Redirect multiple google doc links into a single link - google-drive-api

I have several of the same document, each shared with a different person. Is it possible to create a new document, and redirect all other links to the new document's link, so that I only have to update one doc for everyone to see the changes?

This is a hack, but replace each of the old documents with new versions (to keep the same Google link) consisting of simple text files with the standard Windows url content:
[InternetShortcut]
URL=http://google.com/link/to/common/doc
Then rename the file, adding the suffix .url
The old links won't go straight to the new document, but at least the user will get a webpage that redirects them to it by clicking "Apps on your computer: Internet Browser" or clicking download and then on the downloaded link. Not pretty, but better than nothing.

Related

Open html file in a new tab instead of downloading it

For my Trac plugin, I have made an export script which converts contents to a different format. The result is an HTML code.
When I click the link, some browsers open the HTML code in a new tab, while others offer to download it as a .print file, depending on their specific settings I think. Opening this .print file shows the same HTML page as opening it directly, but locally instead of from the server.
How can I force it to always open in a new tab?
I think it might be a mimetype issue. If it is, which mimetype can I use to tell the browser to open the HTML code directly? I am currently using text/html as mimetype.
EDIT: some more info
To give some more insight, adapting from a comment of mine below:
I do not create the link myself. The link is provided by Trac, the bug tracking software the plugin is for, and what I do is implement the method that creates the HTML code and let it return the HTML code along with the mimetype. Trac then returns the HTML code either as a file, or as a new tab, when clicking on that content conversion link. What I am searching for is a possibility to specify in the HTML code or mimetype that it gets opened in a new tab directly.
Maybe there is some kind of mimetype specifying the (HTML) text as an HTML web document instead of HTML file (if that distinction even exists).
Or an HTML/XML header or doctype specifying whether it gets downloaded or opened by a browser. I think the browser need to get that information from somewhere.
Or maybe there is an option to set in Trac.
I hope these ideas of mine about what could exist can help those of you who are versed with either or some of these to find a solution. I could not find a solution through my research yet.
If you have a link that "directly" opens (not in a new tab) and you want it to open a new tab, one way of doing it is
This will create a blank page, then paste the link there automagically and thus you will have a new tab with the desired page.

Create a Sharepoint page from HTML file with images

I'm trying to create an editable page in Sharepoint. I already have the page in HTML (it's quite large) and it has many images in it. Previously I have just created a new page in sharepoint and pasted the HTML source in, the uploaded/inserted the images manually, one at a time.
Unfortunately, I am not able to do this in a reasonable amount of time since there are many images this HTML file is using.
So, I want an editable Sharepoint page that keeps the images intact from a directory that looks like this:
thepage.html
1.png
2.png
...
...
...
343.png
etc
Any ideas?
EDIT: For more clarity - this is a specifications document in HTML form, so it has a lot of text and header integrated with images. I'd like it to be converted to an actual Sharepoint Page that is editable from Sharepoint's interface.
Seems best here to use a low-tech solution, some HTML editing and use the best way for you to upload multiple files.
Assuming
C:\mypage
-> \page.html
-> \images\1.png
-> \images\2.png
...
-> \images\100.png
Via the UI
Go to a Document or Image library, and use the "Upload Multiple files/images" (this only appears on Internet Explorer)
Lets say you uploaded it to //sharepoint/myimages
Create a new content page (say an Article page, or WebPart Page with a Content Editor WebPart)
Lets say your page resides now at //sharepoint/pages/mypage.aspx
Change your html to point from <img src="images/1.png" /> to <img src="../myimages/1.png" />
Edit the HTML for your newly created page (Ribbon > Edit HTML Source), paste your HTML code
Via SharePoint Designer
Drag and Drop all the images in your desired location
repeat the HTML steps above
To replace text in bulk, SharePoint Designer, your favorite HTML editor or event Notepad can do that well using the CTRL+H menu / Edit > Find & Replace options.
NOTE: the //sharepoint address up there is the http url for your site, SO won't let me use a full fake address as a sample.
From IE or from Word, save the page as a complete webpage so it creates an HTML file plus a folder with the images.
In network places, create web folder (WebDAV) pointing to Sharepoint. This way, you can access it from the file system in Explorer.
Open your new network place, navigate to the library where you want your HTML file to be, and drag-n-drop the file and folder into there.
The file then will be visible in browser, with the pictures, but the folder will be hidden.
If I have understood correctly your question. You can use this post answer to load list of images by javascript and php ->
Load list of image from folder.
Upload files to Share Point server and use that folder.
Or you can dynamically write c# code to read Share Point folder and display images.

