what is returned is a JavaScript Object and you extract the values by specifying the Object name and the Attribute name. If that technical terminology confuses you, look at the example.
 
==Selecting values using GET===


Suppose you want to get the values for the following three web tags:
Suppose you want to get the values for the following three web tags:
5,838

edits