1 / 21

OpenSocial

OpenSocial. CS 195.35: Survey of Contemporary Technologies. Outline. OpenSocial concepts overview Containers, people, relationships, activities, viewers, owners, friends Hello world application Demo: installing an application in a container Requesting social data

kyrene
Télécharger la présentation

OpenSocial

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. OpenSocial CS 195.35: Survey of Contemporary Technologies

  2. Outline • OpenSocial concepts overview • Containers, people, relationships, activities, viewers, owners, friends • Hello world application • Demo: installing an application in a container • Requesting social data • Using the OpenSocial namespace • Demo: owner and viewer • Demo: listing friends

  3. OpenSocial concepts • What is OpenSocial? • OpenSocial is an API that enables the development of applications within a social networking environment • First version released in 2007(version 0.9 released early this year) • Based on HTML and JavaScript • Code can be used across multiple social websites • Supported in several containers: Orkut, MySpace, hi5, friendster, and many others

  4. OpenSocial concepts • People: users in a social networking environment • Relationships: friends and connections between people • Activities: actions that users carry out (that they want friends to know about) • OpenSocial apps: applications/gadgets written using the OpenSocial API through which users can interact

  5. Key namespaces • opensocial: defines classes that represent key objects and data in a social networking environment (persons, activities, messages) and functions that facilitate object creation and social data requests • gadget: defines classes and functions that facilitate remote data requests and container-specific user interface features

  6. Roles • Viewer: user who logged in, who may be viewing another person’s profile • Owner: user who owns the profile • Friends: users who have been added as friends (of the viewer or owner) within the container

  7. Creating your first social app • What you need • A container (social networking website) that supports OpenSocial • Create an account(or a sandbox/developer account, as necessary) • A webhost where you can store your application code in • Should be publicly accessible, or accessible from the container

  8. Creating your first social app • You will need to create an XML file that specifies your gadget (social app) • Hello-worldgadget: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <Module> <ModulePrefs title="my first app"> <Require feature="opensocial-0.8" /> </ModulePrefs> <Content type="html"> <![CDATA[ Hello world, this is my first app. ]]> </Content> </Module> HTML/JavaScript codegoes here

  9. Demo: friendster • Relatively straightforward container to use: apps can be installed and immediately executed without special developer or sandbox accounts • Steps: • Upload gadget (XML file) to a website • Log in to friendster, then go to friendster.com/developer to install application • Execute the application (your friends may execute or install the applications as well)

  10. Simple lab exercise • Install the helloworld app • Gadget already uploaded inhttp://sites.google.com/site/jpvopenapps/helloworld.xml • Installation steps • Go to friendster.com/developer(after logging in) • Select the “Get API Key” tab • Fill in gadget details and other requirements,then click on “Save” • Click on “Test App”, then click on “Add App” • Ask a friend to visit your profile

  11. Requesting social data • Steps: • Create an opensocial.DataRequest object • Add request items to the object • Send the object to the container, specifying a callback function • Example: requesting owner data function request() { var req = opensocial.newDataRequest(); req.add( req.newFetchPersonRequest( opensocial.IdSpec.PersonId.OWNER), 'get_owner' ); req.send(response); };

  12. opensocial.DataRequest.add() • add(request, opt_key) • Adds a request item to fetch or update data from the server • Parameters • request: specifies which data to fetch/update • opt_key: string that the generated response maps to (for future retrieval from the callback function)

  13. Request items • There are functions under opensocial.DataRequest that create request items • newFetchPersonRequest: • Creates an item to request person data for the given person • Returns a Person object • newFetchPeopleRequest: • Creates an item to request friends from the server • Returns a Collection<Person> object

  14. opensocial.DataRequest.send() • send(callback_function) • Sends the data request to the server in order to get a data response • Parameter • callback_function: The function to call with the data response generated by the server

  15. Call back function example • You need a Javascript function through which the response will be processed function response(dataResponse) { var owner = dataResponse.get('get_owner').getData(); var html = ' <h3> Owner name:' + owner.getDisplayName() + ' </h3> '; document.getElementById('msg').innerHTML = html; }; • The last line identifies the html code generated • To be inserted inside a div tag: <div id='msg'> </div> Key specified whenthe request was made

  16. Putting it all together <script type="text/javascript"> function request() { var req = opensocial.newDataRequest(); req.add( req.newFetchPersonRequest( opensocial.IdSpec.PersonId.OWNER), 'get_owner' ); req.send(response); }; function response(dataResponse) { var owner = dataResponse.get('get_owner').getData(); var html = ' <h3> Owner name:' + owner.getDisplayName() + ' </h3>'; document.getElementById('msg').innerHTML = html; }; gadgets.util.registerOnLoadHandler(request); </script> <div id='msg'> </div>

  17. Demo • Install the ownerviewer social app in friendster • Gadget already uploaded inhttp://sites.google.com/site/jpvopenapps/ownerviewer.xml • Execute it • Ask one of your friends in that container to visit your profile (to execute that application) and observe the output • Under what circumstances will owner be different from viewer when your application executes?

  18. Request items v0.8 • People: • newFetchPersonRequest • newFetchPeopleRequest • Activities: • newFetchActivitiesRequest • Application Data: (persistence) • newFetchPersonAppDataRequest • newUpdatePersonAppDataRequest • newRemovePersonAppDataRequest

  19. Request items v0.9 • People: • newFetchPersonRequest • newFetchPeopleRequest • Activities: • newFetchActivitiesRequest • Application Data • newFetchPersonAppDataRequest • newUpdatePersonAppDataRequest • newRemovePersonAppDataRequest • Media Items • newCreateMediaItemRequest • newFetchMediaItemsRequest • newUpdateMediaItemRequest • Albums • newCreateAlbumRequest • newFetchAlbumsRequest • newUpdateAlbumRequest • newDeleteAlbumRequest

  20. Listing friends • Take home exercise • Sign up to a free webhost service, and upload listfriends.xml (available via moodle) • Install the gadget via friendster • Try other containers (MySpace, Orkut, etc)

  21. What’s next? • Exploring and understanding other containers and development environments • Other features of the API • Persistence: storing app data • Activities: generating app-related updates to be viewed by friends • Third party requests: communicating with other servers

More Related