After several edits, adding comments to the code example, adding screenshots and so on, an answer of mine grew somewhat in length.
How much is too much, especially regarding code samples?
As OP seems to be beginner level (and we have to assume that for everyone who reads our answers), I felt the need to go into much detail, especially as "Solution 2" isn't that trivial to get right. I could have provided only general hints and some links to the API documentation but that propably wouldn't be that helpful. You can only get so much from reference docs (especially if it comes from a known big software manufacturer ;-)).
So I added a code sample that can be used "as is", has complete error handling and uses techniques that I think are "best practice".
Often when I stumble upon "official" code samples the error handling is at best "rudimentary". But I believe people are lazy and will just copy-paste code samples without adding their own error handling, even if there is a big red hint that the author omitted error handling for "brevity". I believe "brevity" is a bad excuse for laziness of the author, so I tend to provide verbose code samples.
But maybe such verbosity is not wanted here on SO and I should shorten my code samples? Or possibly move code that exceeds a certain length to some external side like gist.github.com?
<a href="#solution1">...</a>
doesn't seem to work.