-
Updated
Feb 23, 2015 - Java
Google Forms
Google Forms is a survey application. Forms features all of the collaboration and sharing features found in Docs, Sheets, and Slides. It can also be used to create quizzes, including some specialized functions that are of use in educational settings.
Other resources
- Read the API documentation at https://developers.google.com/forms
- Access the application at https://forms.google.com
Here are 268 public repositories matching this topic...
Python code to automate the filling of google form.
-
Updated
Apr 4, 2016 - Python
A simple API for creating a web proxy for Google forms.
-
Updated
Jul 9, 2016 - Python
Simple way to read Google Sheet into a Google Form
-
Updated
Feb 20, 2017 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Mar 24, 2017 - JavaScript
This python module will automate the google forms. With this module we can fill the responses from file.
-
Updated
Mar 29, 2017 - Python
"King Midas has ears of an ass!" Fetch confessions on Google Forms and post to FB automatically
-
Updated
Apr 12, 2017 - JavaScript
@College_Project: Social network website where the user can search for academic events of all kind and where the students' union can promote their own events.
-
Updated
Apr 12, 2017 - HTML
handling form posts to client and google forms (in case)
-
Updated
Apr 27, 2017 - JavaScript
G Suite ticketing system - Google Forms, Spreadsheet and Script
-
Updated
Sep 5, 2017 - JavaScript
A Google Forms CSV parser that generates lists of optimal accompaniment pairs for music departments.
-
Updated
Sep 6, 2017 - C++
-
Updated
Feb 8, 2018 - JavaScript
A selenium toolkit for automating the creation of google forms.
-
Updated
Feb 16, 2018 - Python
-
Updated
Feb 25, 2018
🎖 The front-end for people to nominate themselves for LSR's committee
-
Updated
Mar 19, 2018 - HTML
Code resources for generating a google form for labelling data.
-
Updated
Apr 1, 2018 - JavaScript
Created by Google
- Followers
- 19 followers
- Organization
- googleworkspace
- Website
- workspace.google.com/products/forms
- Wikipedia
- Wikipedia