opening html from google drive

I have made a page in html5 with css3. It works fine on local (I dont use any server, just doubleclick in the index to open it).
I want to put it in google drive. I have load all the documents needed, but when I try to open the html, I can only see the text (I mean, it is not being executing, I can see just the source code).
Any suggestion?
Not available any more, https://support.google.com/drive/answer/2881970?hl=en
Host web pages with Google Drive
Note: This feature will not be available after August 31, 2016.
I highly recommend https://www.heroku.com/ and https://www.netlify.com/
EDIT: As of August 2016 Google Drive can no longer be used to host static web pages, so this solution no longer works.
Create a new folder in Drive and share it as "Public on the web."
Upload your content files to this folder.
Right click on your folder and click on Details.
Copy Hosting URL and paste it on your browser.(e.g. https://googledrive.com/host/0B716ywBKT84AcHZfMWgtNk5aeXM)
It will launch index.html if it exist in your folder other wise list all files in your folder.
I don't think it is necessary to "host" the content using the way from the accepted answer. It is too complicated for a normal user with limited developing skills.
Google actually has provided hosting feature without using Drive SDK/API, what you need is just few clicks. Check this out:
http://support.google.com/drive/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=2881970
It is the same to the answer of user1557669. However, in step 4, the URL is not correct, it is like:
https://drive.google.com/#folders/...
To get the correct host URL. Right click on the html file (you have to finish 1-3 steps first and put the html in the public shared folder), and select "Details" from the context menu. You will find the hosting URL right close to the bottom of the details panel. It should look like:
https://googledrive.com/host/.../abc.html
Then you can share the link to anyone. Happy sharing.
Now you can use
https://sites.google.com
Build internal project hubs, team sites, public-facing websites, and more—all without designer, programmer, or IT help. With the new Google Sites, building websites is easy. Just drag content where you need it.
While drive allows you to edit plain text and HTML files I don't believe they allow the HTML to actually be displayed. I don't think they want people hosting websites from their drive space.
A lot of the solutions offered here do not seem to work anymore. I'm currently on a chromebook and wanted to view an HTML5 banner. This seems impossible now through Google Drive or other apps (as mentioned in previous comments).
The method I ended up using to view the HTML5 was the following:
Open Google Adwords (create a free account if you dont have one)
Click on Ads in the top panel
Click on "+AD" and choose image ad
Choose "upload an ad"
Drag and drop your zip file into the area
Click on Preview
Voila, you will see your HTML5 banners in their full beauty
There may well an easier way, but this way is pretty good too. Hope it helps and worked well for me.
Create a new folder in Drive and share it as "Public on the web."
Upload your HTML, JS & CSS files to this folder.
Open the HTML file & you will see "Preview" button in the toolbar.
Share the URL that looks like www.googledrive.com/host/... from the preview window and anyone can view your web page.
Found method to see your own html file (from here (scroll down to answer from prac): https://productforums.google.com/forum/#!topic/drive/YY_fou2vo0A)
-- use Get Link to get URL with id=... substring
-- put uc instead of open in URL

