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Google Data APIs provide programmatic interface to some of Google's online services. The Google data Protocol is based upon the Atom Publishing Protocol and allows client applications to retrieve data matching queries, post data, update data and delete data using standard HTTP and the Atom syndication formation. The Zend_Gdata component is a PHP 5 interface for accessing Google Data from PHP. The Zend_Gdata component also supports accessing other services implementing the Atom Publishing Protocol.
See http://code.google.com/apis/gdata/ for more information about Google Data API.
The services that are accessible by Zend_Gdata include the following:
Google Spreadsheets provides an online collaborative spreadsheets tool which can be used as a simple data store for your applications.
Google Blogger is a popular internet provider of "push-button publishing" and syndication.
Google CodeSearch allows you to search public source code from many projects.
Google Notebook allows you to view public Notebook content.
Unsupported services | |
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Google Data API also supports Google Base, Picasa Web Albums, Google Apps Provisioning, but Zend_Gdata does not provide helper classes for these products in this release. The Google Calendar code is in the process of being finalized for release, and is currently included in the incubator directory of the Zend Framework. As incubator code, stability is not guaranteed. If you wish to use the incubator code, please include the incubator/library directory in your classpath before, and in addition to, the core library directory. Zend_Gdata does not provide an interface to any other Google service, such as Search, Gmail, Translation, or Maps. Only services that support the Google Data API are supported. |
Zend_Gata is composed of several types of classes:
Service classes - inheriting from Zend_Gdata_App. These also include other classes such as Zend_Gdata, Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets, etc. These classes enable interacting with APP or GData services and provide the ability to retrieve feeds, retrieve entries, post entries, update entries and delete entries.
Query classes - inheriting from Zend_Gdata_Query.
These also include other classes for specific services,
such as Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets_ListQuery and
Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets_CellQuery. Query classes
provide methods used to construct a query for data
to be redtrieved from GData services. Methods include
getters and setters like setUpdatedMin()
,
setStartIndex()
, and
getPublishedMin()
. The query classes also
have a method to generate a URL representing the
constructed query -- getQueryUrl
.
Alternatively, the query string component of the URL
can be retrieved used the getQueryString()
method.
Feed classes - inheriting from Zend_Gdata_App_Feed. These also include other classes such as Zend_Gdata_Feed, Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets_SpreadsheetFeed, and Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets_ListFeed. These classes represent feeds of entries retrieved from services. They are primarily used to retrieve data retrurned from services.
Entry classes - inheriting from Zend_Gdata_App_Entry.
These also include other classes such as
Zend_Gdata_Entry, and Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets_ListEntry.
These classes represent entries retrieved from
services or used for constructing data to send to
services. In addition to being able to set the
properties of an entry (such as the spreadsheet cell
value), you can use an entry object to send update
or delete requests to a service. For example,
you can call $entry->save()
to save
changes made to an entry back to service from which
the entry initiated, or $entry->delete()
to delete an entry from the server.
Other Data model classes - inheriting from
Zend_Gdata_App_Extension. These include classes such
as Zend_Gdata_App_Extension_Title (representing the
atom:title XML element), Zend_Gdata_Extension_When
(representing the gd:when XML element used by the
GData Event "Kind"), and
Zend_Gdata_Extension_Cell (representing the gs:cell
XML element used by Google Spreadsheets). These
classes are used purely to store the data retrieved
back from services and for constructing data to be
sent to services. These include getters and seetters
such as
setText()
to set the child text
node of an element, getText()
to retrieve
the text node of an eleemnt, getStartTime()
to retrieve the start time attribute of a When element,
and other similiar methods.
The data model classes also include methods such as
getDOM()
to retrieve a DOM representation
of the element and all children and
transferFromDOM()
to construct a data
model representation of a DOM tree.
Google data services are based upon the Atom Publishing Protocol (APP) and the Atom syndication format. To interact with APP or Google services using the Zend_Gdata component, you need to use the service classes such as Zend_Gdata_App, Zend_Gdata, Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets, etc. These service classes provide methods to retrieve data from services as feeds, insert new entries into feeds, update entries, and delete entries.
Note; A full example of working with Zend_Gdata is available in the
demos/Zend/Gdata
directory. This example is runnable
from the command-line, but the methods contained within are easily
portable to a web application.
The Zend Framework naming standards require that all classes be
named based upon the directory structure in which they are located.
For instance, extensions related to Spreadsheets are stored in:
Zend/Gdata/Spreadsheets/Extension/...
and, as a result
of this, are named
Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets_Extension_...
