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Quoting the wikipedia [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representational_State_Transfer#REST_versus_RPC REST] article: | Quoting the wikipedia [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representational_State_Transfer#REST_versus_RPC REST] article: | ||
: In general, however, REST for data does not yet have a generally-accepted, standard format corresponding to HTML for documents, so each REST client must be custom-written to deal with XML at a fairly low level, and crawling XML data over REST is difficult (since it is not always easy to identify links). Proposals for a standard, generic format for use with REST based systems have included RDF, XTM, Atom, RSS (in its various | : In general, however, REST for data does not yet have a generally-accepted, standard format corresponding to HTML for documents, so each REST client must be custom-written to deal with XML at a fairly low level, and crawling XML data over REST is difficult (since it is not always easy to identify links). Proposals for a standard, generic format for use with REST based systems have included RDF, XTM, Atom, RSS (in its various flavors), and Plain Old XML (POX) with XLink to handle links | ||
In short, there isn't a clean design pattern for the optimal way to encode and use REST, which is precisely the sort of thing a microformats approach can provide. | In short, there isn't a clean design pattern for the optimal way to encode and use REST, which is precisely the sort of thing a microformats approach can provide. |
Latest revision as of 23:50, 2 September 2007
XHTML-REST Examples
These are some examples of how people are currently implementing REST web services (usually in XML), to provide some context for how best to implement them in XHTML.
The Problem
Quoting the wikipedia REST article:
- In general, however, REST for data does not yet have a generally-accepted, standard format corresponding to HTML for documents, so each REST client must be custom-written to deal with XML at a fairly low level, and crawling XML data over REST is difficult (since it is not always easy to identify links). Proposals for a standard, generic format for use with REST based systems have included RDF, XTM, Atom, RSS (in its various flavors), and Plain Old XML (POX) with XLink to handle links
In short, there isn't a clean design pattern for the optimal way to encode and use REST, which is precisely the sort of thing a microformats approach can provide.
Participants
Real-World Examples
Links to public web pages, either popular or insightful
ATOM Publishing
Currently the best use of REST in a standard protocol. They're even discussing using XOXO!
Amazon E-Commerce
Not a very good example, as they only have a single URI for the "REST" API, and do everything with url-encoding.
Delicious API
Their so-called REST API is not, really. Here's a good critique which includes a more RESTful representation:
http://www.peej.co.uk/articles/restfully-delicious
Rails and MOFO
Web Services via JSON and Microformats
http://www.infoq.com/articles/rails-rest-and-microformats
Existing Practices
- Summary of common patterns discovered
- Other attempts to solve The Problem
Proposal
- Early drafts
- Link to related pages as they become available
- rest-brainstorming
- - proposal
- -microformat
See Also
- Normative references for tags used