RESTClient | REST Client for Unity with JSON and XML parsing | JSON Processing library
kandi X-RAY | RESTClient Summary
kandi X-RAY | RESTClient Summary
REST Client for Unity with JSON and XML parsing. (Features JSON helper to handle nested arrays and deserializing abstract types)
Support
Quality
Security
License
Reuse
Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
Currently covering the most popular Java, JavaScript and Python libraries. See a Sample of RESTClient
RESTClient Key Features
RESTClient Examples and Code Snippets
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on RESTClient
QUESTION
I am generating a C# REST service client via AutoRest (OpenAPI v3). I'm generating the client by running the following command:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-18 at 20:43Looking into the AutoRest source code, it will only create public constructors if the security schema in the OpenAPI spec is set to AzureKey or AADtoken. This is verified in their docs AutoRest source code
AutoRest Security Schemes documentationThe table for AutoRest flags says that the
--add-credential
does nothing for the .NET clients (4th column from the left).
https://github.com/Azure/autorest/blob/main/docs/generate/flags.md#shared-flags
It appears that AutoRest v3 is only for APIs hosted on Azure itself. With the evidence above, as well as the fact that required parameters for constructors of generated clients, like ClientDiagnostics
, are declared internal
, I think we're going to have to find another API client generator.
QUESTION
I get an error (after update RestSharp - v107) on the following line:
var contacts = new JsonDeserializer().Deserialize>(response);
Error CS0246 The type or namespace name 'JsonDeserializer' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?)
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-04 at 01:37try this
QUESTION
I am printing moving averages on a mplfinance plot, as expected there are gaps.
On most charting software, i.e. TradingView etc, they do not have gaps on the moving averages - and presume they are pulling the data from previous -n elements (even with a discontinuous jump they accept this).
I have two questions please:
How can I run a moving average without a gap (understanding it would be skewed within n elements of the discontinuity)... i.e. pull in the day prior and use this for moving average calculation but do not display that day (so that the moving average will already be running on the left hand side of the plot - for below that would be startng at Dec 21st)?
If i wanted to calculate this moving average outside of mplfinance internal function (or change to exponential moving average etc) how would I go about adding this as a separate plot on top of the candlesticks?
And my code is below:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-01 at 12:45- As you have implied, those systems that show no gap at the beginning of the moving average do so by using data prior to the data displayed as part of the moving average calculation. You can accomplish the same thing by setting kwarg
xlim=(min,max)
in your call tompf.plot()
by settingmin
equal to one less than your largest moving average, andmax=len(data)
... so for example given your code above, do:
QUESTION
I am trying to deploy a SparkJava REST app in a Kubernetes container on my Windows machine.
- Windows 10
- Kubernetes v1.22.5
- (edit) base image: openjdk:8-alpine
I am trying to read in a properties file when the app starts. I have created a volume mount in my YAML that points to where the file is. However, the container always crashes when I start it. I have taken screenshots of the YAML and the logs from the container. I have tried logging some test results to make sure the system can find the mounted drive and the file, and I also logged the canRead
property to debug whether it is a permissions problem. Tests seem to indicate the file is visible and readable; but the error that is thrown would indicate otherwise.
Some research I did points to a possible bug or hack required to get the volume mount working correctly, but I haven't read anything that seems to mirror my issue closely.
Does anybody see what I am doing wrong?
Here is my java:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Jan-25 at 17:13Posted community wiki answer based on the topic with similar issue on the GitHub. Feel free to expand it.
The solution is to add /run/desktop/mnt/host
before the /c/users///gits/resttest
:
QUESTION
Please help. I'm trying to learn REST concepts and make the first programs using Delphi and REST objects. I came across a problem that I don’t know how to solve. In the database I have a test with special characters from my mother tongue (Bosnian): č, ć, đ, š, ž. When I pass this text via the GET method, objects that parse and display this text in objects on the form display these characters as "?", "æ", "æè" etc. I researched and tried unsuccessfully to solve the problem. I tried to use the Utf8ToAnsi function and put iso-8859-2 instead of UTF-8 in the RESTClient, RESTRequest and RESTResponce object parameters. Please for help, instruction or advice on how to solve or investigate this problem.
Source code on server side:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Dec-28 at 07:49The HTTP response contains this line:
QUESTION
I've inherited a Java (Maven) project at work. I'm not a Java developer, but the project is now mine, nonetheless. When I clone (a la git clone
) the repository, I notice the folder structure goes really deep before any .java files appear. For instance, the folder structure looks like this:
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Oct-19 at 21:40Maven is a tool that has certain opinions on where things should go; a default configuration. You don't have to follow it, but not following this default configuration has three significant downsides:
- You do have to then configure maven to tell it about the alternative choices you made. Maven does not make this easy.
- Other java programmers generally assume the defaults. If you have a good reason to deviate, go for it, but 'I do not like it' is not a good reason, as it'll be pointlessly increasing the learning curve.
- The maven developers chose this structure as default for a reason. If you think it's a dumb reason, that's certainly possible and you may even be right, but then you're using a build tool written by folks who, (judging the book by its cover a little bit), according to you, make boneheaded choices about sane defaults. That's not a great place to be.
