3

I know you can append limit and offset values to the graph.facebook.com/id/photos API call to paginate through photos. But large limits don't seem to work well, photos end up missing. I read here that limit=0 gives you all photos, but again photos will be missing. So what's the biggest limit you can use reliably? What's the proper way to efficiently retrieve ALL photos?

Is there documentation on the limits of limit?

3
  • Photos that user is tagged in are owned by his friends, so I think photos by friends with restricted privacy settings may not appear.
    – ifaour
    Oct 7, 2011 at 14:06
  • There are photos that are retrieved if I just do 25 at a time with the limit/offset pagination mechanism which I DON'T retrieve sometimes with big limits or limit=0.
    – at.
    Oct 7, 2011 at 15:46
  • For me it sounds like a big...and better reported on the Bug System
    – ifaour
    Oct 7, 2011 at 18:48

2 Answers 2

2

Here's my experience with the Facebook API...

If you set a limit, you won't get any more than that. However, a large limit will most certainly give you less than you requested despite more existing. All of Facebook seems to run on a principle of "good enough" when it comes to responding to API queries. If you ask for 5000 items and after 5-15 seconds the system is only able to retrieve 350, then that's likely all you'll retrieve. There also seems to be a limit on size of content. So, the limit completely relies on the type of content you're querying and it's not a fixed amount. It's possible to say limit=5 and only get 4 items (even when more exist).

limit=0 used to give as many responses as possible, but I'm not sure if it still works. You can also use since/until to be more specific about the items you want to retrieve. But regardless, there's no way to know if you've gotten all possible responses.

1

I faced the same issue in our application. "me/photos" doesn't give complete data. One can understand the permission associated with photos but then also "me/photos" end up not returning even photos with "public" permission.

We were able to resolve this issue by taking following approach. Now our application returns all tagged photos except the ones having restrictive permission.

First we did find the list of IDs of photos in which user is tagged using FQL. This can be achieved as following.


FB.api({
"method": 'fql.query',
"query": 'select object_id from photo_tag where subject=me()'
}
,function(resp)
{

}

The above API will give the IDs of photos in which user is active. Now once the ID is available the details of photo can be fetched as following.


FB.api({
"method": 'fql.query',
"query": 'select object_id from photo_tag where subject=me()'
}
,function(resp)
{
   var photoId = resp.object_id;
   FB.api("/" + photoId, function(data){////DO THE PROCESSING/////////////});
}

The above process involve larger number of requests to Facebook, but till now this is the only way that we have found out to fetch all possible tagged photos.

6
  • That approach can work. To make the many queries more efficient, you can also use FB's batch query mechanism. Jun 25, 2012 at 21:37
  • I will really appreciate that. Can you please let me know how to use batch query mechanism to improve the efficiency Jul 13, 2012 at 7:28
  • I started with the Facebook developer docs on batch requests. Our app is built on Rails and we're using the Koala gem for FB API requests which has a batching mode built in. Hope that gets you started. Jul 13, 2012 at 19:19
  • Hi Wolfram, Thanks for your help I was able to use Batch Request. I was using javascript SDK. The batch request document is not very clear about how to make actual requests using JS SDK. But after lots of google I figured it out. Now my code is much more efficient. Jul 16, 2012 at 8:11
  • Glad you figured it out. I've not tried the Javascript SDK. Perhaps you can post your findings here? Jul 16, 2012 at 9:06

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