Displaying files (e.g. images) stored in Google Drive on a website

I was wondering if its possible to access/display files like images which are stored in Google Drive on a public website.
A workaround is to get the fileId with Google Drive SDK API and then using this Url:
https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id={fileId}
That will be a permanent link to your file in Google Drive (image or anything else).
Note: this link seems to be subject to quotas. So not ideal for public/massive sharing.
Go to your Google Drive.
Right-click on the image file.
Select Get link.
Open the General access drop-down menu.
Select Anyone with the link to publish your image.
Click Copy link > Done.
You will get a URL like the following:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1wMgCWAsqlw0nXcMhCldTbwSznMdXUmBT/view?usp=share_link
You can see your file ID in bold. Put the file ID in the following simple view link:
https://drive.google.com/uc?id=FILE ID
Result:
https://drive.google.com/uc?id=1wMgCWAsqlw0nXcMhCldTbwSznMdXUmBT
You can take the same steps for other file types: MP3, PDF, etc.
UPDATE: As was announced, Google deprecated this feature in Aug 2016. Here's the final update from Google with alternatives.
Yes, it's possible. Provided that you put your files in a public folder, you can get any file in a folder by this URL:
https://googledrive.com/host/<folderID>/<filename>
here is how from # https://productforums.google.com/forum/#!topic/drive/yU_yF9SI_z0/discussion
1- upload ur image
2- right click and chose "get sharable link"
3- copy the link which should look like
https://drive.google.com/open?id=xxxxxxx
4-change the open? to uc? and use it like
<img src="https://drive.google.com/uc?id=xxxxx">
EDIT : As of 2020, THIS is working. Most previous answers are outdated.
Easy Solution
All you have to do is open your file:
Then, go into your web inspector (for Chrome, Cmd-Shift-I or Ctrl-Shift-I depending on your OS) and get the link. Paste that link into your browser and it will redirect to another link. Copy the new URL. Done!
What's the redirect for?
It seems that if you use the first link, it can only be accessed when signed in to your Google account. Not very helpful for other people. The second, redirected link, however, does not need you to be signed in. That's the rationale behind it.
I deleted the original file shown in the images, but I have another working example here.
I've actually checked back on my example link that I posted in my edit about a week ago, but it no longer seems to be working. It looks like these links only work temporarily, so don't use them for any kind of production environment.
Working solution for Workspace (G suite) users in Nov 2022
Some embed codes do not show the img unless the viewer is logged into gmail, the following works like a regular image on your webhost:
Share item publicly (make sure it says ''Anyone on the internet with this link can view): either the image itself (or the folder where the image resides) then copy the link the following way
Take the ID of the file and insert here:
<img src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/d/[ID_OF_THE_FILE]">
Result (if you see the dog below it means the solution still works):
Localmachine
Won't display on MAMP/WAMP type of localhost environments, but does display on webpages.
UPDATE: As was announced, Google deprecated this feature in Aug 2016. Here's the final update from Google with alternatives.
As per April 2013 and using Chrome/webkit, the following worked for me:
1 Make a folder called e.g. "public"
2 Select that folder, right click and Share > Share. Click. Select "Anyone can access"
3 Drag and Drop a file into the folder, and let it upload.
4 Right click on the file and select Details. One of the lines in the Details-Fieldset reads "Hosting". Underneath it is an url:
https://googledrive.com/...
Drag and Drop that url into a new tab. Copy and paste the url and share or embed it anywhere you like.
One limitation is that as far as HTTP goes, only secure HTTP access seems to be possible.
Update:
Another limitation is that files which Google drive can open, won't be accessible that way.
That is, clicking on "Details" won't show an Google-drive url.
To overcome this:
right click on the file in question and select "Open with>Manage apps":
Untick the file-associated apps here
Optional: Reload Google Drive
Right click on the file and select "Details"
Proceed as in step #4
Note: An alternative to the procedure above, is uploading the file with an extension that Google Drive cannot open/is not associated.
If you want to view the file in the browser, it's also possible using a similar method to the one provided by rufo and Torxed:
https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id={fileId}
Specifically for G-Suite users
.
As reported in point 3 here, you can use this URL for hosting image
https://drive.google.com/a/domain.com/thumbnail?id=imageID
with following replacements
domain: replace with your company's GSuite domain like pikachu
imageID: replace with the image id / file id
The prerequisite here is that image should have been shared via drive to target audience (either with each person individually or maybe across the org)
If you face problems with size of rendered image, use following options as mentioned here
https://drive.google.com/a/domain.com/thumbnail?id=imageID&sz=w{width}-h{height}
with following replacements (in addition to domain and imageID replacement)
{width}: write the width in pixels (without braces) like 300
{height}: write the height in pixels (without braces) like 200
Per this blog post, a currently working solution is:
<img src=”https://drive.google.com/uc?id=[imageIdGoesHere]" />
Test here
https://drive.google.com/uc?id=1m-uOoFzHn4oUGlEsDSEfPBbJ2QhBJzlM
This is verified to work as of 26th of April, 2021. No shared folder or login is required. But a publicly shared file is.
I think it is possible but only for a short time
What you have to do is set the Access Control List of the file to Public Read-Only (or Public Read/Write). You can do that programmatically using the Google Document List API, or manually through the "Share" button on the Drive image viewer.
