So nothing new here I am just trying to get some clarification and cannot seem to find any in other posts.
I am creating a new resource restulfully, say:
/books (POST)
with a body:
{
title: 'The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe',
author: 'C. S. Lewis'
}
I know that I should return a 201 (Created) with a Location header of the new resource:
Location: /books/12345
The question I cannot seem to answer for myself is what should the server return in the body.
I have often done this type of response:
{
id: 12345,
title: 'The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe',
author: 'C. S. Lewis'
}
I have done this for a couple reasons:
- I have written api for front end frameworks like angularjs. In my
particular case I am using angular resources and I often need just
the id for the resource to locate it. If I did not return the id in
the response body I would need to parse it out of the Location
header.
- In a GET of all books I usually return the entire object not just
the id. In this sense my client code does not have to differentiate
where to get the id from (location header or body).
Now I know I am really in the grey area here, but most people are saying that returning the entire resource is 'bad' practice. But what if the server changes/adds information to the resource. It definitely adds the id, but might also add other things like a timestamp. In the case that I do not return the entire resource, is it really better to do a POST, return the id, then have the client perform a GET to get the new resource.
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