GET (in regard to TCP/IP) reads unformatted(raw) data from an open connection, opened with [[_OPENCLIENT]], [[_OPENHOST]] or [[_OPENCONNECTION]] '''QB64''' functions. {{PageSyntax}} ::::::::''Syntax 1:'' GET #handle, ,b$ *Reads any available data into variable length string b$ (b$'s length is adjusted to the number of bytes read, so checking EOF is completely unnecessary) using the handle return value from the function used. ::::::::''Syntax 2:'' GET #handle, ,x% *Reads an integer, if 2 bytes are available, they are read into x%, if not then nothing is read and EOF(handle) will return -1 (and x%'s value will be undefined) using the handle return value from the function used. :::::'''Communicating using unformatted/raw streamed data:''' * Benefit: Communicate with any TCP/IP compatible protocol (eg. FTP, HTTP, web-pages, etc) * Disadvantage: Streamed data has no 'message length' as such, just a continuous bunch of bytes all in a row. Some messages get fragmented and parts of messages can (and often do) arrive at different times. * The position parameter(between the commas) is not used in TCP/IP statements. :::::'''Your program MUST cater for these situations manually.''' ''Example:'' {{CodeStart}} {{Cl|PUT|PUT #}}c, , a$ ' sends data {{Cl|GET|GET #}}o, , b$ ' reads any available data into variable length string b$ {{Cl|GET|GET #}}o, , x% ' if 2 bytes are available, they are read into x% {{CodeEnd}} ''Explanation:'' * Data could be a string, variable array, user defined [[TYPE]], etc. * b$'s length is adjusted to the number of bytes read. Checking [[EOF]](o) is unnecessary. * If 2 bytes are not available for the x% integer then nothing is read and [[EOF]](o) will return -1 ''See the examples in [[_OPENCLIENT]] or [[Email Demo]].'' ''See also:'' * [[PUT (TCP/IP statement)]], [[INPUT (TCP/IP statement)]] * [[_OPENCLIENT]], [[_OPENHOST]] * [[_OPENCONNECTION]], [[GET|GET #]] * [[IP Configuration]] * [https://curl.haxx.se/ cURL], [[WGET]] (HTTP and FTP file transfer) {{PageNavigation}}