Difference between revisions of "Specifying Query Parameters in REST APIs"
imported>Aeric |
imported>Aeric |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== Specifying Request Arguments == | == Specifying Request Arguments == | ||
{{:Specifying Parameters in a URL}} | |||
== Specifying Response Format == | == Specifying Response Format == |
Revision as of 22:34, 14 September 2011
Specifying Request Arguments
You pass arguments in a URL using query parameters. Those parameters are specified in the form parameterName=value.
A parameter list is appended to a URI after a "?". Multiple parameters are separated by "&", as shown here:
- <syntaxhighlight lang="vbnet">
https://{yourDomain}/networking/{targetAddress}?parameterName1=value1¶meterName2=value2
</syntaxhighlight>
For boolean arguments, the value passed can be "1" or "true", "0" or "false".
Note:
When specifying a URL in code, any special characters (characters other than letters and numbers) need to be encoded. For example, a space character can be encoded using either + or %20.(Browsers typically take care of encoding URLs entered into the address bar--so the URL displayed after visiting a page may differ somewhat from the one that was initially entered.)
Here are some typical encodings:
space
+
%%20 or +
%2B
%25
So:
Instead of Use & (A&B)
space (A B)%26 (A%26B)
%20 (A%20B)
It can be hard to get be hard to get the encoding right, so it's desirable to use a language library designed for the purpose.
Learn more:- URL Encoding in HTML
- Encode a URL in JavaScript
- URLEncoder class for Java
Specifying Response Format
You specify the response format as either XML (the default) or JSON, using the alt parameter:
- ?alt=xml
- ?alt=json
- Example
- <syntaxhighlight lang="vbnet">
http://{domain}/{address}?alt=json
</syntaxhighlight>