Welcome to another CCB Tutorial. Picking up from where we left off last, it was brought to my attention that last week’s tutorial may have another option as it pertains to creating a simplified login page using the CCB API. Last week’s tutorial focused on validating a user’s credentials simply using the Individual Profile from
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Welcome back! Today’s tutorial will focus on creating a simple and functioning login page that validates a user’s credentials. I use the term validate instead of authenticate because this is truly not a secure or fool-proof login system using CCB’s API. The API service we’ll use, Individual Profile from Login and Password, simply states that
In today’s tutorial, I’m sharing with you how to access and display group profiles by id. Not to be confused with the group_profiles API service — which allows you to pass in a given date and have all groups created or modified since that date returned to you, today’s tutorial will access group_profiles_from_id API service.
Not long ago, I provided a tutorial that offered the ability and functionality to retrieve a full list of process managers and the total number of processes managed. Today’s tutorial somewhat builds upon the aforementioned tutorial; however, instead of focusing on process managers, we’ll turn our attention to the CCB API service for queue managers:
Four score and seven years ago… ok, maybe not that long ago. 🙂 Maybe it was a year or two ago that I published how to retrieve and customize a public web calendar for your church using CCB’s API. As with most of CCB, some of the native functionality leaves a church desiring more in