Thanks. I got it to work by adding the page_token to the Body. I was
previously adding it to the header, which obviously wasn't working. Thanks
for the help!!
So all things equal, the only change was the body WAS:
{"query":"my query here"}
and now it is
{
"query":"same query as above",
"page_t
Hi,
My apologies if I couldn't provide an actual cURL example. You would need
to add the page token after the page size. See below:
{
"customer_id": ,
"query" : "insert_query_string_here",
"page_size": "insert_page_size_here",
"page_token": "inser_page_token_here"
}
Let me know if this
Let me rephrase my question for clarity.
Can someone provide a cURL example for pulling the "next_token"?
Thanks!
On Wednesday, May 15, 2019 at 6:26:27 AM UTC-4, Jarrod Thuener wrote:
>
> From what I understand, the caveat here is that a library it's used... I
> have to use curl, so the first c
>From what I understand, the caveat here is that a library it's used... I
have to use curl, so the first call returns the first 1 results then it
provides a next page token. How to I push that token through again to get
the next set of results?
On Tuesday, May 14, 2019 at 11:18:42 PM UTC-4,
Hi,
Thank you for reaching out. In Google Ads API perspective, page_token and
next_page_token doesn't have to be specified. These two are automatically
generated when you execute your request. So for example, you have 300 ads
and you set the page_size to 100, when you execute the request, the AP