HTTP

This manual will give you a walk-through on how to use the HTTP web services.

Introduction

HTTP Service is the most lightweight and unrestricted remote service: it supports POST and GET requests to a predefined URL. Result is retrieved as is and rendered as a webpage.

Examples

Example #1

This example will show how to call chemicalize.org via an HTTP web service. In this case we want to calculate the pKa values of a molecule.

images/download/attachments/41125595/image2015-12-7_15_48_9.png

Fig. 1 HTTP service calling the pKa calculator of chemicalize.org

An example calculation with this webservice can be found below.

images/download/attachments/41125595/image2015-12-7_15_51_41.png

Fig. 2 Result of the pKa calculation via the webservice calling chemicalize.org

Example #2

This example shows how to reach the functionalities of chemicalize.org via HTTP API.

HTTPServiceDescriptor descriptor = new HTTPServiceDescriptor();
descriptor.setURL("http://chemicalize.org/tomcat-files/datapage.jsp");
descriptor.addArgument(ServiceArgument.createArgument("mol", ""));
descriptor.addArgument(ServiceArgument.createArgument("special", ""));
descriptor.addArgument(ServiceArgument.createArgument("pka_width", 0));
 
Object result = null;
try {
result = descriptor.getServiceHandler().callService(descriptor, "c1ccnccc1", "pka", 300);
} catch (ServiceException e) {
System.err.println("Service call failed.");
}
System.out.println("Synchronized call returned: " + String.valueOf(result));
 
descriptor.getServiceHandler().callService(descriptor, new AsyncCallback<String>() {
 
@Override
public void onSuccess(String result) {
System.out.println("Aynchronous call returned: " + result);
}
 
@Override
public void onFailure(ServiceException caught) {
System.err.println("Asynchronous call failed.");
}
}, "c1ccnccc1", "pka", 300);