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I want to make a chrome extension that can call chatgpt api.
But I haven't seen openai open the api.
I see that the corresponding chrome extension implements such technology, such as this blog
https://www.extspy.com/blog/List-of-10-Best-Chatgpt-Chrome-Extensions-for-2023
Can anyone tell me how to do it?
Use the fetch API to send a request to the OpenAI API.
You will need to signup for an API key with OpenAI first:
https://openai.com/api/
To send a question to GPT you would make the following Fetch API call.
const response = await fetch('https://api.openai.com/v1/completions', {
method: 'POST',
headers: {
'Content-Type: application/json',
'Authorization: Bearer YOUR_API_KEY'
},
body: {
model: 'text-davinci-003',
prompt: 'How do I make an API call to OpenAI inside a Chrome Extension?',
max_tokens: 2000
}
})
console.log(response.data.choices[0].text)
Ref: https://platform.openai.com/docs/api-reference/completions
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I implemented JWT Token Authentication in React framework, It gets me token but the problem I am getting is I am not able to authenticate it on the pages which need authentication.
I tried "Authorization: Bearer " after that authenticated url,
I tried "Authorization : JWT Token token"
Yo can do something like this :
const response = await axios.get('http://example.com',{ headers: {Authorization: `Bearer ${token}`}});
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I have a website and when I click on a button I want to generate a custom link for the user, a link that it will be a endpoint to my nodejs server. My question is: how can this be accomplished ? I think I need to make a basic endpoint in my server that will be called when I press that button in my website and then, based on a custom property in the request's body, it will generate another endpoint, a custom endpoint for that user. How can I do this ? Any help or documentation would be appreciated.
Usually, this would be done with a parameter added to a fixed part of the URL. You then define a route for the fixed part of the URL and the code for that route then examines the parameter and acts accordingly. This way, you're dynamically generating parameters, but all the new parameters all go through the same route definition and the same code.
You can either use a dynamic portion of the URL path or a query parameter. Here is an example of each:
// dynamic path segment
// example url /dyn/dieutaoc
app.get("/dyn/:id", (req, res) => {
// use req.params.id to access the dynamic part of this path
});
// dynamic query parameter
// example url /dyn?id=dieutaoc
app.get("/dyn", (req, res) => {
// use req.query.id to access the dynamic part of this path
});
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In passportJS Documentation, I think passport isAuthenticated function not documented well.
How is req.isAuthenticated() in PassportJS implemented?
For any request you can check if a user is authenticated or not using this method.
app.get('/some_path',checkAuthentication,function(req,res){
//do something only if user is authenticated
});
function checkAuthentication(req,res,next){
if(req.isAuthenticated()){
//req.isAuthenticated() will return true if user is logged in
next();
} else{
res.redirect("/login");
}
}
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I am developing a mobile app, with the backend in Node.js. Users will interact with the platform almost exclusively through the mobile app. As part of the backend, I am exposing multiple APIs to be utilized by the mobile app -- for example: an API to create an account, send a message, post a picture, etc.
What is best practice to validate the API input?
My thought is to create a module for each API, whose purpose is to extract, sanitize, and validate the relevant attributes from the http-request. For example, the "create an account" API will have an associated AccountCreationRequest module with a validate method in which all account-creation-specific validations will be defined. Each specific validation can then be performed by libraries such as express validator and validator.
exports.AccountCreationRequest = {
init: function(request) {
... extract attributes ...
},
sanitizeAndValidate: function() {
... use express-validator/validator on
attributes such as username, email, etc ...
},
isValid: function() {
... return result of validation ...
}
};
Then, when the backend API receives a request,
var accountCreationRequest = AccountCreationRequest.init(httpRequest);
accountCreationRequest.sanitizeAndValidate();
if (accountCreationRequest.isValid()) {
... store in database and notify client of success ...
} else {
... notify client of failure ...
}
My concern is that N APIs will require N request-validation-modules. However, since each API is unique, I don't think there is much opportunity for code reuse.
If you use express, you can do something like
app.use('/private', function(req, res, next) {
if (/*some condition to check for authentication*/) {
next();
} else { //unauthorized
res.status(401).send('not authorized, please authenticate');
}
});
that will filter everything under the /private path through your authentication condition. You can also use wildcards in the path if you prefer.
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I have a web app that exposes REST webservices.
I want to call those web services using javascript\jQuery (ajax)
Basically I want to render the contents returned by the REST service & perform CRUD openations (which will call other REST services of the external web app)
Anyone has some pointers, articles, sample code that shows how to do it?
Thanks
If I understand your question correctly, there's nothing Liferay-specific in calling external webservices, so you can use any tutorial you find on the web. As you're mentioning you want to use jquery, I assume that those calls will be made from the browser - the only thing that you need to do in Liferay is to make sure that jquery is loaded - for this you can use your theme: Edit portal-normal.vm and include the line to load jquery. Alternatively, as Liferay comes with AlloyUI/YUI, you can load jQuery as a module for AUI with its module yQuery
Here is a sample code using javascript\jQuery to call REST webservices inside portlet (Call Portal Service with Basic Authorization Header):
<%# include file="init.jsp"%>
$(document).on('ready',function(){
var username ="test#liferay.com";
var password ="test";
function make_base_auth(user, password) {
var tok = user + ':' + password;
var hash = btoa(tok);
return "Basic " + hash;
}
$.ajax({
url: 'http://localhost:8080/LiferayJSONWebservices-portlet/api/jsonws/employee/get-employee/employee-id/1',
dataType: "json",
type: "get",
success: function(data){
alert(data.employeeName);
},
beforeSend: function(xhr){ xhr.setRequestHeader('Authorization',make_base_auth(username, password));
},
complete: function(){
},
error: function(){
}
});
});
</script>