The OneDrive C# SDK is designed to look just like the OneDrive API.
When accessing the OneDrive APIs, all requests will be made through a OneDriveClient object. For a more detailed explanation, see Authentication.
Resources, like items or drives, are represented by Item
and Drive
. These objects contain properties that represent the properties of a resource. These objects are property bags and cannot make calls against the service.
To get the name of an item you would address the Name
property. It is possible for any of these properties to be null at any time. To check if an item is a folder you can address the Folder
property of the item. If the item is a folder, a Folder
object that contains all of the properties described by the folder facet will be returned.
See Resource model for more information.
To make requests against the service, you construct request objects using a request builder object. The type of the request builder will depend on the type of the object you are addressing. This is meant to mimic creating the URL for any of the OneDrive APIs.
To generate a request you chain together calls on request builder objects. You get the first request builder from the OneDriveClient
object. To get a drive request builder you call:
Task | SDK | URL |
---|---|---|
Get a drive | oneDriveClient.Drive | GET api.onedrive.com/v1.0/drive/ |
The call will return an IDriveRequestBuilder
object. From drive you can continue to chain the requests to get everything else in the API, like an item.
Task | SDK | URL |
---|---|---|
Get an item | oneDriveClient.Drive.Items["1234"] | GET api.onedrive.com/v1.0/drive/items/1234 |
Here oneDriveClient.Drive
returns an IDriveRequestBuilder
that contains a property Items
of type IItemsCollectionRequestBuilder
. That builder has an accessor for the item ID and Items["1234"] returns an IItemRequestBuilder
.
Similarly to get thumbnails:
Task | SDK | URL |
---|---|---|
Get thumbnails | ... Items["1234"].Thumbnails | .../items/1234/thumbnails |
Here, oneDriveClient.Drive.Items["1234"]
returns an IItemRequestBuilder
that contains the property Thumbnails of type IThumbnailsCollectionRequestBuilder
.
This returns a collection of thumbnail sets. To index the collection directly you can call:
Task | SDK | URL |
---|---|---|
Get thumbnail Set | ... Items["1234"].Thumbnails["0"] | ...items/1234/thumbnails/0 |
To return a thumbnail set, and to get a specific thumbnail, you can add the name of the thumbnail to the URL like this:
Task | SDK | URL |
---|---|---|
Get a thumbnail | ... Thumbnails["0"].Small | .../thumbnails/0/small |
After you build the request you call the Request
method on the request builder. This will construct the request object needed to make calls against the service.
For an item you call:
var itemRequest = oneDriveClient
.Drive
.Items[itemId]
.Request();
All request builders have a Request
method that can generate a request object. Request objects may have different methods on them depending on the type of request. To get an item you call:
var item = await oneDriveClient
.Drive
.Items[itemId]
.Request()
.GetAsync();
For more info, see items and errors.
If you only want to retrieve certain properties of a resource you can select them. Here's how to get only the names and IDs of an item:
var item = await oneDriveClient
.Drive
.Items[itemId]
.Request()
.Select("name,id")
.GetAsync();
All properties other than Name
and Id
will be null on the item.
To expand certain properties on resources you can call a similar expand method, like this:
var item = await oneDriveClient
.Drive
.Items[itemId]
.Request()
.Expand("thumbnails,children(expand=thumbnails)")
.GetAsync();
The above call will expand thumbnails and children for the item, as well as thumbnails for all of the children.