Then you can get the URL to the image programmatically by either using the Google Document List API or using the Google Drive API (i.e. file.getDownloadUrl() in Java). You can also easily get a link to the image manually by right clicking on the image in the Google Drive default image viewer.
The problem is that this link has a limited time to live, so it will work for a little while and then stop working.
Basically the URL of the image file stored in Drive should be accessible without any authentication once it has been set shared publicly but that URL is going to change at some point. We might find a solution to this in the future like providing a permanent URL that will redirect to these changing URL but no promises...
From google drive help pages:
To host a webpage with Drive:
Open Drive at drive.google.com and select a file.
Click the Share button at the top of the page.
Click Advanced in the bottom right corner of the sharing box.
Click Change....
Choose On - Public on the web and click Save.
Before closing the sharing box, copy the document ID from the URL in the field below "Link to share". The document ID is a string of
uppercase and lowercase letters and numbers between slashes in the
URL.
Share the URL that looks like "www.googledrive.com/host/[doc id] where [doc id] is replaced by the document ID you copied in step 6.
Anyone can now view your webpage.
This is the only direct link format without redirection (then a Permalink) and only applies to files directly visible on Google Drive (e.g. images and documents).
It is not affected by the download limit and you can use it to display images on a website.
For example the sharing link:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/FILE_ID/view?usp=sharing
becomes:
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/d/FILE_ID
lh4, lh5 and lh6 also work.
Some of the previous users were close, but they were missing a step here or there.
Here is a video that shows all of the steps.
(Edit 2-Dec-14 The Below information is incorrect when it comes to the new Google Drive. For the New Google Drive follow these instructions.
There are two options you can use,
option 1 you can click the cog on the top right and revert to the old google drive, IF you revert, use the instructions after "End Edit)"
.
Option 2 or you can follow the work around I found. If I find a better way than this I will update it, but here is what I have found that works.
The full link will look like this "https://googledrive.com/host/(folder id)
Part one of your link that you need is "https://googledrive.com/host/" for the second half you will need to navigate to the file you would like to share.
Once you are in the folder with the file you would like to share, look at the link above
(Example 1 https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/#folders/0B3UALYkiLexYSXZlcldoU2NpYXM )
(Example 2 https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/#folders/0B3UALYkiLexYSXZlcldoU2NpYXM/0B3UALYkiLexYRkNnOVhsUVozRU0)
In both of these above examples, the "Folder ID" you need for sharing is the last group of letters and numbers after the "/" so in example one, it is "0B3UALYkiLexYSXZlcldoU2NpYXM" in example two it is "0B3UALYkiLexYRkNnOVhsUVozRU0"
In the examples I used, example 1 was a folder on my drive, and example 2 was a folder inside that first one, that is why it has the entire first link before the second.
We only need the section after the "/" furthest to the right.
So now that you have your "Folder ID", take the above formula "https://googledrive.com/host/(folder id)"
Example 1 https://googledrive.com/host/0B3UALYkiLexYSXZlcldoU2NpYXM
Example 2 https://googledrive.com/host/0B3UALYkiLexYRkNnOVhsUVozRU0
Great, now that you have this link, open it in a new page. It will direct you to the shared folder. Once there you can either right click on any file and select "Copy link address" or you can click any file in that folder and it will take you to the hosted image, the URL at the top of the page is the hosting URL.
That is the how you do it. It is quite annoying, and personally it seems a whole lot easier to just revert to the old google drive.
I will try to make a new tutorial video ASAP
Let me know if this does not work for you and what problem you are experiencing.
End Edit)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QmN22LMPdDk&feature=youtu.be
Or you can just follow the written ones below.
These pictures go with the ones listed in the steps.
https://googledrive.com/host/0B3UALYkiLexYSXZlcldoU2NpYXM/
Create a Folder on your Google Drive that you would like to use for sharing images.
Select that folder and go to the sharing options. Change the "Who has access" options from "Specific People" to "Public on the web"
All images placed in folder will have a hosting link on them shown in Step 4
(Images : Change Folder Option.png, Change folder option 2.png, and Change folder option 3.png)
place an image in that folder.
select the image you would like to share and look at the details section (usually on right hand side) for a section labeled "Hosting" you should find a link that starts with
"googledrive.com/host/(random numbers and digits that are the ID for that folder)/(file name)"
Use that link to share your images. You can use that link to embed them into other websites.
(Images: Change folder option 4.png and Change folder option share.png)
Vetea, if you take the link from picture URL, it does not work, but if you take it from the field "Direct Link" it should work. I have used and tested it in multiple occasions.
A very useful api/url I found is:
imageId -> the file ID
width, the desired width (cannot be greater than image resolution width), must be integer for it to work
height, the desired height (cannot be greater than image resolution height), must be integer for it to work
https://drive.google.com/thumbnail?id=${imageId}&sz=w${width}-h${height}
Note: the api/url will keep the aspect ratio so it will stop at whichever dimension is met first
