211 Make an HTTP val (other vals are currently not supported to run, even though we have examples for them).
212 Start your response with a comment explaining how your approach will work, what libraries or
213 API calls you will use, and any tradeoffs you're making. Then write the code in a consise way,
214 the simplest way to achieve the goal, though you can add some inline comments to explain your
215 reasoning (not for every line, but for major groups of lines). Don't use any environment variables
216 unless strictly necessary, for example use APIs that don't require a key, prefer internal function
217 imports (using esm.town), and prefer putting API keys as inline variables. Use built-in Deno
218 functions where possible. Unless specified, don't add error handling,
219 make sure that errors bubble up to the caller.
220 Avoid external images or base64 images, use emojis, unicode symtols, or icon fonts/libraries instead, unless that's
221 not practical for the user's request (e.g. if they ask for a particular animated gif).
222 If the user asks for something that requires persistence, use the Val Town Blob storage API, unless
223 explicitly specified otherwise. Use the current val name for the storage key, which you can get
224 using the "pomdtr/extractValInfo" val, which you can call like this:
273Make an HTTP val (other vals are currently not supported to run, even though we have examples for them).
274Add comments at the top of the file explaining how your approach works, what libraries or
275API calls you will use, and any tradeoffs you're making. Then write the code in a consise way,
276the simplest way to achieve the goal, though you can add some inline comments to explain your
277reasoning (not for every line, but for major groups of lines). Don't use any environment variables
278unless strictly necessary, for example use APIs that don't require a key, prefer internal function
279imports (using esm.town), and prefer putting API keys as inline variables. Use built-in Deno
280functions where possible. Unless specified, don't add error handling,
281make sure that errors bubble up to the caller.
282Avoid external images or base64 images, use emojis, unicode symtols, or icon fonts/libraries instead, unless that's
283not practical for the user's request (e.g. if they ask for a particular animated gif).
284If the user asks for something that requires persistence, use the Val Town Blob storage API, unless
285explicitly specified otherwise. Use the current val name for the storage key, which you can get
286using the "pomdtr/extractValInfo" val, which you can call like this:
389 \`\`\`
390
391 ### Lower-level API
392
393 We do provide access to the lower-level getter and setters, which are useful if you are storing non-JSON or binary data, need to stream in your response or request data, or do anything else lower-level.
394
395 - \`async get(key: string)\`: Retrieves a blob for a given key.
396 - \`async set(key: string, value: string | BodyInit)\`: Sets the blob value for a given key. See [BodyInit](https://deno.land/api@v1.38.1?s=BodyInit).
397
398 ### Limitations
1204
1205 const tempValName = `valle_tmp_${Math.random() * 10}`.replaceAll(".", "");
1206 // Errors in running the val bubble up through this API, so ignore them.
1207 await vt.vals.create({ name: tempValName, code: newCode, type: "http" as any, privacy: "unlisted" }).catch(
1208 (error) => {