.
This causes a lot of typing if you're trying to construct a new
instance of a spreadsheet cell element!
We've implemented a magic factory method in all service classes
(such as Zend_Gdata_App, Zend_Gdata, Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets) that
should make constructing new instances of data model, query and
other classes much easier. This magic factory is implemented by
using the magic __call
method to intercept all attempts
to call $service->newXXX(arg1, arg2, ...)
. Based off
the value of XXX, a search is performed in all registered 'packages'
for the desired class. Here's some examples:
<?php require_once 'Zend/Loader.php'; Zend_Loader::loadClass('Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets'); $ss = new Zend_Gdata_Spreadsheets(); // creates a Zend_Gdata_App_Spreadsheets_CellEntry $entry = $ss->newCellEntry(); // creates a Zend_Gdata_App_Spreadsheets_Extension_Cell $cell = $ss->newCell(); $cell->setText('My cell value'); $cell->setRow('1'); $cell->setColumn('3'); $entry->cell = $cell; // ... $entry can then be used to send an update to a Google Spreadsheet, ?>
Each service class in the inheritance tree is responsible for registering the appropriate 'packages' (directories) which are to be searched when calling the magic factory method.
Most Google Data services require client applications to authenticate against the Google server before accessing private data, or saving or deleting data. There are two implementations of authentication for Google Data: AuthSub and ClientLogin. Zend_Gdata offers class interfaces for both of these methods.
Most other types of queries against Google Data services do not require authentication.
Zend_Gdata makes use of Zend_Http_Client to send requests to google.com and fetch results. The response to most Google Data requests is returned as a subclass of the Zend_Gdata_App_Feed or Zend_Gdata_App_Entry classes.
Zend_Gdata assumes your PHP application is running on a host that has a direct connection to the internet. The Zend_Gdata client operates by contacting Google Data servers.
Create a new object of class Zend_Gdata_App, Zend_Gdata, or one of the subclasses available that offer helper methods for service-specific behavior.
The single optional parameter to the Zend_Gdata_App constructor is an instance of Zend_Http_Client. If you don't pass this parameter, Zend_Gdata creates a default Zend_Http_Client object, which will not have associated credentials to access private feeds. Specifying the Zend_Http_Client object also allows you to pass configuration options to that client object.
<?php require_once 'Zend/Loader.php'; Zend_Loader::loadClass('Zend_Http_Client'); Zend_Loader::loadClass('Zend_Gdata'); $client = new Zend_Http_Client(); $client->setConfig( ...options... ); $gdata = new Zend_Gdata($client); ?>
Also see the sections on authentication for methods to create an authenticated Zend_Http_Client object.
You can specify parameters to customize queries with Zend_Gdata. Query parameters are specified using subclasses of Zend_Gdata_Query. The Zend_Gdata_Query class includes methods to set all query parameters used throughout GData services. Individual services, such as Spreadsheets, also provide query classes to defined parameters which are custom to the particular service and feeds. Spreadsheets includes a CellQuery class to query the Cell Feed and a ListQuery class to query the List Feed, as different query parameters are applicable to each of those feed types. The GData-wide parameters are described below.
The q
parameter specifies a full-text
query. The value of the parameter is a string.
Set this parameter with the setQuery()
function.
The alt
parameter specifies the feed type.
The value of the parameter can be
atom
,
rss
,
json
,
or json-in-script
.
If you don't specify this parameter, the default feed type
is atom
. NOTE: Only the output of the
atom feed format can be processed using
Zend_Gdata
.
The Zend_Http_Client
could be used to retrieve
feeds in other formats, using query URLs generated by the
Zend_Gdata_Query
class and its subclasses.
Set this parameter with the setAlt()
function.
The maxResults
parameter limits the number
of entries in the feed. The value of the parameter is
an integer. The number of entries returned in the feed
will not exceed this value.
Set this parameter with the setMaxResults()
function.
The startIndex
parameter specifies the
ordinal number of the first entry returned in the feed.
Entries before this number are skipped.
Set this parameter with the setStartIndex()
function.
The updatedMin
and updatedMax
parameters specify bounds on the entry date.
If you specify a value for updatedMin
,
no entries that were updated earlier than the date
you specify are included in the feed. Likewise
no entries updated after the date specified by
updatedMax
are included.
You can use numeric timestamps, or a variety of date/time string representations as the value for these parameters.
Set this parameter with the setUpdatedMin()
and setUpdatedMax()
functions.
