@Aran-Fey I don't believe in such superstitions. The only scientific cure is to bury a lock of rabbit hair under a gallows at midnight. Good thing it's a full moon tonight.
No, when writing a program that interacts with an API locked behind OAuth. Maybe I'm doing it wrong, but usually the procedure is something like this: 1) Open webbrowser asking the user to authorize my app to access their account 2) user clicks "ok" and is redirected to localhost:8000 where my server is running 3) server grabs the authorization code from the HTTP request and shuts down
"server grabs the authorization code from the HTTP request and shuts down". That suggests to me that it's external from whatever app is serving content locked behind OAuth
So I'm curious about why there's a middleman that pops up just to collect the authorisation code and dies
Yes, my app is not the one serving content, it's using it
say I'm writing an app that uploads photos to your google drive. I open your browser, you give me access to your account, google sends a GET to localhost:8000, I grab the code and exchange it for an access token
I think I have a grasp on the flow of what you're doing but I'll need to mull it over a bit before I can ask any sensible questions. Thanks for the clarification @Aran-Fey
:) Sorry, I didn't realise I was depriving you! Thanks again
user10984358
if anyone remembers me asking about scraping Instagram last eve, then I made an ugly scraper, I just route the requests to a 3rd party downloader website from which I receive the href and download it, ugly but it works :)
I too need sleep. I thought the same too, @MisterMiyagi but there's a question about it, and someone in the room I have respect for using it, so it's challenging my assumptions :)