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Update getting started examples

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Aditya Oberai 2023-07-07 18:27:44 +05:30 committed by GitHub
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## Getting Started
### Initialize & Make API Request
Once you add the dependencies, its extremely easy to get started with the SDK; All you need to do is import the package in your code, set your Appwrite credentials, and start making API calls. Below is a simple example:
Once you have installed the package, it is extremely easy to get started with the SDK; all you need to do is import the package in your code, set your Appwrite credentials, and start making API calls. Below is a simple example:
```csharp
using Appwrite;
using Appwrite.Services;
using Appwrite.Models;
static async Task Main(string[] args)
{
var client = Client();
var client = new Client()
.SetEndpoint("http://cloud.appwrite.io/v1") // Make sure your endpoint is accessible
.SetProject("5ff3379a01d25") // Your project ID
.SetKey("cd868db89") // Your secret API key
.SetSelfSigned(); // Use only on dev mode with a self-signed SSL cert
client
.setEndpoint('http://[HOSTNAME_OR_IP]/v1') // Make sure your endpoint is accessible
.setProject('5ff3379a01d25') // Your project ID
.setKey('cd868c7af8bdc893b4...93b7535db89')
.setSelfSigned() // Use only on dev mode with a self-signed SSL cert
;
var users = new Users(client);
var users = Users(client);
var user = await users.Create(
userId: ID.Unique(),
email: "email@example.com",
password: "password",
name: "name");
try {
var user = await users.Create(ID.Unique(), 'email@example.com', 'password', 'name');
Console.WriteLine(user.ToMap());
} catch (AppwriteException e) {
Console.WriteLine(e.Message);
}
}
Console.WriteLine(user.ToMap());
```
### Error Handling
The Appwrite .NET SDK raises `AppwriteException` object with `message`, `code` and `response` properties. You can handle any errors by catching `AppwriteException` and present the `message` to the user or handle it yourself based on the provided error information. Below is an example.
The Appwrite .NET SDK raises an `AppwriteException` object with `message`, `code`, and `response` properties. You can handle any errors by catching `AppwriteException` and presenting the `message` to the user or handling it yourself based on the provided error information. Below is an example.
```csharp
var users = Users(client);
var users = new Users(client);
try {
var user = await users.Create(ID.Unique(), 'email@example.com', 'password', 'name');
Console.WriteLine(user.ToMap());
} catch (AppwriteException e) {
Console.WriteLine(e.Message);
try
{
var user = await users.Create(
userId: ID.Unique(),
email: "email@example.com",
password: "password",
name: "name");
}
catch (AppwriteException e)
{
Console.WriteLine(e.Message);
}
```
@ -47,4 +50,4 @@ You can use the following resources to learn more and get help
- 🚀 [Getting Started Tutorial](https://appwrite.io/docs/getting-started-for-server)
- 📜 [Appwrite Docs](https://appwrite.io/docs)
- 💬 [Discord Community](https://appwrite.io/discord)
- 🚂 [Appwrite Dart Playground](https://github.com/appwrite/playground-for-dotnet)
- 🚂 [Appwrite .NET Playground](https://github.com/appwrite/playground-for-dotnet)