To explain each layer:
src
Indicates that these are source files: Compiled and generated stuff should not be in here, and the entire src
tree should be in version control. Contrast to e.g. bin
or build
containing build artefacts, doc
containing documentation, and who knows what other directories you need for other relevant parts of a repo.
main
A project can consist of multiple separately buildable artefacts and 'kinds' of product. For example, most projects include a bunch of code that exists solely for testing purposes (the unit tests). They live in src/test
. The core product lives in main
.
You can also have for example separate sources for an installer perhaps (src/installer
), or a build plugin, or an annotation processor that needs to be built first and then it needs to be on classpath when compiling the main
project, etcetera.
java
There's such a thing as split language projects, where some of it is written in language A and some of it in language B. For its worth, I think this layer is bad design; A file ending in .java
gives away how one is to 'compile it', and this goes for just about every source file that needs a compiler applied to it: The extension says just as much as a folder name of java
ever could. To show you a common contrast: Many projects have src/main/resources
as well as src/main/java
: Resources are 'compiled' simply by copying them over: Imagine your app has a text file containing a list of all US states with all zipcodes used in each state. Or png
files with icon images for a GUI app. Such files are just as much part of your main application as the class files would be and should end up in the same place (inside the jar
file), but to 'compile' them, you just.. copy em, you don't run javac
to do this. That's what this level is about: What tool should be used to turn source files into distributable aspects?
co/lab/zeus/apimanager
This matches the java package structure. This is effectively a requirement applied by javac
itself. The reason to use such a deeply nested package structure is simply because packages serve as namespaces: If there is a conflicting fully qualified name, all hell breaks loose: Java simply cannot handle this. Hence, java programmers ensure that such conflicts never happen by using a 'reverse domain name' structure: You'd stick your project in that package if you own the zeus.lab.co
domain, thus ensuring nobody except other folks in your team who share control of that server could possibly be in conflict (and for those: They're in your team, talk to them to avoid conflict). For example, there are 3 different open source java projects all called spark. Had they all gone with package spark;
(and thus, src/main/java/spark/Main.java
as an example file), then for every java project you'd pick one of the 3: The other 2 you can never use in this project. Harsh, and pointless, which is why (almost) all java libraries use a reversed domain name as root package name, and then maven follows this package name in its directory structure because javac
makes life extremely difficult if you don't do that.
That gets us to project_name/src/main/java
.
org/bah
You made that up for hyperbole. Nobody hosts a proj on zeus.lab.co.bah.org
. But if they do: Talk to the management that decided to assign that whopper of a domain name to a team. It's on them, not on the author of this project.
QUESTION
I would like to test a simple polling example from https://smallrye.io/smallrye-mutiny/guides/polling and poll the data of a service into a Kafka stream.
This is a simplified example of a class I want to test:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Nov-06 at 09:23If I see it correctly, you assert that the stream is completed:
QUESTION
Up until now I have done very basic things with smallrye Mutiny in Quarkus. Basically, I have one or two very small web services which only interact with a web application. These services return a Uni
.
Now I'm writing a logging service I want my others to pass information to. In this logging service, I need to return a value to calling services. The logging service will return this value as a Uni
. What I'm struggling with is how to extract the return value in the calling service as an int
.
Here is the function in the logging service
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Sep-27 at 12:57You need to invoke a terminal operation, or use the value and continue the chain.
If you want to invoke a terminal operator you can invoke the await
operation to make your code blocking and wait for the response.
If you want to merge this reactive invocation with another that is present in your client code, you can join or combine your actual Mutiny stream with the on coming from the response by using the combine
method.
If you just want to use the value and do not retrieve it, you can suscribe and get the result.
If you have a multi you can call directly the method toList
Assuming that you want to have some timeouts involved and you want to get the actual Integer, you can go with the await
method and a timeout.
QUESTION
I am successfully calling a service using the VS RestClient addin (changes made to protect secrets)
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Aug-09 at 18:32You may need to enforce the TLS version something like this
QUESTION
I have a class with different methods but on these methods i need to do a check on the access token before doing some calls
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jul-17 at 01:42There is a general principle for OO languages to be "lazy" and defer decisions to as late as possible. We'll use that principle to refactor your code to make the token automatically refresh itself on expiration, and/or fetch itself if it has not already done so.
There is also a group of principles known collectively as SOLID. We'll use those principles also.
The final principle I'll reference is "smaller is better", with respect to methods and modules. Combine that with the "S" (Single Responsibility) from SOLID, and you'll see the refactor contains a lot more, but much smaller methods.
Principles aside, it's not clear from the problem statement that the token is short-lived (lasts only for a "session") or long-lived (eg: lasts longer than a single session).
If the token is long-lived, then storing it into a file is okay, if the only processes using it are on the same system.
If multiple web servers will be using this code, then unless each one is to have its own token, the token should be shared across all of the systems using a data store of some kind, like Redis, MySQL, or Postgres.
Since your code is using a file, we'll assume that multiple processes on the same system might be sharing the token.
Given these principles and assumptions, here is a refactoring of your code, using a file to store the token, using "lazy" deferred, modular logic.
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
Vulnerabilities
No vulnerabilities reported
Install RESTClient
Support
Reuse Trending Solutions
Find, review, and download reusable Libraries, Code Snippets, Cloud APIs from over 650 million Knowledge Items
Find more librariesStay Updated
Subscribe to our newsletter for trending solutions and developer bootcamps
Share this Page