Use Case: What were the properties that were updated from yesterday?
What You'll Need: Any property update email for the days in question.
You may want to subscribe yourself to an update email with broad parameters to ensure that you receive one for each day. You can set some rules and filter in your gmail so that it's marked a read and is added to another folder automatically.
The property update email links have a lot of unique identifiers in the URL.
Anatomy of the Property Update URL: www.totallynotrealgeeks.com/search/results/ <- Use the Relevant Domain.
A is the Search ID. You can find this easily by looking up the Saved Search related to the update email. The /o9/ in this example is the Search ID. http://www.totallynotrealgeeks.com/search/results/o9/
B, C These are the two Unique Daily IDs. These ID's are tied to the specific date it was created. They are the same throughout all of our property update emails.
This is where having your own set of property update emails comes into play. You can pull the Daily IDs from your own updates and use them on another domain to help find the changes for that specific day.
You must have both of them.
D is the Search Type. These are defined below.
Active: `/search/results/search ID/unique daily ID/2nd unique daily ID/alert/ACTIVE`
Price Change: `/search/results/search ID/unique daily ID/2nd unique daily ID/price_changes/ACTIVE`
Under Contract: `/search/results/search ID/unique daily ID/2nd unique daily ID/alert/__GRAY__`
Sold: `/search/results/search ID/unique ID/unique ID 2/alert/SOLD`
Remove everything after the Search Type. This is the user auto-login key, which we don't want.
We end up with a result like this to find the 1 property that was updated between April 8th and 9th, 2019: https://www.jupiterflhomesonline.com/search/results/igg/ppn43n/ppoz2n/alert/ACTIVE