2

Consider the following example:

[HttpGet("api/values/{id}")]
public ActionResult<string> Get(int id)
{
    return id
}

The above will work without problems, however, I wish to change that so that it allows lets say for argument sake 10 parameters. I'm trying to understand in a restful api scenario how this is accomplished.

The first question is how its suppose to look like on the URI side? api/values/5/testOne/TestTwo/? What if testOne is null? So should I use Query Parameters then? api/values/5/?testOne=abc&testTwo=123

The second is can I wrap it in what I call a request Model. Example: Lets say I have a request model like this:

public class TestRequestModel
{
    public int Id { get; set; }
    public string TestOne { get; set; }
    public string TestTwo { get; set; }
}

And lets say I wish to include it:

[HttpGet("api/values/{id}/{testOne}/{testTwo}")]
public ActionResult<string> Get(TestRequestModel requestModel)
{
    return requestModel.Id
}

The above {id} will not map to requestModle.Id, nor will the other parameters. My second question is how do I achieve that binding in a GET request?

4
  • Try api/values/5//TestTwo/ to pass null to the testOne parameter in URL. Dec 11, 2018 at 16:43
  • 2
    Use [FromRoute] TestRequestModel requestModel. Dec 11, 2018 at 20:20
  • @KirkLarkin does that work with query strings or only setup route?
    – Bagzli
    Dec 11, 2018 at 23:05
  • That's for the "setup route" (your second example). Dec 12, 2018 at 13:56

1 Answer 1

0

While setting urls according to rest practises you can get url parameters like this

[HttpGet("api/values/{id:int}/{testOne:(type)}/{testTwo(type)}")]

You should set type types unless the query parameter is not string. And, you can get those values like that

HttpGet("api/values/{id:int}/{testOne:type}/{testTwo:type}")]
public ActionResult<string> Get(int id, type testOne, type testTwo)
{
    TestRequest model = new TestRequestModel();
    request.id = id;
    request.TypeOne = typeOne;
    .....
}

The reason we mapped query parameters explicitly is that there is no native support in .net to map query parameters to class. Also you could get required values from a class and using that type to get parameters. But in this way, you should set those parameters in FormData, not in query string. Hope this helps.

4
  • In an MVC View application you can do this, are you saying in an API application you can't? It just doesn't seem right...
    – Bagzli
    Dec 11, 2018 at 17:12
  • I am not saying you can not do this. You can do for both.
    – Hasan
    Dec 11, 2018 at 17:26
  • Ok, how? My original question was asking how do you accomplish that.
    – Bagzli
    Dec 11, 2018 at 17:27
  • With the code I demonstrate in my comment, you can achieve that I suppose. Whether its a mvc endpoint or api endpoıint, its is common practice to add unique identifiier of the controller in the url. In your case, I beleive it is id variable. Also, the variables in your code(testOne, testTwo) is mapped to input parameters(as I have shown in my comment) but again, I do NOT think you can map those variables directly to your class.
    – Hasan
    Dec 12, 2018 at 5:19

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