i am trying to make a website where there is a server side which is for admin who will upload songs to firebase storage and a client side who can search the songs using emoji, like for happy songs, smiley emoji will be used, how should i implement this? im stuck. How should i relate the songs im uploading to an emoji, so that when the user searches using emoji the respective songs related to that emoji shows up? That would be a great help!
I think it's quite possible. The server side would not only need to keep the songs but also have some information on moods associated with every song. This way, client app can pass an emoji and server side will respons with all songs that consist of this particular emotion.
For example - song "Happy" can be found by using 🙂 or 💃🏼
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I am trying to collect some data for a pet study. I would be collecting some metadata on the video suggestions based on a search. I was wondering if it is possible to do the following using the Youtube API(python or R) :
Input a search keyword and get the results
Choose one of the videos randomly and see the list of video suggestions.
Choose one of the suggested videos randomly.
Repeat this "n" times.
Is there a way to emulate this entire process? I think web-scraping can be an option but I am not really sure, how I would go about it. So if there are nay pointers that would be amazing and get me started.
Also, Is it possible to have no history, as in an option to erase all the cookies for the previous attempt(Steps 1 through 4) and start afresh? (More like an option to have this in Incognito Mode)
TIA for your suggestions.
AFAIK Google tracks the computer you are using in such a way that you can't escape their filter bubble. Even through Tor, YouTube might prefer some content related to the exit node IP location (and so language) or any previous YouTube search done by you (through this exit node) or another user of the end node or any computer using the same IP as the exit node...
The YouTube Data API v3 has a possibility to retrieve suggestions thanks to part=suggestions with Videos: list by authenticating with OAuth (so results might not be neutral). You can get the initial videos thanks to Search: list thanks to q filter. Web-scraping is also doable to be less tracked, my open-source YouTube operational API is able to web-scrape search results for instance.
Note that a French person claims having achieved to have done such a neutral French YouTube suggestions graph.
I want to code a script to retrieve data from league of legends game while spectating. I want to open the league of legends client, join a game as a spectator, then run the script, and the script collects all the game data, champ damage, gold etc and save that to a json file.then display that data nicely on a webpage and the gold and players damage as graphs.
Does riot games apis provide such a thing or if there's anything on GitHub I can use for this kinda job?
I didn't tried this, but I think LCU API can help you.
You can may open League of Legend client and join as a spectator with this.
But unfortunately, there is no official LCU API documentation, so you can see this documentation.
I hope I can help you.
There's an API for downloading the match timeline which is probably what you're after. There's no need to spectate a game to get it, you just need to register for an API key, and then you can download it using the match ID.
The way I was able to get around it is by using ocr to read the screen, I can grab anything that is displayed, but for damage currently there is no way. If you want a gold graph its best to make it yourself in python.
Is there a good API or other possible solution to the following?
I am trying to track club membership and discrete "check in" events/activities using QR codes. First I generate a QR code with an embedded URL to a web page with member information (random/obscured URLs with shortened links) and print that QR code on a label and attach it to a membership card. I then scan the QR code with Red Laser or some other reader to access the shortened URL and the "hidden" member information.
My issue is that I have 100s (eventually thousands) of QR codes to track so I'm looking for a simple tool or API to manage all of these obscure links and see how often they have been accessed by Red Laser (or a browser if someone manages to discover any of these obscured links).
I tried Google Analytics but I wasn't able to get the level of "fine tune" control I'd like. What I really want is the ability to map this information (e.g., member contact info, obscure links, number of times clicked, etc.) to a format like chartbeat.com.
Grateful for any suggestions.
I have a classifieds webapp for our student union and want to create printable versions of the different ads, that students can print and distribute on the campus. To get further information, people should be able to read a QR code from the printout with their smartphone.
The question is: Can I encode both the phone number to call for the ad and the URL of the website in the QR code at the same time, so that people can scan the code and then select if they want to call the person or open the website of the ad?
I was thinking about using a vcard, but that would add that otherwise useless information to the peoples contacts list. Is there something like CSV data that Android correctly reads to achieve this? (And preferably iPhones, too)
Of course you can.
VCard is fine, it would enable other QR readers to parse it correctly - so your QR would be up to standard.
You wouldn't have to implement full RFC though, just the basic TEL, and URL fields.
I've found related questions (like this one), but nothing that directly answers my question: I need a direct way to turn artist name and track name into a spotify link. Just like spotify does for the local file list (some are links, some are not, I assume because spotify doesn't have those tracks.
How can I turn something like artist:'Francolin' and track name:'Hospital Song' into a Spotify uri without searching for it (which will return multiple results, and I don't know which one to use). How does the Spotify local files list do it?
The local files list in the Spotify client makes URLs like this:
spotify:local:Coldplay:Mylo+Xyloto:Paradise:277 (spotify:local:ARTIST:ALBUM:TRACK:LENGTH_IN_SECONDS). You can verify this by right-clicking a local file in your list that hasn't been linked to a Spotify track and choosing "Copy Spotify URI".
When playing the track, the client resolves it without using the backend at all - it searches its own local list of known files and plays whichever matches it closest.
When linking to a "real" Spotify track, the client asks the backend to do the dirty work. There isn't a web API for this (it's in libSpotify though), but basically the backend does a few heuristics to the data* then chooses the track that matches the given data (including length) the closest.
*Basically, the track metadata is stripped to a simpler form when searching, and the album has less weighting since an artist may release the same track on multiple albums.
I ran into the same problem as you but I don't think there's a direct way to convert it. Instead I just run for a search with "artist:'$artist' title:'$title'", which should be very accurate, and just use the first result in the array of results.