Difference between revisions of "Representational state transfer"

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* [[Architectural pattern]]
 
* [[Architectural pattern]]
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* [[Atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability]] (ACID)
 
* [[Backbone.js]]
 
* [[Backbone.js]]
* [[HTML]]
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* [[Create, read, update and delete]] (CRUD)
* [[Hypermedia]]
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* [[Java API for RESTful Web Services]]
 
* [[Java API for RESTful Web Services]]
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* [[Resource-oriented architecture]] (ROA)
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* [[Resource-oriented computing]] (ROC)
 
* [[Scalability]]
 
* [[Scalability]]
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* [[Semantic URL]]
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* [[Service-oriented architecture]] (SOA)
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* [[Web-oriented architecture]] (WOA)
 
* [[SOAP]]
 
* [[SOAP]]
 
* [[Software architecture]]
 
* [[Software architecture]]

Revision as of 09:12, 6 December 2016

Representational state transfer (REST) or RESTful web services are one way of providing interoperability between computer systems on the Internet.

REST-compliant web services allow requesting systems to access and manipulate textual representations of web resources using a uniform and predefined set of stateless operations.

The term REST stands for representational state transfer.

Description

REST is a coordinated set of constraints applied to the design of components in a distributed hypermedia system that can lead to a more performant and maintainable software architecture.

World Wide Web

The World Wide Web represents the largest implementation of a system conforming to the REST architectural style.

REST has gained widespread acceptance across the Web as a simpler alternative to SOAP and WSDL-based web services.

RESTful systems typically, but not always, communicate over the Hypertext Transfer Protocol with the same HTTP verbs (GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, etc.) used by web browsers to retrieve web pages and send data to remote servers.

See also

External links