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Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=3840 "Garbage at end." UserInfo={NSDebugDescription=Garbage at end.}
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The site you're asking this on - Stack Apps - is community-run. The team that owns the sites might be looking, but I wouldn't want to bank on it - I suggest you ask them directly instead, since they're the ones who can give you authority (or not) to do this. Here's the contact form. — ArtOfCode2 days ago
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Thanks for the suggestion @BrockAdams. I think it can work. — a16262 days ago
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No, the API does not provide directly for this. But there are only 3000 synonyms and they change rather slowly. So your app can store a table of all 3000, check for new synonyms using creation_date, and use this table to augment the API's inname search. — Brock Adams2 days ago
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API keys do not identify the user or the application making the API request, so you can't restrict access to specific users or service accounts. For example, if you're developing a mobile application that needs to use the Google Cloud Translation API, but doesn't otherwise need a backend server, API keys are the simplest. its maybe you like it (babasupport.org/routers/tp-link-customer-service/778) — Suraj Tiwari2 days ago
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Thanks, then I'll try finding that libraries. (But by now my IDE is broken and abandons libraries and deoendencies... - - :() — KYHSGeekCodeMar 15 at 5:56
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You can send queries even without a key, and using any tool that can fetch URL's and parse the JSON response. ... Look up how to do this; jsoup doesn't seem like a productive approach for API use. — Brock AdamsMar 15 at 5:54
The site you're asking this on - Stack Apps - is community-run. The team that owns the sites might be looking, but I wouldn't want to bank on it - I suggest you ask them directly instead, since they're the ones who can give you authority (or not) to do this. Here's the contact form. — ArtOfCode2 days ago
The site you're asking this on - Stack Apps - is community-run. The team that owns the sites might be looking, but I wouldn't want to bank on it - I suggest you ask them directly instead, since they're the ones who can give you authority (or not) to do this. Here's the contact form. — ArtOfCode2 days ago
No, the API does not provide directly for this. But there are only 3000 synonyms and they change rather slowly. So your app can store a table of all 3000, check for new synonyms using creation_date, and use this table to augment the API's inname search. — Brock Adams2 days ago
API keys do not identify the user or the application making the API request, so you can't restrict access to specific users or service accounts. For example, if you're developing a mobile application that needs to use the Google Cloud Translation API, but doesn't otherwise need a backend server, API keys are the simplest. its maybe you like it (babasupport.org/routers/tp-link-customer-service/778) — Suraj Tiwari2 days ago
The site you're asking this on - Stack Apps - is community-run. The team that owns the sites might be looking, but I wouldn't want to bank on it - I suggest you ask them directly instead, since they're the ones who can give you authority (or not) to do this. Here's the contact form. — ArtOfCode2 days ago
The site you're asking this on - Stack Apps - is community-run. The team that owns the sites might be looking, but I wouldn't want to bank on it - I suggest you ask them directly instead, since they're the ones who can give you authority (or not) to do this. Here's the contact form. — ArtOfCode2 days ago
The site you're asking this on - Stack Apps - is community-run. The team that owns the sites might be looking, but I wouldn't want to bank on it - I suggest you ask them directly instead, since they're the ones who can give you authority (or not) to do this. Here's the contact form. — ArtOfCode2 days ago
The site you're asking this on - Stack Apps - is community-run. The team that owns the sites might be looking, but I wouldn't want to bank on it - I suggest you ask them directly instead, since they're the ones who can give you authority (or not) to do this. Here's the contact form. — ArtOfCode2 days ago
The site you're asking this on - Stack Apps - is community-run. The team that owns the sites might be looking, but I wouldn't want to bank on it - I suggest you ask them directly instead, since they're the ones who can give you authority (or not) to do this. Here's the contact form. — ArtOfCode2 days ago