There is a filetype option in the Google Drive API. You could, maybe, check if that resolves to a valid image. I'd look at an option where if the filetype gives me an invalid image, then get a new direct URL for the file. I haven't figured out exactly how to do this though, but maybe that's a path to try.
You can do it directly from Drive & Gmail. Here's how:
1.Upload an image to Google drive and set permissions for viewing (can be public OR anyone w/ link)
Go to Gmail>Compose. Select the + next to attachment icon.
Select drive icon (triangle shape)
Navigate to your image and right-click copy image url
Paste into web browser or embed on webpages as needed.
For images, open an image in google viewer. i.e.
Method 1
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0Bz7qe_olclTwWDNJRDRmb1pJamM/edit
then view source> find word "texmex-thumb" and aside it there will be link.
1.Change the settings of your picture to public.
2.Get its shareable link.
3.Go to this website and generate a direct download link.
Worked for me!
You can follow below steps to embed the files you want to your website.
Find the PDF file in Google Drive
Preview the PDF file in Google Drive
Pop-out the Google Drive preview
Use the More actions menu and choose Embed item
Copy code provided
Edit Google Sites page where you want to embed
Open the HTML Editor
Paste the HTML embed code provided by the Google Drive preview
Use the Update button and Save the page
References: https://www.steegle.com/websites/google-sites-howtos/embed-drive-pdf
Solution provided by Niutech worked for me i.e.
http://googledrive.com/host/<folderID>/<filename>
But there are 2 outstanding issues
You cannot have 2 files with the same name in the same folder in the drive else this link won't work.
It is not yet clear but Google seems to be planning to deprecate image hosting via drive. please see the link below.
https://support.google.com/richmedia/answer/6098968?hl=en
Function title: goobox
tags: image hosting, regex, URL, google drive, dropbox, advanced
return: string, Returns a string URL that can be used directly as the source of an image.
when you host an image on google drive or dropbox you can't use the direct URL of your file to be an image source.
you need to make changes to this URL to use it directly as an image source.
goobox() will take the URL of your image file, and change it to be used directly as an image source.
Important: you need to check your files' permissions first, and whether it's public.
live example: https://ybmex.csb.app/
cconst goobox = (url)=>{
let dropbox_regex = /(http(s)*:\/\/)*(www\.)*(dropbox.com)/;
let drive_regex =/(http(s)*:\/\/)*(www\.)*(drive.google.com\/file\/d\/)/;
if(url.match(dropbox_regex)){
return url.replace(/(http(s)*:\/\/)*(www\.)*/, "https://dl.");
}
if(url.match(drive_regex)){
return `https://drive.google.com/uc?id=${url.replace(drive_regex, "").match(/[\w]*\//)[0].replace(/\//,"")}`;
}
return console.error('Wrong URL, not a vlid drobox or google drive url');
}
let url = 'https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PiCWHIwyQWrn4YxatPZDkB8EfegRIkIV/view'
goobox(URL); // https://drive.google.com/uc?id=1PiCWHIwyQWrn4YxatPZDkB8EfegRIkIV
Con can disable javascript in your browser open the image file and in the view page source or right click on the image, you will see the image link. ( check share preference before )
However this answer is simple, infact very simple and yea many have mentioned it that simply put the id of image into the following link https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id={fileId}
But however easy that is, I made a script to run in the console.
Feed in an array of complete sharable links from google drive and get them converted into the above link. Then they can be simply used as static addresses.
array = ['https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B8kNn6zsgGEtUE5FaGNtcEthNWc','https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B8kNn6zsgGEtM2traVppYkhsV2s','https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B8kNn6zsgGEtNHgzT2x0MThJUlE']
function separateDriveImageId(arr) {
for (n=0;n<arr.length;n++){
str = arr[n]
for(i=0;i<str.length;i++){
if( str.charAt(i)== '=' ){
var num = i+1;
var extrctdStrng = str.substr(num)
}
}
console.log('https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id='+extrctdStrng)
window.open('https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id='+extrctdStrng,'_blank')
}
}
separateDriveImageId(array)

Google Chrome extension - to open new tab directed to url when a certain url is searched in current tab?

I am very new (started today) to writing chrome extensions but need to write a 'fairly simple' one for tomorrow...
I am really struggling to get my head round it though!
I need to write an extension that opens a new tab or window (whichever is easier!) directed at a predefined url is opened when a certain URL is searched in the current.
An example of this would be if the user typed in www.facebook.com I am trying to get the extension to then open a new tab/window with www.google.com in.
Any help would be much appreciated!
Thanks
Will
In your html of the extension you can specify an anchor tag for the action button which opens a new tab like this
content of the anchor
or if you want to do it programmatically you can
window.open('http://google.com','_newtab');
You cant get at the contents of the omnibox unless you use the omnibox api, which means they have to specify your keyword first before your extension can get at the contents. You could make it open another page once they have gone to a url. You could use a content script that has a matches field that matches the page your interested in and then open a page accordingly.
Content Scripts
http://code.google.com/chrome/extensions/content_scripts.html
Tabs
You can use the tab api to get the current tabs details if your not in a content script. If you are in a content script you can use window.location as stated by Encore PTL. You can also use the tab api to open a tab.
http://code.google.com/chrome/extensions/tabs.html