On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 7:51 AM, ikalbeniz wrote:
> i have used this API to access to android market:
>
> http://code.google.com/p/android-market-api/ (uses google-protobuff-
> api)
>
Note that the android-market-api project is not from or authorized by
Google. It looks like they reverse-engine
ok, i have don some test and works!! i dont know why this conversions
are done but works..
On 19 abr, 17:00, Marc Gravell wrote:
> Now that is amusing (to me, at least); I decode a variant in "calc", and
> then mess up the field number! It is the field with *binary* 101, i.e. field
> 5.
>
> and n
Now that is amusing (to me, at least); I decode a variant in "calc", and
then mess up the field number! It is the field with *binary* 101, i.e. field
5.
and note also that I'm treating that as an unsigned variant; a signed
(zig/zag) variant would give a different answer.
On 19 April 2010 15:57, M
and you process the last 2 bytes separately, of course; it is field 101 of
type string (or sub-message or bytes), length 14, with the actual data
missing.
Marc
On 19 April 2010 15:53, Marc Gravell wrote:
> I know it wasn't the core part of the question, but note that BitConverter
> isn't especi
I know it wasn't the core part of the question, but note that BitConverter
isn't especially helpful for protobuf, unless you happen to be dealing with
[s]fixed{32|64} / float / double (it is unclear whether you mean "uint64" as
a protobuf type or a language-specific type).
Treating it as fixed/uns
i have used this API to access to android market:
http://code.google.com/p/android-market-api/ (uses google-protobuff-
api)
i have get all the comments from an app and i get that one of the
comments date is 1269450764071 (the one from ikalbeniz)
in my custom class all the HTTP protocol is develo
here some test i have been doing with c#:
byte[] data2byte = new byte[8];
data2byte[0] = (byte)167;
data2byte[1] = (byte)222;
data2byte[2] = (byte)165;
data2byte[3] = (byte)137;
data2byte[4] = (byte)249;
data2byte[