HTTP Methods
Use GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, and DELETE with clear intent.
HTTP Methods
HTTP methods communicate intent. Safe reads, full replacements, partial updates, creations, deletes, and retries should use method semantics consistently so clients and infrastructure can behave correctly.
Where This Fits
- Parent path: API Engineering Learning Path
- Module: API Engineering Fundamentals
- Previous step: HTTP Basics
- Next step: HTTP Headers
Key Ideas
- Treat the API as a long-lived contract, not only a controller or endpoint.
- Design for consumers, failure paths, observability, security, and future change.
- Keep behavior predictable across success, validation, conflict, retry, and authorization scenarios.
- Document decisions clearly enough that another team can consume the API without reading source code.
Design Checklist
- Define the consumer, business capability, and success criteria.
- Identify request fields, response fields, errors, status codes, and examples.
- Decide authentication, authorization, rate limits, idempotency, and audit needs.
- Consider latency, payload size, pagination, caching, and downstream dependency failures.
- Add logs, metrics, traces, correlation IDs, and useful dashboards before production release.
Common Mistakes
- Designing around database tables instead of consumer use cases.
- Returning inconsistent error shapes across endpoints.
- Ignoring retries, duplicate requests, and partial failures.
- Shipping without contract examples, monitoring, or backward-compatibility guidance.
Practical Outcome
After this lesson, you should be able to explain http methods in a design review, identify the trade-offs, and apply the concept to a production API.
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