OnePost

免费增值
通过 Adam Darrah | 已更新 2ヶ月前 | Social
人气

8.8 / 10

延迟

928ms

服务等级

100%

Health Check

N/A

返回全部教程 (10)

Create a Post with Image Upload

By default, the API documentation assumes that you’re sending all API requests with a JSON request body. You can see how this works for creating a new Post from the Create a Post API documentation. For most cases, this works great! However, when it comes to attaching an image to the post, this will only work for posts that have already been uploaded to the internet (so that you have the URL). So, what happens if you need to upload the image?

Luckily, the “Create a Post” endpoint also supports creation via form-data parameters, which makes it possible to upload an image using the image parameter. Here is an example of how this works with cURL:

curl --location --request POST 'https://onepost1.p.rapidapi.com/api/v1/posts?secret_key=sk-cbe...' \
> --header 'x-rapidapi-host: onepost1.p.rapidapi.com' \
> --header 'x-rapidapi-key: 9d0...' \
> --form 'post[body]="Red Rocks!"' \
> --form 'post[authorized_page_ids][]="10"' \
> --form 'post[authorized_page_ids][]="11"' \
> --form 'post[image]=@"/Users/adam/Downloads/redrockseaster.jpg"'

{"id":11,"body":"Red Rocks!","created_at":"2021-02-23T08:00:49.885-05:00","updated_at":"2021-02-23T08:00:49.919-05:00","state":"draft","publish_at":null,"authorized_page_ids":[10,11],"image_url":"https://onepost-aws-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/jue4mlp2vf63v5brq3s572qmmdye?response-content-disposition=inline%3B%20filename%3D%22redrockseaster.jpg%22%3B%20filename%2A%3DUTF-8%27%27redrockseaster.jpg\u0026response-content-type=image%2Fjpeg\u0026X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256\u0026X-Amz-Credential=AKIAZN2CXLF3YEIHHHFZ%2F20210223%2Fus-east-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request\u0026X-Amz-Date=20210223T130050Z\u0026X-Amz-Expires=300\u0026X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host\u0026X-Amz-Signature=f87ac5afbcc2ef2bd24306b1af8f505f587cc5fa93ee4943cec91f983f4fdcbf","social_posts":[{"id":12,"post_id":11,"created_at":"2021-02-23T08:00:49.896-05:00","updated_at":"2021-02-23T08:00:49.896-05:00","type":"SocialPosts::Twitter","state":"unsent","authorized_page_id":10},{"id":13,"post_id":11,"created_at":"2021-02-23T08:00:49.904-05:00","updated_at":"2021-02-23T08:00:49.904-05:00","type":"SocialPosts::Facebook","state":"unsent","authorized_page_id":11}]}

If you’re using a tool like Postman, here is what this might look like;