A sandbox, in software development terms, is an area where things can be tested against code or information provided by the owning entity; in this case, FamilySearch.
@ShotgunNinja i thought it meant like we are a bunch of grown ups but we can act like kids for the moment by hving fun on this website. i'm sorry. but i seriouly thought that. ok. moving on
If you have a web application that pulls data from their website using their API, then you have to access their sandbox in order to test.
@user1690130 Well, normally I'm a more fun-loving guy, but in this case, I just want to help you and get back to my own complete redesign of 6 websites that I'm putting off to help you. Respect thy elders.
"But I can say that we don’t have an API available for searching and retrieving data on our historical records. The APIs we’ve released only deal with data in our tree"
@user1690130 In terms of what data they have, they may have separate pools of information in multiple databases, due to anything from federal privacy laws to simple delays in data entry or difficulties in porting one dataset to another.
@ShotgunNinja He wrote No. and then that blurb: But I can say that we don’t have an API available for searching and retrieving data on our historical records. The APIs we’ve released only deal with data in our tree.
@ShotgunNinja that is in reference to my application
@ShotgunNinja the application asked why you want to apply
@user1690130 Their historical records are probably still in paper form, to be fair. There is a huge amount of information they are only borrowing from public records.
Right; well, they may simply not have the resources to allow other people to search through their whole databases.
Keep in mind, there are a number of reasons why they may not allow it. I'm not privy to the exact reason, but you could probably ask them why the API does not provide access to the full historical records.
The federal government may have limitations on providing historical records for citizens, especially in light of privacy and information protection laws.
The providers of the site may not be comfortable with providing their services to developers like this, for legal (see: Avoiding being sued) or technical (see: No one's written the code just yet) reasons.
It's a combination of "We're working on it" and "We don't know how to do this legally, just yet".
@ Randy Wilson: "Working on it. There's an internal one FamilySearch uses for it's own client, of course. We're working towards defining an API that works for external clients, and, ideally, as a standard others could use as well."
@ Randy Wilson: "As Gordon points out, content protected by contracts would have appropriate restrictions on them and so forth. But hopefully we will get to a point where there is a standard way to exchange not just tree data but also structured (computer-understandable) record data."
Dunno what else can be done about that, other than keeping in touch with them and being patient.
Usually, you use a high-level language (Perl, Java, C#, PHP, C++, etc.) and its associated database API for a specific RDBMS (MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, MS-SQL, etc) to connect to a database and issue SQL queries to it, which select ranges of data rows from a database and give them back to you.
@user1690130 Well, I wish I could help further, but I really need to go. I'm on here almost every day, around this time (though usually not quite this late).
what's the difference between identifying and non identifying relationship?.. im designing my database with mysql workbench and i dont understand the difference....
Alright, I don't really care about Struts.. for now anyway :) There seems to be a distinction between Servlets and Web application.. can a Servlet execute without a web app?
Just a friendly piece of advice on StackOverflow chat: Don't be afraid to try shit on your own. We don't like helping people who don't spend some time bashing their heads against stuff. If you can tell us what you've tried, then you're perfectly fine.