Welcome David. Ruben is right, it's cool to post up some code you have tried. But I spent many months getting my head around Apps-script and love to share what I know. There are several ways to get the data out of a Google sheet. There is a very well document Spreadsheet Service For GAS. There is also a client API..
There is the approach you mention. I suggest converting the incoming data to JSON so you can do with it as you like.
Unauthenticated frontend queries are also possible. Which needs the spreadsheet to be published and set to anyone with the link can view, and uses the Google visualisation API
var sql = 'SELECT A,B,C,D,E,F,G where A = true order by A DESC LIMIT 10 offset '
var queryString = encodeURIComponent(sql);
var query = new google.visualization.Query('https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/'+ spreadsheetId +'/gviz/tq?tq=' + queryString);
query.send(handleSampleDataQueryResponse);
function handleSampleDataQueryResponseTotal(responsetotal) {
var myData = responsetotal.getDataTable();
var myObject = JSON.parse(myData.toJSON());
console.log(myObject)
}
Other Approaches
In your GAS back end this can get all of your data in columns A to C as an array of arrays ([[row1],[row2],[row3]]).
function getData(query){
var ss = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
var sheet = ss.getSheetByName('Sheet1');
var range = sheet.getRange('A1:C');
var data = range.getValues();
// return data after some query
}
In your GAS front end this can call to your backend.
var data = google.script.run.withSuccessHandler(success).getData(query);
var success = (e) => {
console.log(e)
}
In your GAS backend this can add data to your sheet. The client side API will also add data, but is more complex and needs authentication.
function getData(data){
var ss = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
var sheet = ss.getSheetByName('Sheet1');
var range = sheet.getRange('A1:C');
var data = range.setValues([[row1],[row2],[row3]]);
return 'success!'
}
In your GAS frontend this can send data to your backend.
var updateData = [[row1],[row2],[row3]]
var data = google.script.run.withSuccessHandler(success).getData(updateData);
var success = (e) => {
console.log(e)
}
Finally
Or you can get everything from the sheet as JSON and do the query in the client. This works okay if you manipulate the data in the sheet as you will need it. This also needs the spreadsheet to be published and set to anyone with the link can view.
var firstSheet = function(){
var spreadsheetID = "SOME_ID";
var url = "https://spreadsheets.google.com/feeds/list/" + spreadsheetID +"/1/public/values?alt=json";
return new Promise((resolve,reject)=>{
$.getJSON(url, (data)=>{
let result = data.feed.entry
resolve(result)
});
})
}
firstSheet().then(function(data){
console.log(data)
})