Does the setting that users blocking registration with the Google Calendar API exist?












0















Does the setting that users blocking registration with the Google Calendar API exist?



I am considering using the Google Calendar API.
If there is a setting to block registration by API on the user side, the user will not notice schedules.
I want to avoid such a situation.
Please tell me whether there is any setting.










share|improve this question























  • Your question is unclear. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask then edit your question and try to be more clear what you are trying to do and what you have done to try and solve your problem.

    – DaImTo
    Nov 16 '18 at 8:27











  • @DaImTo Sorry, I questioned it although I do not research API's specification. If I will have a chance to ask again, I will research what I want to know.

    – Takaaki Ito
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:23
















0















Does the setting that users blocking registration with the Google Calendar API exist?



I am considering using the Google Calendar API.
If there is a setting to block registration by API on the user side, the user will not notice schedules.
I want to avoid such a situation.
Please tell me whether there is any setting.










share|improve this question























  • Your question is unclear. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask then edit your question and try to be more clear what you are trying to do and what you have done to try and solve your problem.

    – DaImTo
    Nov 16 '18 at 8:27











  • @DaImTo Sorry, I questioned it although I do not research API's specification. If I will have a chance to ask again, I will research what I want to know.

    – Takaaki Ito
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:23














0












0








0








Does the setting that users blocking registration with the Google Calendar API exist?



I am considering using the Google Calendar API.
If there is a setting to block registration by API on the user side, the user will not notice schedules.
I want to avoid such a situation.
Please tell me whether there is any setting.










share|improve this question














Does the setting that users blocking registration with the Google Calendar API exist?



I am considering using the Google Calendar API.
If there is a setting to block registration by API on the user side, the user will not notice schedules.
I want to avoid such a situation.
Please tell me whether there is any setting.







google-calendar-api






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 16 '18 at 1:57









Takaaki ItoTakaaki Ito

31




31













  • Your question is unclear. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask then edit your question and try to be more clear what you are trying to do and what you have done to try and solve your problem.

    – DaImTo
    Nov 16 '18 at 8:27











  • @DaImTo Sorry, I questioned it although I do not research API's specification. If I will have a chance to ask again, I will research what I want to know.

    – Takaaki Ito
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:23



















  • Your question is unclear. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask then edit your question and try to be more clear what you are trying to do and what you have done to try and solve your problem.

    – DaImTo
    Nov 16 '18 at 8:27











  • @DaImTo Sorry, I questioned it although I do not research API's specification. If I will have a chance to ask again, I will research what I want to know.

    – Takaaki Ito
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:23

















Your question is unclear. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask then edit your question and try to be more clear what you are trying to do and what you have done to try and solve your problem.

– DaImTo
Nov 16 '18 at 8:27





Your question is unclear. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask then edit your question and try to be more clear what you are trying to do and what you have done to try and solve your problem.

– DaImTo
Nov 16 '18 at 8:27













@DaImTo Sorry, I questioned it although I do not research API's specification. If I will have a chance to ask again, I will research what I want to know.

– Takaaki Ito
Nov 19 '18 at 2:23





@DaImTo Sorry, I questioned it although I do not research API's specification. If I will have a chance to ask again, I will research what I want to know.

– Takaaki Ito
Nov 19 '18 at 2:23












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














If you'll have to check this documentation, it was stated in steps 3 to 5.





  1. When you create your application, you register it using the Google API Console. Google
    then provides information you'll need later, such as a client ID and a
    client secret.

  2. Activate the Google Calendar API in the Google API Console. (If the API isn't listed in the API Console, then skip this step.)

  3. When your application needs access to user data, it asks Google for a particular scope of access.

  4. Google displays a consent screen to the user, asking them to authorize your application to request some of their data.

  5. If the user approves, then Google gives your application a short-lived access token.gives your application a short-lived access token.

  6. Your application requests user data, attaching the access token to the request.

  7. If Google determines that your request and the token are valid, it returns the requested data.







share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you. I understood that users set authorization when it is used for the first time, not in advance setting. I am sorry that my question was bad. I will consider using API.