There is a get
function for each
set
function.
<?php $query = new Zend_Gdata_Query(); $query->setMaxResults(10); echo $query->getMaxResults(); // returns 10 ?>
The Zend_Gdata class also implements "magic" getter and setter methods, so you can use the name of the parameter as a virtual member of the class.
<?php $query = new Zend_Gdata_Query(); $query->maxResults = 10; echo $query->maxResults; // returns 10 ?>
You can clear all parameters with the resetParameters()
function. This is useful to do if you reuse a Zend_Gdata
object for multiple queries.
<?php $query = new Zend_Gdata_Query(); $query->maxResults = 10; // ...get feed... $query->resetParameters(); // clears all parameters // ...get a different feed... ?>
Use the getFeed()
function to retrieve
a feed from a specified URI.
This function returns an instance of class specified
as the second argument to getFeed, which defaults to
Zend_Gdata_Feed.
<?php $gdata = new Zend_Gdata(); $query = new Zend_Gdata_Query( 'http://www.blogger.com/feeds/blogID/posts/default'); $query->setMaxResults(10); $feed = $gdata->getFeed($query); ?>
See later sections for special functions in each helper class for Google Data services. These functions help you to get feeds from the URI that is appropriate for the respective service.
After retrieving a feed, you can read the data from the feed or the entries contained in the feed using either the accessors defined in each of the data model classes or the magic accessors. Here's an example:
<?php $client = Zend_Gdata_ClientLogin::getHttpClient($user, $pass, $service); $gdata = new Zend_Gdata($client); $query = new Zend_Gdata_Query( 'http://www.blogger.com/feeds/blogID/posts/default'); $query->setMaxResults(10); $feed = $gdata->getFeed($query); foreach ($feed as $entry) { // using the magic accessor echo 'Title: ' . $entry->title->text; // using the defined accessors echo 'Content: ' . $entry->getContent()->getText(); } ?>
After retrieving an entry, you can update that entry and save changes back to the server. Here's an example:
<?php $client = Zend_Gdata_ClientLogin::getHttpClient($user, $pass, $service); $gdata = new Zend_Gdata($client); $query = new Zend_Gdata_Query( 'http://www.blogger.com/feeds/blogID/posts/default'); $query->setMaxResults(10); $feed = $gdata->getFeed($query); foreach ($feed as $entry) { // update the title to append 'NEW' echo 'Old Title: ' . $entry->title->text; $entry->title->text = $entry->title->text . ' NEW'; // update the entry on the server $newEntry = $entry->save(); echo 'New Title: ' . $newEntry->title->text; } ?>
The Zend_Gdata object has a function post()
with which you can upload data to save new entries
to Google Data services.
You can use the data model classes for each service to
construct the appropriate entry to post to Google's
services. The post()
function will
accept a child of Zend_Gdata_App_Entry as data to
post to the service. The method returns a child
of Zend_Gdata_App_Entry which represents the state
of the entry as it was returned from the server.
Alternatively, you could construct the XML structure
for an entry as a string and pass the string to the
post()
function.
<?php $gdata = new Zend_Gdata($authenticatedHttpClient); $entry = $gdata->newEntry(); $entry->title = $gdata->newTitle('Playing football at the park'); $content = $gdata->newContent('We will visit the park and play a few football matches'); $content->setType('text'); $entry->content = $content; $entryResult = $gdata->insertEntry($entry, 'http://www.blogger.com/feeds/blogID/posts/default'); echo 'The <id> of the resulting entry is: ' . $entryResult->id->text; ?>
To post entries, you must be using an authenticated Zend_Http_Client that you created using the Zend_Gdata_AuthSub or Zend_Gdata_ClientLogin classes.
Option 1: The Zend_Gdata object has a function delete()
with which you can delete entries from Google Data
services. Pass the edit URL value from
a feed entry to the delete()
method.
Option 2: Alternatively, you can call $entry->delete()
on an entry retrieved from a Google service.
<?php $gdata = new Zend_Gdata($authenticatedHttpClient); // a Google Data feed $feedUri = ...; $feed = $gdata->getFeed($feedUri); foreach ($feed as $feedEntry) { // Option 1 - delete the entry directly $feedEntry->delete(); // Option 2 - delete the entry by passing the edit URL to $gdata->delete() // $gdata->delete($feedEntry->getEditLink()->href); } ?>
To delete entries, you must be using an authenticated Zend_Http_Client that you created using the Zend_Gdata_AuthSub or Zend_Gdata_ClientLogin classes.