    – Takaaki Ito
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:13











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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









0














If you'll have to check this documentation, it was stated in steps 3 to 5.





  1. When you create your application, you register it using the Google API Console. Google
    then provides information you'll need later, such as a client ID and a
    client secret.

  2. Activate the Google Calendar API in the Google API Console. (If the API isn't listed in the API Console, then skip this step.)

  3. When your application needs access to user data, it asks Google for a particular scope of access.

  4. Google displays a consent screen to the user, asking them to authorize your application to request some of their data.

  5. If the user approves, then Google gives your application a short-lived access token.gives your application a short-lived access token.

  6. Your application requests user data, attaching the access token to the request.

  7. If Google determines that your request and the token are valid, it returns the requested data.







share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you. I understood that users set authorization when it is used for the first time, not in advance setting. I am sorry that my question was bad. I will consider using API.

    – Takaaki Ito
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:13
















0














If you'll have to check this documentation, it was stated in steps 3 to 5.





  1. When you create your application, you register it using the Google API Console. Google
    then provides information you'll need later, such as a client ID and a
    client secret.

  2. Activate the Google Calendar API in the Google API Console. (If the API isn't listed in the API Console, then skip this step.)

  3. When your application needs access to user data, it asks Google for a particular scope of access.

  4. Google displays a consent screen to the user, asking them to authorize your application to request some of their data.

  5. If the user approves, then Google gives your application a short-lived access token.gives your application a short-lived access token.

  6. Your application requests user data, attaching the access token to the request.

  7. If Google determines that your request and the token are valid, it returns the requested data.







share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you. I understood that users set authorization when it is used for the first time, not in advance setting. I am sorry that my question was bad. I will consider using API.

    – Takaaki Ito
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:13














0












0








0







If you'll have to check this documentation, it was stated in steps 3 to 5.





  1. When you create your application, you register it using the Google API Console. Google
    then provides information you'll need later, such as a client ID and a
    client secret.

  2. Activate the Google Calendar API in the Google API Console. (If the API isn't listed in the API Console, then skip this step.)

  3. When your application needs access to user data, it asks Google for a particular scope of access.

  4. Google displays a consent screen to the user, asking them to authorize your application to request some of their data.

  5. If the user approves, then Google gives your application a short-lived access token.gives your application a short-lived access token.

  6. Your application requests user data, attaching the access token to the request.

  7. If Google determines that your request and the token are valid, it returns the requested data.







share|improve this answer













If you'll have to check this documentation, it was stated in steps 3 to 5.





  1. When you create your application, you register it using the Google API Console. Google
    then provides information you'll need later, such as a client ID and a
    client secret.

  2. Activate the Google Calendar API in the Google API Console. (If the API isn't listed in the API Console, then skip this step.)

  3. When your application needs access to user data, it asks Google for a particular scope of access.

  4. Google displays a consent screen to the user, asking them to authorize your application to request some of their data.

  5. If the user approves, then Google gives your application a short-lived access token.gives your application a short-lived access token.

  6. Your application requests user data, attaching the access token to the request.

  7. If Google determines that your request and the token are valid, it returns the requested data.








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answered Nov 16 '18 at 8:56









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2,2921515













  • Thank you. I understood that users set authorization when it is used for the first time, not in advance setting. I am sorry that my question was bad. I will consider using API.

    – Takaaki Ito
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:13



















  • Thank you. I understood that users set authorization when it is used for the first time, not in advance setting. I am sorry that my question was bad. I will consider using API.

    – Takaaki Ito
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:13

















Thank you. I understood that users set authorization when it is used for the first time, not in advance setting. I am sorry that my question was bad. I will consider using API.

– Takaaki Ito
Nov 19 '18 at 2:13





Thank you. I understood that users set authorization when it is used for the first time, not in advance setting. I am sorry that my question was bad. I will consider using API.

– Takaaki Ito
Nov 19 '18 at 2:13




















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